píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

Princess Pingyang (Han Dynasty)

  • created reference approved 平阳公主/平陽公主 → 卫子夫/衛子夫 (see) — "Initial import from upstream dictionary"

    平阳公主 / 平陽公主 píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

    卫子夫 / 衛子夫 wèi​zǐ​fū

    see

    Changed: source (simp), source (trad), source pinyin, target (simp), target (trad), target pinyin, type

    created reference

  • created reference approved 平阳公主/平陽公主 → 卫青/衛青 (see) — "Initial import from upstream dictionary"

    平阳公主 / 平陽公主 píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

    卫青 / 衛青 wèi​qīng

    see

    Changed: source (simp), source (trad), source pinyin, target (simp), target (trad), target pinyin, type

    created reference

  • created reference approved 平阳公主/平陽公主 → 娘子关/娘子關 (see) — "Initial import from upstream dictionary"

    平阳公主 / 平陽公主 píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

    娘子关 / 娘子關 niáng​zǐ​guān

    see

    Changed: source (simp), source (trad), source pinyin, target (simp), target (trad), target pinyin, type

    created reference

  • created sense approved 平阳公主/平陽公主 · píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ · Princess Pingyang (Han Dynasty) — "Initial import from upstream dictionary"

    平阳公主 / 平陽公主

    píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

    Princess Pingyang (Han Dynasty)

    Han Dynasty princess and elder sister of Emperor Wu. She was originally the Princess of Yangxin but became known as Princess Pingyang after marrying Cao Shi, the Marquis of Pingyang. She famously introduced her maid [[卫子夫|衛子夫|wei4 zi3 fu1]] to the Emperor and later married the general [[卫青|衛青|wei4 qing1]].

    平阳 (literal) → 平阳/平陽 · píng​yáng · Pingyang 公主 (literal) → 公主 · gōng​zhǔ · princess

    Changed: simplified, traditional, gloss, definition, pinyin, variant pinyin, variants, separable parts, decomposition

    created sense

  • created sense approved 平阳公主/平陽公主 · píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ · Princess Pingyang (Tang Dynasty) — "Initial import from upstream dictionary"

    平阳公主 / 平陽公主

    píng​yáng​gōng​zhǔ

    Princess Pingyang (Tang Dynasty)

    Tang Dynasty princess (died 623) and daughter of the founding Emperor Gaozu. During the rebellion against the Sui Dynasty, she raised and led a force of 70,000 soldiers known as the Lady's Army. The famous pass [[娘子关|娘子關|niang2 zi3 guan1]] is named after her troops.

    平阳 (literal) → 平阳/平陽 · píng​yáng · Pingyang 公主 (literal) → 公主 · gōng​zhǔ · princess

    Changed: simplified, traditional, gloss, definition, pinyin, variant pinyin, variants, separable parts, decomposition

    created sense