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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
 Cao Pi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Pi escaped, though Zhang Liao was hit by an arrow in his loins and soon after died of his wounds.
In 220, Cao Pi forced Emperor Xian to abdicate the throne and proclaimed himself Wei Emperor.
Cao Pi continued his father's war against the Kingdoms of Shu and Wu but was unsuccessful.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Pi

  
 Three Kingdoms Period Chronology
Cao Cao appointed "Commandant of the Valiant Cavaliers" and is ordered to suppress the Yellow Scarves Rebellion.
Cao Cao becomes protector of Yanzhou and receives the surrender of the Yellow Scarves of Qingzhou.
Cao Cao is defeated by the combined armies of Zhang Xiu and Liu Biao.
tse.dyndns.org /~sktse/3kingstl

  
 Cao Cao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, Cao Cao's attempt to extend his domination south of the Yangtze River was dashed as his forces were defeated by the first coalition of his archrivals Liu Bei and Sun Quan (who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively) at the Red Cliffs in 208.
Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must have been laid.
Cao Cao was born in the county of Qiao(譙, present day Bozhou, Anhui) in 155.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Cao   (3350 words)

  
 Lai Vax (Wa Reader) Glawg 4
Mawh kheu nan, yam hwet cao cix sidah ka daux nyiex yaong, nyiex mawh nyiex an caw tix tang viex kawn praix tix hwet cix sidah heue.
Viang mawh nan, reeh ang pon to: cie tix, tax cao jaw tom sut tix sau reeh daux bau kawg tix heue.
Mawh kheu kiet simie tax cao jaw tix nyaux rawm, nawh hu nyaux rawm daux klawng, dex praok rawm klawng an, tax cao jaw yaox rhoi caong cak mai nawh kiet gauxrhawm ka heue.
wadict.soas.ac.uk /wadict/corpus/mm/Lai_vax_glawg_4.html   (3350 words)

  
 Cao Xueqin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao himself eventually settled in Western Beijing where he lived through the larger part of his late years in poverty selling off his paintings.
A Han Chinese clan assimilated into Manchurian ethnicity, Cao’s family had become so rich as to be able to play host four times to the Emperor Kangxi in his itinerant trips down south in Nanjing.
Most of what we know about Cao was passed down from his contemporaries and friends.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Xueqin   (247 words)

  
 Xiahou Ba - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Xiahou Yuan had fought with Cao Cao since the start of the civil wars and was one of the most trusted of Cao's lieutenants.
In the 240s he became General of the Right and Marquis of Bochangting and was a known associate of Cao Shuang.
Xiahou Ba's father was the great Wei general Xiahou Yuan and his mother was a sister-in-law of the dynastic founder Cao Cao.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Xiahou_Ba   (247 words)

  
 Cao Ren - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Ren died in 223 and was posthumously enfeoffed as Marquis Zhong, literally meaning the loyal marquis.
Cao Ren (168– 223) was a military general under the powerful warlord Cao Cao during the late Eastern Han Dynasty and Three Kingdoms period in ancient China.
Throughout most of the 210s Cao Ren held the position of General who Conquers the South (征南将军) and garrisoned at Fan (樊), a strategic city on the shores of the Han River that is vital to the defense of Jingzhou(荆州).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Ren   (720 words)

  
 Cao Chong - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Cao shed tears and is recorded to have said to Cao Pi, his ultimate successor: "This is my misfortune, but your good fortune." Cao Chong was entombed with the seal of the General of Chariots and Cavalry and with the daughter of an official who had also recently deceased.
Cao Chong 曹沗 (styled Cangshu 倉舒, 196– 208) was a son of the great 3rd century Chinese warlord Cao Cao.
In 221, after the establishment of the state of Wei Cao Chong was posthumously enfeoffed as Marquis Ai of Deng (鄧哀侯), a title later elevated to the rank of Duke(公).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Chong   (720 words)

  
 Cao Cao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, Cao Cao's attempt to extend his domination south of the Yangtze River was dashed as his forces were defeated by the first coalition of his archrivals Liu Bei and Sun Quan (who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively) at the Red Cliffs in 208.
Cao Cao (155 – 220), whose name is also often transliterated and should be correctly pronounced as Ts'ao Ts'ao, was a regional warlord and the last Chancellor of Eastern Han Dynasty who rose to great power during the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty in ancient China.
Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must have been laid.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Cao   (3334 words)

  
 Cao Pi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Pi died of illness in 226, at the age of 39.
Cao Pi was the eldest son of Cao Cao and his concubine Lady Bien.
He was the second son of the Chinese politician and poet Cao Cao and was the first emperor and the real founder of the Kingdom of Wei (see Three Kingdoms).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Pi   (435 words)

  
 Three Kingdoms Chronology
Cao Cao becomes protector of Yan Zhou and receives the surrender of the Yellow Scarves in Qing Zhou.
Cao Cao defeats the Wu Huan with Gou Jias help and returns to Ye.
Cao Cao conquers Han Zhong, Zhang Lu surrenders.
blackdragon-san.tripod.com /jonathan_wu/id7.html   (435 words)

  
 Rulers of Wei
Cao Cao's territories stretch as far to the edge of the Mongolian desert and was able to control the central plains after defeating Yuan Shao in the decisive battle of Guandu.
Cao Cao gained control of much of Jingzhou effortless when Liu Zong surrender upon the approach of the Cao army after Liu Biao's death.
Cao Cao managed to escape to Fancheng which is held by Cao Ren and later returned back to the capital Xuchang to rebuild his army.
www.3kingdoms.net /weiruler.htm   (435 words)

  
 Three Kingdoms Period Chronology
Cao Cao appointed "Commandant of the Valiant Cavaliers" and is ordered to suppress the Yellow Scarves Rebellion.
Cao Cao becomes protector of Yanzhou and receives the surrender of the Yellow Scarves of Qingzhou.
Cao Cao is defeated by the combined armies of Zhang Xiu and Liu Biao.
tse.dyndns.org /~sktse/3kingstl.htm   (435 words)

  
 Cao Gangchuan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Gangchuan, native of Wugang, Henan Province, was born in December 1935.
Cao Gangchuan (Traditional Chinese: 曹剛川; Simplified Chinese: 曹刚川; pinyin: Cáo Gāng Chuān) (born December 1935) is vice chairman of Central Military Commission and Minister of National Defense of the People's Republic of China.
United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld meeting with Cao Gangchuan during his first visit to the People's Republic of China
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Gangchuan   (478 words)

  
 Cao Chun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born in 170, Cao Chun was a younger brother of Cao Ren.
Cao Chun pressed on south to secure the strategic city of Jiangling, which had a cache of armaments and a sizeable river fleet.
Cao Chun ( 170– 210) was a cavalry general under the powerful warlord Cao Cao during the late Eastern Han Dynasty and Three Kingdoms Period in ancient China.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Chun   (478 words)

  
 Cao Zhang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The second of Cao Cao 's four sons by Emperess Bian, Cao Zhang was said to excel in archery and armed combat in his youth.
Cao Pi was gripped by fear that his brother would contest the heirship with the military power he held.
The successor Cao Pi then sent all his brothers, including Cao Zhang, back to their individual fiefdoms, for fear that they might contest his position.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Zhang   (478 words)

  
 Cao Cao Info - Encyclopedia WikiWhat.com
Cao Cao (曹& Cao2 Cao1) (155-220) was the self-appointed Imperial Secretarist of the Han Dynasty and the de facto ruler of Northern China during the beginning of the period of Three Kingdoms.
The historical Cao Cao was the son of a court official of the Han Dynasty.
Cao Cao is also a character in the Chinese classic, Romance of the Three Kingdoms, where he is cast as the cunning and capable villain.
www.wikiwhat.com /encyclopedia/c/ca/cao_cao.html   (486 words)

  
 Cao Pi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Pi, hearing these news at Cao Cao's headquarters at Yecheng (鄴城, in modern Handan, Hebei), quickly declared himself the new Prince of Wei and issuing an edict in the name of his mother, Princess Bian, to that effect -- without confirmation from Emperor Xian of Han, of whom he was still technically a subject.
At the time of Cao Pi's birth, Cao Cao was a mid-level officer in the imperial guards in the capital Luoyang, with no hint that he would go on to the great campaigns that he would eventually carry out after the collapse of the imperial government in 190.
Cao Pi was the eldest son of Cao Cao and his concubine (later wife) Princess Bian.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Pi   (2201 words)

  
 Cao Cao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, Cao Cao's attempt to extend his domination south of the Yangtze River was dashed as his forces were defeated by the first coalition of his archrivals Liu Bei and Sun Quan (who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively) at the Red Cliffs in 208.
Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must have been laid.
While historical records indicate Cao Cao as a brilliant ruler, he was represented as a cunning and deceitful man in Chinese opera, where the character of Cao Cao is given a white facial makeup to reflect his treacherous personality.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Cao   (2201 words)

  
 Cao Cao
The historical Cao Cao was the son of a court official of the Han Dynasty.
Cao Zhi was regarded as the greatest poet of the age.
While the historical record indicates Cao Cao was a brilliant ruler and poet, in classical Chinese literature he is traditionally represented as a cunning and deceitful general.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/c/ca/cao_cao.html   (496 words)

  
 Cao Pi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Pi was the eldest Cao Cao and his concubine Lady Bien.
Cao Pi escaped, though Zhang Liao was hit by an arrow in his loins and soon after died of his wounds.
He was the second son of the Chinese politician and poet Cao Cao and was the first emperor and the real founder of the Kingdom of Wei (see Three Kingdoms).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Pi   (496 words)

  
 Cao Cao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, Cao Cao's attempt to extend his domination south of the Yangtze River was dashed as his forces were defeated by the first coalition of his archrivals Liu Bei and Sun Quan (who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively) at the Red Cliffs in 208.
Cao Cao (155 – 220), whose name is also often transliterated and should be correctly pronounced as Ts'ao Ts'ao, was a regional warlord and the last Chancellor of Eastern Han Dynasty who rose to great power during the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty in ancient China.
Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must have been laid.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Cao   (3246 words)

  
 Cao Shuang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Shuang (曹爽) is the son of Cao Zhen.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Shuang   (3246 words)

  
 Cao Zhi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Despite his failure in politics, Cao Zhi was hailed as one of the representatives of the poetic style of his time, together with his father Cao Cao, his elder brother Cao Pi and several other poets.
Cao Pi eventually succeeded Cao Cao in 220 and within a year declared himself the first emperor of the Kingdom of Wei.
Born in 192, Cao Zhi was the third son of the powerful warlord Cao Cao and Empress Bian.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Zhi   (1524 words)

  
 Cao Zhi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Despite his failure in politics, Cao Zhi was hailed as one of the representatives of the poetic style of his time, together with his father Cao Cao, his elder brother Cao Pi and several other poets.
Cao Pi eventually succeeded Cao Cao in 220 and within a year declared himself the first emperor of the Kingdom of Wei.
Born in 192, Cao Zhi was the third son of the powerful warlord Cao Cao and Empress Bian.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Zhi   (1524 words)

  
 University of Chicago Hospitals: Qi-Ling Cao, MD
Cao offers special skill in transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), a type of echocardiography that is performed through the esophagus.
Cao has contributed to more than 100 publications on various areas of congenital heart disease.
Cao's publications through the National Library of Medicine's PubMed online database.
www.uchospitals.edu /physicians/qi-ling-cao.php   (1524 words)

  
 Cao Cao - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must have been laid.
Cao Cao was born in the county of Qiao (谯, present day Bozhou, Anhui) in 155.
Cao Cao, however, laughed and said, "All the officials of the court – crying from dusk till dawn and dawn till dusk – could you cry Dong Zhuo to his death?" He then borrowed from Wang Yun the Seven Gem Sword with the promise that he would personally assassinate Dong Zhuo.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Cao   (1524 words)

  
 Cao Fang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
He was a grandson of Cao Zhang, who was in turn the second son of Cao Cao and consort Bian.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cao_Fang   (93 words)

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