Lady Li (other)
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Lady Li (other)
Lady Li may refer to any woman in imperial China with the surname Li, such as: * Empress Li (other) * Empress Dowager Li (other) * Consort Li (other) * Lady Li (died between 104 and 101 BC), concubine of Emperor Wu of Han *Lady Li (Three Kingdoms) (李氏, died 263), noble lady and aristocrat from the Three Kingdoms period. * Li Zhaoyi, concubine of Liu Shan of the Shu Han state during the Three Kingdoms period. *Lady Li (Wang Jipeng) ( 10th century), consort of the Min emperor Wang Jipeng *Li Qingzhao Li Qingzhao (1084 – ca. 1155), alias Yian Jushi (Chinese: 易安居士) was a Chinese poet and essayist during the Song dynasty. She is considered one of the greatest poets in Chinese history. Biography Early life Li Qingzhao was born in ...
(1084–1156), Song dynasty poet {{disambiguation ...
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Empress Li (other)
Empress Li or Empress Dowager Li may refer to: *Empress Li (Li Shi's wife) (fl. 343), empress of the Cheng-Han state *Empress Li (Former Qin) (fl. 392–393), empress of Former Qin * Li Lingrong (died 400), empress dowager of the Jin Dynasty * Empress Li (Huiyi) (died 409?), empress of Northern Yan *Li Zu'e (died after 581), empress of Northern Qi *Li Ezi (536–588), empress dowager of Northern Zhou *Empress Li (Liu Shouguang's wife) (died 914), empress of Yan *Li Chunyan (died 939), empress of the Min state, married to Wang Jipeng * Empress Li (Wang Yanxi) (died 944), empress of the Min state, married to Wang Yanxi *Empress Li (Later Jin) (died 950), empress of Later Jin * Empress Li (Later Han) (died 954), empress of Later Han *Empress Dowager Li (Later Shu) Empress Dowager Li (李太后, personal name unknown) (died 965) was the mother of Meng Chang, the last emperor of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period state Later Shu. She was a concubine of Meng Chang's fath ...
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Empress Dowager Li (other)
Empress Li or Empress Dowager Li may refer to: *Empress Li (Li Shi's wife) (fl. 343), empress of the Cheng-Han state *Empress Li (Former Qin) (fl. 392–393), empress of Former Qin * Li Lingrong (died 400), empress dowager of the Jin Dynasty * Empress Li (Huiyi) (died 409?), empress of Northern Yan *Li Zu'e (died after 581), empress of Northern Qi *Li Ezi (536–588), empress dowager of Northern Zhou *Empress Li (Liu Shouguang's wife) (died 914), empress of Yan *Li Chunyan (died 939), empress of the Min state, married to Wang Jipeng * Empress Li (Wang Yanxi) (died 944), empress of the Min state, married to Wang Yanxi *Empress Li (Later Jin) (died 950), empress of Later Jin * Empress Li (Later Han) (died 954), empress of Later Han *Empress Dowager Li (Later Shu) Empress Dowager Li (李太后, personal name unknown) (died 965) was the mother of Meng Chang, the last emperor of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period state Later Shu. She was a concubine of Meng Chang's fath ...
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Consort Li (other)
Consort Li may refer to: Consorts with surname Li 李 Ancient China * (衛婕妤), titled ''Jieyu'' (婕妤), original name Li Ping (李平), taking the surname Wei from her predecessor Empress Wei, concubine of Emperor Cheng of Han. * Li Zhaoyi (李昭儀), consort of emperor Liu Shan of Shu Han state during the Three Kingdoms period. * Li Chunyan, concubine and later empress consort of Emperor Wang Jipeng of Min. * (李丽姬), also titled Li Lifei (李丽妃), concubine of Emperor Liu Sheng of Southern Han. * Consort Li (李宸妃), concubine of Emperor Zhenzong of Song and mother of Emperor Renzong. * (李元妃), concubine of Emperor Shizong of Jin, mother of Wanyan Yongdao ( 完顏永蹈), Wanyan Yongji and Wanyan Yongde ( 完顏永德). * (李淑妃), concubine of Ming Dynasty's Hongwu Emperor, mother of Crown Prince Zhu Biao and Princes Zhu Shuang and Zhu Gang (朱棡). * (李贤妃), concubine of Hongwu Emperor, mother of Zhu Jing ( 朱桱). * (李贤妃), co ...
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Lady Li
Lady Li (李夫人, died between 104 and 101 BC), also rendered as Li Fu-jēn, was a Han dynasty concubine of Emperor Wu. Civil unrest broke out between her family and Wei Zifu's family. Moreover, her siblings defected to the Xiongnu and became traitors to China. As a result, Emperor Wu ordered her relatives to be tried and executed, leading to the downfall of her and her family. Biography As concubine She was allegedly the inspiration for ''The Beauty Song'', composed by her brother Li Yannian. Lady Li's brother Li Yannian was a musician for Princess Pingyang. After he performed ''The Beauty Song'' () for Emperor Wu, the Emperor asked Li Yannian if he knew of such a woman, to which Princess Pingyang responded that the song was about Li's sister. The Emperor thus requested to meet with Lady Li, and she became one of his concubines. She had one son named Bo (髆). However, although composed in the persona of Han Wudi, there is doubt as to the actual authorship of this and ...
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Lady Li (Three Kingdoms)
Lady Li or Lishi (李氏, died 263) was a Chinese noble lady and aristocrat from the Three Kingdoms period. She was born of the Li family and lived most of her life in the city of Jiangyou (江油) in the domain of Shu Han state. Lady Li is best known for her role in the Conquest of Shu by Wei (263-264), she faced Ma Miao (馬邈), the governor of her city, who surrendered Jiangyou to Cao Wei state.(先登至江由,蜀守將馬邈降。) ''Sanguozhi'' vol. 28. She ended up committing suicide to demonstrate loyalty to the Shu kingdom; she was later praised by Deng Ai, a general of Cao Wei. In ''Romance of the Three Kingdoms'' Her early life was not recorded in historical records. She married Ma Miao, governor of Jiangyou, a city located in Sichuan province. The most notable mentions about her were in the 14th century historical novel, ''Romance of the Three Kingdoms'', which romanticizes previous events and during the Three Kingdoms period of China. The novel introduces Lady ...
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Li Zhaoyi (Shu Han)
Li Zhaoyi (李昭儀, d. 264) was a Chinese noble woman from the Shu Han state during the Three Kingdoms period. She was the concubine of the Shu Emperor Liu Shan. She was from the Li clan (李) and entered the imperial court under the office title of Zhaoyi (昭儀). Fall of Shu In 263, the Wei general Deng Ai led a campaign to conquer the state of Shu. When Deng Ai arrived at the gates of Chengdu Chengdu (, ; Simplified Chinese characters, simplified Chinese: 成都; pinyin: ''Chéngdū''; Sichuanese dialects, Sichuanese pronunciation: , Standard Chinese pronunciation: ), Chinese postal romanization, alternatively Romanization of Chi ..., the capital of Shu, where Li Zhaoyi lived, Liu Shan and the entire army surrendered to Wei. Liu Shan signed a surrender treaty and was treated cordially by Deng Ai, later Liu Shan and Empress Zhang went to Cao Wei's capital Luoyang. Li Zhaoyi remained in Chengdu and was ousted from her post. Liu Shan's surrender caused an uproa ...
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Lady Li (Wang Jipeng)
Lady Li (李夫人, personal name unknown), formally the Lady of Liang (), was the first (known) wife of Wang Jipeng (later known as Wang Chang), an emperor of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period Min state. Lady Li was a cousin to Wang Jipeng — her mother was a sister to his father Wang Yanjun (known as Wang Lin during his reign as emperor), and her father was the official Li Min (), who served as a chancellor during Wang Lin's reign. It is not known when she married Wang Jipeng, but as historical accounts referred to her as his "original princess" (), it was probably during the time he was the Prince of Fu under his father. She eventually carried the title of Lady of Liang.''Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms''vol. 94 However, even during Wang Lin's reign, Wang Jipeng was carrying on an affair with Wang Lin's lady in waiting Li Chunyan and, later, through the intercession of Wang Lin's third wife Empress Chen Jinfeng, Wang Jipeng was able to receive ...
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