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Xu Xianzhi (徐羨之) (364[1] – 8 February 426[2]), courtesy name Zongwen (宗文), was a high-level official of the Chinese Liu Song dynasty, who, along with his colleagues Fu Liang and Xie Hui, deposed Emperor Shao after the death of Emperor Wu (Liu Yu) due to their belief that Emperor Shao was not fit to be emperor. When Emperor Shao's brother Emperor Wen subsequently wanted to kill him, he committed suicide.
^Xu Xianzhi's biography in Book of Song indicated that he was 63 (by East Asian reckoning) when he committed suicide. Thus by calculation, his birth year should be 364.
^bingyin day of the 1st month of the 3rd year of the Yuanjia era, per Emperor Wen's biography in Book of Song
XuXianzhi (徐羨之) (364 – 8 February 426), courtesy name Zongwen (宗文), was a high-level official of the Chinese Liu Song dynasty, who, along with his colleagues...
The Lantingji Xu (traditional Chinese: 蘭亭集序; simplified Chinese: 兰亭集序; pinyin: Lántíngjí Xù; lit. 'Preface to the Poems Collected from the Orchid Pavilion')...
Song Dynasty (b. 374) Xie Hui, general of the Liu Song Dynasty (b. 390) XuXianzhi, official of the Liu Song Dynasty (b. 364) Zhang, empress dowager of the...
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general of the Chinese Liu Song dynasty, who, along with his colleagues XuXianzhi and Fu Liang, deposed Emperor Shao after the death of Emperor Wu (Liu...
before being judged incompetent and killed by government officials led by XuXianzhi, replacing him with Emperor Wen, a different son, who soon killed the...
official of the Chinese Liu Song dynasty, who, along with his colleagues XuXianzhi and Xie Hui, deposed Emperor Shao after the death of Emperor Wu (Liu Yu)...
frivolous and incapable of governing the empire, the high-level officials XuXianzhi, Fu Liang, and Xie Hui deposed and subsequently killed him, as well as...
grew seriously ill later that year, he entrusted Crown Prince Yifu to XuXianzhi, Fu Liang, Xie Hui, and Tan Daoji. At the same time, however, he secretly...
Emperor Wu became extremely ill, and he entrusted Crown Prince Yifu to XuXianzhi, Fu Liang, Xie Hui, and Tan Daoji. He then died, and Liu Yifu took the...
Song Dynasty (b. 374) Xie Hui, general of the Liu Song Dynasty (b. 390) XuXianzhi, official of the Liu Song Dynasty (b. 364) Zhang, empress dowager of the...
entrusted Liu Yifu to XuXianzhi, Fu Liang, Xie Hui and Tan, and he died soon after. Liu Yifu succeeded him as Emperor Shao. Unlike Xu, Fu, and Xie, however...
weakened the Tang dynasty. Huang was a salt smuggler before joining Wang Xianzhi's rebellion in 875. After splitting with Wang in 876, Huang turned south...
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Zeng Xianzhi (Chinese: 曾宪植; 23 January 1910 – 11 October 1989) was a Chinese revolutionary and politician. In the late 1920s and early 1930s, girls in...
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to Xi Xuan around the year 323. They had eight children, including Wang Xianzhi, who later became a renowned calligrapher in his own right. Between 324...
(851–1036) and the Ganzhou Uyghur Kingdom (894–1036) The uprisings of Wang Xianzhi and Huang Chao (874–884) Administrative divisions of the Tang dynasty Xiong...
Shingai Tanaka Oona Tully Wang Xianzhi Wang Xizhi Osman Waqialla Sheila Waters Wei Shuo Hermann Zapf Yan Zhenqing Zhang Xu Zhao Mengfu Zhong Hui Biography...
writer and calligrapher; the Lantingji Xu is generally attributed to him. Nephew of Wang Dao. Wang Xianzhi (344–386), calligrapher; son of Wang Xizhi...
Collected Works of Wang Mengkui. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-09247-4. Zhang, Xianzhi (30 April 2014). Enterprise Management Control Systems in China. Springer...
ISBN 9787540202590. Chen, Huaxin (1990). 中國歷代帝王大觀. p. 379. ISBN 9787218003474. Feng, Xianzhi (2006). 中国历代重大战争详解:隋唐战争史. ISBN 9787999031499. Thurgood, Graham; LaPolla...