Wang Yun (Minister Of Forestry)
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Wang Yun (Minister Of Forestry)
Wang Yun may refer to: * Wang Yun (Han dynasty) (137–192), bureaucrat during the late Han dynasty * Wang Yun (Yuan dynasty) Wang Yun (, 1228–1304), was a writer of Chinese Sanqu poetry from Weizhou in Henan province. He was born during the Jin dynasty, but became an official under the Yuan Dynasty. Initially a local official, he was given a series of appointments in ... (1228–1304), poet of the Yuan dynasty * Wang Yun (Qing dynasty) (1749–1819), poet of the Qing dynasty * Wang Yun (footballer) (born 1983), Chinese footballer {{hndis ...
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Wang Yun (Han Dynasty)
Wang Yun () (137–4 July 192), courtesy name Zishi, was a Chinese politician who lived during the Eastern Han dynasty. He served in the Han government through the reigns of three emperors – Emperor Ling (), Emperor Shao (189) and Emperor Xian (). The highest offices he served in were Manager of the Affairs of the Masters of Writing and Minister over the Masses in the early reign of Emperor Xian. In 192, with help from the general Lü Bu and others, he plotted a successful coup in Chang'an against Dong Zhuo, a tyrannical warlord who controlled the Han central government, and assassinated him. However, later that year, Dong Zhuo's followers staged a counter-coup and seized back control of the central government. Wang Yun, along with his family members, was captured and executed. In the 14th-century historical novel ''Romance of the Three Kingdoms'', Wang Yun was the adoptive father of the fictional maiden Diaochan, whom he used to stir up conflict between Lü Bu and Dong Z ...
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Wang Yun (Yuan Dynasty)
Wang Yun (, 1228–1304), was a writer of Chinese Sanqu poetry from Weizhou in Henan province. He was born during the Jin dynasty, but became an official under the Yuan Dynasty. Initially a local official, he was given a series of appointments in Hebei, Henan, Shantong and Fujian provinces starting in 1268. Later he was summoned to the capital where he served in the Hanlin Academy. At twenty he became the acquaintance of the renowned writer Yuan Haowen. He was a noted prose stylist in the Tang manner of unadorned directness. His poetry often depicted the downtrodden and the poor. His collected works in one-hundred fascicles is extant. A biography of Wang exists in the official history of the Yuan Dynasty (). Forty-one of his ''sanqu'' are extant. Translations (Yuediao: Pinghuyue) Untitled 1. Autumn green lotuses And a calm lake stitched with clouds. A cassia boat sews the moistness. A song, a full cup of wine Relieve the sorrow. How can a man's life be as before? When d ...
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Wang Yun (Qing Dynasty)
Wang Yun (1749–1819) was a Chinese poet and playwright during the Qing Dynasty. Her birthplace is Chang'an. In her poems she writes about the frustration of educated women, who were not allowed to have a career, nor were they accepted by men as intellectual equals. The ''Huaiqing Tang ji'' contains over 200 of her poems. She also wrote three ''chuanqi'' plays; ''Fanhua meng'' (Dream of Glory), ''Quan fu ji'' (Complete Happiness) and ''You xian meng'' (A Dream Visit to the Immortals Immortality is the ability to live forever, or eternal life. Immortal or Immortality may also refer to: Film * ''The Immortals'' (1995 film), an American crime film * ''Immortality'', an alternate title for the 1998 British film '' The Wisdom of ...). References"Wang Yun", Renditions, a Chinese-English Translation Magazine, last accessed June 9, 2007 {{DEFAULTSORT:Wang, Yun Chinese women poets Qing dynasty poets 19th-century Chinese dramatists and playwrights 1749 births 1819 deaths 18th- ...
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