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Dai (Spring and Autumn period), the Glossary

Index Dai (Spring and Autumn period)

Dai was a state which existed in northern Hebei during the Spring and Autumn period of Chinese history.[1]

Table of Contents

  1. 71 relations: Adposition, Ancient Chinese states, Baike.com, Beidi, Beijing, Book of the Later Han, Cambridge, Chinese characters, Chinese jade, Dai, Dai (Warring States period), Dai Commandery, Dai County, Dai Prefecture, Eponym, Eurasian Steppe, Fan Ye (historian), Five Barbarians, Gu Yanwu, Hebei, History of China, Horses in East Asian warfare, Huainanzi, Huaxia, Hunyuan County, Jia of Zhao, Jin (Chinese state), Lanham, Maryland, Linguistic reconstruction, Liu An, Marriage of state, Mohism, Mount Heng (Shanxi), Mount Wutai, North China Plain, Noun, Old Chinese, Ordos Plateau, Pinyin, Posthumous name, Prince of Dai, Qin (state), Qin dynasty, Qin Shi Huang, Qin's wars of unification, Romanization of Chinese, Santa Ana, California, Seals in the Sinosphere, Shaanxi, Shang dynasty, ... Expand index (21 more) »

Adposition

Adpositions are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (in, under, towards, behind, ago, etc.) or mark various semantic roles (of, for).

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Ancient Chinese states

Ancient Chinese states were dynastic polities of China within and without the Zhou cultural sphere prior to Qin's wars of unification. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Ancient Chinese states are Zhou dynasty.

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Baike.com

Douyin Baike, formerly Hudong and Hoodong, is a for-profit social network and Chinese encyclopedia owned by ByteDance.

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Beidi

The Di or Beidi (Northern Di) were various ethnic groups who lived north of the Chinese (Huaxia) realms during the Zhou dynasty. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Beidi are Zhou dynasty.

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Beijing

Beijing, previously romanized as Peking, is the capital of China.

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Book of the Later Han

The Book of the Later Han, also known as the History of the Later Han and by its Chinese name Hou Hanshu, is one of the Twenty-Four Histories and covers the history of the Han dynasty from 6 to 189 CE, a period known as the Later or Eastern Han.

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Cambridge

Cambridge is a city and non-metropolitan district in the county of Cambridgeshire, England.

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Chinese characters

Chinese characters are logographs used to write the Chinese languages and others from regions historically influenced by Chinese culture.

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Chinese jade

Chinese jade refers to the jade mined or carved in China from the Neolithic onward.

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Dai

Dai may refer to.

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Dai (Warring States period)

Dai was a short-lived state from 228 BC to 222 BC.

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Dai Commandery

Dai Commandery was a commandery (jùn) of the state of Zhao established BC and of northern imperial Chinese dynasties until the time of the Emperor Wen of the Sui dynasty (r. AD581–604).

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Dai County

Dai County, also known by its Chinese name Daixian, is a county in Xinzhou, Shanxi Province, China.

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Dai Prefecture

Dai Prefecture, also known by its Chinese name Daizhou, was a prefecture (zhou) of imperial China in what is now northern Shanxi.

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Eponym

An eponym is a person, a place, or a thing after whom or for which someone or something is, or is believed to be, named.

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Eurasian Steppe

The Eurasian Steppe, also called the Great Steppe or The Steppes, is the vast steppe ecoregion of Eurasia in the temperate grasslands, savannas and shrublands biome.

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Fan Ye (historian)

Fan Ye (398 – 23 January 446), courtesy name Weizong, was a Chinese historian, philosopher, and politician of the Liu Song dynasty during the Southern and Northern dynasties period.

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Five Barbarians

The Five Barbarians, or Wu Hu, is a Chinese historical exonym for five ancient non-Han "Hu" peoples who immigrated to northern China in the Eastern Han dynasty, and then overthrew the Western Jin dynasty and established their own kingdoms in the 4th–5th centuries.

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Gu Yanwu

Gu Yanwu (July 15, 1613 – February 15, 1682), also known as Gu Tinglin, was a Chinese philologist, geographer, and famous scholar-official in Qing dynasty.

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Hebei

Hebei is a province in North China.

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History of China

The history of China spans several millennia across a wide geographical area.

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Horses in East Asian warfare

Horses in East Asian warfare are inextricably linked with the strategic and tactical evolution of armed conflict throughout the course of East Asian military history.

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Huainanzi

The Huainanzi is an ancient Chinese text that consists of a collection of essays that resulted from a series of scholarly debates held at the court of Liu An, Prince of Huainan, sometime before 139 BCE.

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Huaxia

Huaxia is a historical concept representing the Chinese nation, and came from the self-awareness of a common cultural ancestry by the various confederations of pre-Qin ethnic ancestors of Han people.

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Hunyuan County

Hunyuan County is a county under the administration of Datong City, in the northeast of Shanxi province, China.

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Jia of Zhao

Zhao Jia, also known as Jia, King of Dai (代王嘉) or Jia, King of Zhao (趙王嘉), reigned as the only king of the Dai state from 227 to 223 BC.

See Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Jia of Zhao

Jin (Chinese state)

Jin (Old Chinese: &ast), originally known as Tang (唐), was a major state during the middle part of the Zhou dynasty, based near the centre of what was then China, on the lands attributed to the legendary Xia dynasty: the southern part of modern Shanxi. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Jin (Chinese state) are states of the Spring and Autumn period.

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Lanham, Maryland

Lanham is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Prince George's County, Maryland.

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Linguistic reconstruction

Linguistic reconstruction is the practice of establishing the features of an unattested ancestor language of one or more given languages.

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Liu An

Liú Ān (c. 179–122 BC) was a Chinese cartographer, monarch, and philosopher.

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Marriage of state

A marriage of state is a diplomatic marriage or union between two members of different nation-states or internally, between two power blocs, usually in authoritarian societies and is a practice which dates back to ancient times, as far back as early Grecian cultures in western society, and of similar antiquity in other civilizations.

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Mohism

Mohism or Moism was an ancient Chinese philosophy of ethics and logic, rational thought, and scientific technology developed by the scholars who studied under the ancient Chinese philosopher Mozi (c. 470 BC – c. 391 BC), embodied in an eponymous book: the Mozi.

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Mount Heng (Shanxi)

Mount Heng, also known by its Chinese name Hengshan, is a mountain in north-central China's Shanxi Province, known as the northern mountain of the Five Great Mountains of China.

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Mount Wutai

Mount Wutai, also known by its Chinese name Wutaishan and as is a sacred Buddhist site at the headwaters of the Qingshui in Shanxi Province, China.

See Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Mount Wutai

North China Plain

The North China Plain is a large-scale downfaulted rift basin formed in the late Paleogene and Neogene and then modified by the deposits of the Yellow River.

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Noun

In grammar, a noun is a word that represents a concrete or abstract thing, such as living creatures, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, and ideas.

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Old Chinese

Old Chinese, also called Archaic Chinese in older works, is the oldest attested stage of Chinese, and the ancestor of all modern varieties of Chinese.

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Ordos Plateau

The Ordos Plateau, also known as the Ordos Basin or simply the Ordos, is a highland sedimentary basin in parts of most Northern China with an elevation of, and consisting mostly of land enclosed by the Ordos Loop, a large northerly rectangular bend of the Yellow River.

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Pinyin

Hanyu Pinyin, or simply pinyin, is the most common romanization system for Standard Chinese.

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Posthumous name

A posthumous name is an honorary name given mainly to revered dead people in East Asian culture.

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Prince of Dai

Prince or King of Dai was an ancient and medieval Chinese title.

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Qin (state)

Qin (or Ch'in) was an ancient Chinese state during the Zhou dynasty. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Qin (state) are states of the Spring and Autumn period.

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Qin dynasty

The Qin dynasty was the first dynasty of Imperial China.

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Qin Shi Huang

Qin Shi Huang (February 25912 July 210 BC) was the founder of the Qin dynasty and the first emperor of China.

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Qin's wars of unification

Qin's wars of unification were a series of military campaigns launched in the late 3rd century BC by the state of Qin against the other six powers remaining in China — Han, Zhao, Yan, Wei, Chu and Qi.

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Romanization of Chinese

Romanization of Chinese is the use of the Latin alphabet to transliterate Chinese.

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Santa Ana, California

Santa Ana (Spanish for) is a city in and the county seat of Orange County, California, United States.

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Seals in the Sinosphere

In the Sinosphere, seals (stamps) can be applied on objects to establish personal identification. They are commonly applied on items such as personal documents, office paperwork, contracts, and art. They are used similarly to signatures in the West. Unlike in the West, where wax seals are common, Sinosphere seals are used with ink.

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Shaanxi

Shaanxi is an inland province in Northwestern China.

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Shang dynasty

The Shang dynasty, also known as the Yin dynasty, was a Chinese royal dynasty that ruled in the Yellow River valley during the second millennium BC, traditionally succeeding the Xia dynasty and followed by the Western Zhou dynasty.

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Shanxi

Shanxi is an inland province of China and is part of the North China region.

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Sima Qian

Sima Qian (司馬遷; was a Chinese historian during the early Han dynasty. He is considered the father of Chinese historiography for his Records of the Grand Historian, a general history of China covering more than two thousand years beginning from the rise of the legendary Yellow Emperor and the formation of the first Chinese polity to the reign of Emperor Wu of Han, during which Sima wrote.

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Simplified Chinese characters

Simplified Chinese characters are one of two standardized character sets widely used to write the Chinese language, with the other being traditional characters.

See Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Simplified Chinese characters

Slavery in China

Slavery in China has taken various forms throughout history.

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Spring and Autumn period

The Spring and Autumn period in Chinese history lasted approximately from 770 to 481 BCE which corresponds roughly to the first half of the Eastern Zhou period. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Spring and Autumn period are Zhou dynasty.

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Standard Chinese

Standard Chinese is a modern standard form of Mandarin Chinese that was first codified during the republican era (1912‒1949).

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Suicide in China

China's suicide rates were one of the highest in the world in the 1990s.

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Traditional Chinese characters

Traditional Chinese characters are a standard set of Chinese character forms used to write Chinese languages.

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Transcription into Chinese characters

Transcription into Chinese characters is the use of traditional or simplified Chinese characters to phonetically transcribe the sound of terms and names of foreign words to the Chinese language.

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Verb

A verb is a word (part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (bring, read, walk, run, learn), an occurrence (happen, become), or a state of being (be, exist, stand).

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Wade–Giles

Wade–Giles is a romanization system for Mandarin Chinese.

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Xiongnu

The Xiongnu were a tribal confederation of nomadic peoples who, according to ancient Chinese sources, inhabited the eastern Eurasian Steppe from the 3rd century BC to the late 1st century AD.

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Xirong

Xirong or Rong were various people who lived primarily in and around the western extremities of ancient China (in modern Gansu and Qinghai). Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Xirong are Zhou dynasty.

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Yellow River

The Yellow River is the second-longest river in China, after the Yangtze; with an estimated length of it is the sixth-longest river system on Earth.

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Yi Zhou Shu

The Yi Zhou Shu is a compendium of Chinese historical documents about the Western Zhou period (1046–771 BCE).

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Yu County, Hebei

Yu County, also known by its Chinese name Yuxian, is a county under the jurisdiction of the prefecture-level city of Zhangjiakou in northwestern Hebei province, China.

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Zhao (state)

Zhao was one of the seven major states during the Warring States period of ancient China.

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Zhao (surname)

Zhao is a Chinese-language surname.

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Zhao Wuxu

Zhao Wuxu (趙毋卹, reigned 458 BCE – 425 BCE), also known by the posthumous name Xiangzi (襄子), was the head of the house of Zhao in the Jin state in late Spring and Autumn period.

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Zhongshan (state)

Zhongshan was a small state that existed during the Warring States period, which managed to survive for almost 120 years despite its small size. Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Zhongshan (state) are Zhou dynasty.

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Zhou dynasty

The Zhou dynasty was a royal dynasty of China that existed for 789 years from until 256 BC, the longest of such reign in Chinese history.

See Dai (Spring and Autumn period) and Zhou dynasty

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dai_(Spring_and_Autumn_period)

Also known as Dai (Spring & Autumn), Dai (Spring and Autumn), Dai (state during the Spring and Autumn Period).

, Shanxi, Sima Qian, Simplified Chinese characters, Slavery in China, Spring and Autumn period, Standard Chinese, Suicide in China, Traditional Chinese characters, Transcription into Chinese characters, Verb, Wade–Giles, Xiongnu, Xirong, Yellow River, Yi Zhou Shu, Yu County, Hebei, Zhao (state), Zhao (surname), Zhao Wuxu, Zhongshan (state), Zhou dynasty.