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Topic: Jin Feidi


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  Emperor Fei of Jin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Emperor Fei of Jin (晋废帝/晉廢帝, pinyin Jìn Fèidì, Wade-Giles Chin Fei-ti) (342-November 23, 386), personal name Sima Yi (司馬奕), courtesy name Yanling (延齡), was an emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (265-420) in China.
He was the younger brother (from the same mother) of Emperor Ai and later deposed by military leader Huan Wen.
Immediately after Emperor Fei took the throne, the important city Luoyang (which had served as Jin's capital early in the dynasty's history) fell to Former Yan, because Emperor Ai's death prevented a relief force from being dispatched.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Emperor_Fei_of_Jin_China   (877 words)

  
 3. PROCEEDINGS
Feidi then drew the attention of the meeting to the fact that globalization of markets and further liberalization of trade including international fish trade had become a major theme on the international agenda.
Feidi then highlighted that participation in international trade was an important feature of many of the fishery and aquaculture economies of the world and that the participation of developing countries in this trade has therefore always been a primordial concern for FAO.
Feidi gave an overview of background and contents of the Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries, which had been adopted by the Twenty-eight Session of the FAO Conference in October 1995.
www.fao.org /DOCREP/MEETING/004/X8488E/x8488e04.htm   (12325 words)

  
 Science Fair Projects - Emperor Fei of Jin China
August and September, 369: Forces of Jin reached Fangtou (southwest of modern-day Rui County, Henan Province).
September and October 369: Relief forces from Former Qin was sent at the request of Former Yan.
November and December 369: Forces of Former Yan commanded by Murong Chui inflicted heavy losses on the retreating Jin forces.
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Jin_Feidi   (530 words)

  
 Jin Dynasty (265-420) - China-related Topics JI-JL - China-Related Topics
The Jin Dynasty (晉 pinyin j?n, 265-420) followed the Three Kingdoms and preceded the Southern and Northern Dynasties in China.
Meanwhile remnants of the Jin court fled from the north to the south and reestablished the Jin court at Jiankang, which was located south-eastward of Luoyang and Chang'an and near modern-day Nanjing, under Prince of Longya.
Battle of Fei turned out to be a victory of Jin under a short-lived cooperation of Huan Chong, brother of Huan Wen and the Prime Minister (or Imperial Secretariat) Xie An.
www.famouschinese.com /virtual/Jin_Dynasty_(265-420)   (543 words)

  
 Three Kingdoms Period, China
The age of civil wars and disunity began with the era of the Three Kingdoms (Wei, Shu, and Wu, which had overlapping reigns during the period A.D. In later times, fiction and drama greatly romanticized the reputed chivalry of this period.
Unity was restored briefly in the early years of the Jin dynasty (A.D. 265-420), but the Jin could not long contain the invasions of the nomadic peoples.
In A.D. 317 the Jin court was forced to flee from Luoyang and reestablished itself at Nanjing to the south.
www.asianartmall.com /d3king.htm   (128 words)

  
 Emperor Fei of Jin China   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Emperor Fei of Jin China (341 or 342 - November 23 386) was an emperor of the Eastern Jin Dynasty (265-420) in China.
He was the younger brother (from same mother) of Emperor Ai and later deposed by military leader Wen.
September and October 369 : Relief forces from Former Qin was sent at the request of Yan.
www.freeglossary.com /Jin_Feidi   (372 words)

  
 Jurchen Jin Dynasty -- Political, Social, Cultural, Historical Analysis Of China
The Tatars had assisted the early Jurchens in defeating the Mongol (Meng-ku) rebellions, handed over Mongol leader Ambakai (dispueted to have adopted tribal name of Tayichi'ut) and his son to the Jurchens for execution in AD 1150s, and dealt the remaining Meng-ku tribes a decisive defeat near Lake Buir in AD 1160s.
When Jin Emperor Xizong died, his grandson colluded with Jurchen Jin General Wuzu in killing an uncle called Dalai, and Dalai's descendants fled to Kabul-khan's Mengwu people for assitance in avenging on the new Jurchen emperor.
Ogedei declined Jurchen Jin's tributes for condoling Genghis Khan's death and declined again Jurchen Jin's tributes for congratulating Ogedei on the enthronement.
www.uglychinese.org /jurchen.htm   (5994 words)

  
 Emperor Fei of Jin - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
- style="text-align: center;"}before=Emperor Ai of Jin}}}title=Emperor of Jin Dynasty (265-420)years=365-371}}}after=Emperor Jianwen of Jin}}
This encyclopedia, history, geography and biography article about Emperor Fei of Jin contains research on
Emperor Fei of Jin, Early life, Reign, After removal, Era name, Personal information, 342 births, 386 deaths and Jin Dynasty emperors.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Jin_Feidi   (920 words)

  
 Mongols & Mongolians - Political, Social, Cultural, Historical Analysis Of China -- Research Into Origins Of Huns, ...
They are the richest people in Mongolia for silver mining, but internal quarrels kept them weak and they acted as the vassals of the Jurchen Jin Dynasty (founded in AD 1115) and constantly played the role of a hatchetman in subjugating various Mongol tribes.
When Jin emperor Xizong died, his grandson colluded with General Wuzu in killing his uncle Dalai, and Dalai's descendants fled to Kabul-khan for assitance in avenging on the Jurchens.
It was said that after the migration of the Jurchens to north China, the Borjigin Mongols had emerged in central Mongolia as the leading clan of a loose federation.
www.uglychinese.org /mongolian.htm   (13892 words)

  
 ENGLISH ENCYCLOPAEDIA - Emperor Fei of Jin China   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
• August and September, 369: Forces of Jin reached Fangtou (southwest of modern-day Rui County, Henan Province).
• October 369: Troops of Former Yan inflicted loss on the forces of Jin after cutting off supply lines.
• November and December 369: Forces of Former Yan commanded by Murong Chui inflicted heavy losses on the retreating Jin forces.
encyclopaedic.net /english/em/emperor_fei_of_jin_china.html   (544 words)

  
 Manchu "Nurhachi" Y chromosome founded - Asia Finest Discussion Forum
Marco polo bridge was build around 1152 when Jin moved the capital from Manchuria to Beijing naming it ZhongDu(Middle capital).
All men, women and children in the capitals were massacred and the modern city of Beijing were founded by Mongols as I said.
Matters related to Jurchens and Manchus would be covered in three sections: Jurchens and Manchurians section, this section on Jurchen Jin Dynasty, and Manchu Qing Dynasty section.
www.asiafinest.com /forum/index.php?showtopic=56796   (4854 words)

  
 China History Forum, chinese history forum > Complete List of Rulers in Chinese History
The Jin Empire was established in 1115 AD by Wanyan Clan (完颜氏), who were Jurchen people (Chinese: Nüzhen 女真).
The Manchu people were descendents of the Tungus Jurchen people (Chinese: Nüzhen 女真), that had founded the Jin dynasty in 1115 — 1234 AD.
However, Liao, Jin, and Xixia empire all had emperors named after chinese convention and thus were considered chinese dynasty.
www.chinahistoryforum.com /lofiversion/index.php/t384.html   (4017 words)

  
 Asia Finest Discussion Forum > Manchu "Nurhachi" Y chromosome founded
Feb 15 2006, 02:16 AM We need to make a distinction between the Jurchen of the Jin Dynasty and the Jurchen who stayed in Manchuria who later became ancestors of the Qing Dynasty.
The "Jin Jurchen" were pretty much wiped out or assimilated during the Mongol Yuan rule.
They were either massacred by the Mongols or they escaped death by adopting Han names, clothing and intermarried with the locals.
www.asiafinest.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t56796.html   (6109 words)

  
 Chinese History - titles of rulers and names of persons (www.chinaknowledge.de)
Names like Han Modi 漢末帝, Jin Shaodi 晉少帝, or Jin Feidi 齊廢帝 are normally not cited in this way but are translated as "the last ruler of Han", "the minor emperor of Jin", "the deposed emperor of Qi".
"JIN" 晉 is the follower of the Three Kingdoms, "JINN" 金 is the Jurchen empire of north China.
å“€ ai "the Lamentable": ZHOU (Lu, Hann), HAN, JIN, TANG, JINN
www.chinaknowledge.de /History/titles.html   (1749 words)

  
 americanos :: TURKS & UYGURS -
During the Tang Dynasty, Pogu Huai'eng, an Uygur, had obtained a post as a general in the court.
After the fall of Tang Dynasty (AD 619-907), three dynasties among the Five Dynasties of northern China, i.e., Posterior Tang 923-936, Posterior Jin 936-946, Posterior Han 947-950, were ruled by the Shatuo (Sha'to) Turks.
In the first year of Western Wei Emperor Feidi, Tumen defeated the Ruruans, causing Ruruan Khan commit suicide and Ruruan Khan's son flee to Northern Qi Dynasty.
americanos.blogharbor.com /blog/_archives/2005/10/9/1289393.html   (5803 words)

  
 Complete List of Rulers in Chinese History - China History Forum, chinese history forum
[Gong He] (共和), 841 BC — 827 BC Zhou Xuanwang (周宣王), Ji Jin (姬静), 827 BC — 780 BC Zhou Youwang (周幽王), Ji Gongsheng (姬宫湦), 781 BC — 771 BC Eastern Zhou (东周) [1066 BC — 771 BC]
Jin Wudi (晋武帝), Sima Yan (司马炎), 265 — 290 AD Jin Huidi (晋惠帝), Sima Zhong (司马衷), 290 -306 AD Jin Huaidi (晋怀帝), Sima Chi (司马炽), 307 — 313 AD Jin Mindi (晋愍帝), Sima Ye (司马邺;), 313 — 317 AD Eastern Jin (东晋) [317 — 420 AD]
Wendi (文帝), Yuan Baoju (元宝炬), 535 — 551 AD Feidi (废帝), Yuan Qin (元钦), 552 — 554 AD Gongdi (恭帝), Yuan Kuo (元廓), 554 — 556 AD North Dynasty — Northern Qi (北朝 — 北齐) [ 550 — 577 AD]
www.chinahistoryforum.com /index.php?showtopic=384   (2096 words)

  
 DADES DEL SUMARI DE JOURNAL OF CRYSTAL GROWTH   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Autor: Kim, Jin Soo; Lee, Cheul-Ro; Lee, Joo In; Leem, Jae-Young
Títol: Parasitic reaction and its effect on the growth rate of AlN by metalorganic chemical vapor deposition.
Títol: Growth and characterization of nonlinear optical crystal BaCaBO3F. Autor: Zhang, Guochun; Liu, Hongjun; Wang, Xian; Fan, Feidi; Fu, Peizhen
sumaris.cbuc.es /cgis/sumari.cgi?issn=00220248&idsumari=A2006N000001V000289   (1708 words)

  
 ANNEXES
Inaugural Address by Dr. Jung-Ook Lee, President, Korea Maritime Institute (KMI), read by Dr. Seong K. Park, Senior Research Fellow
Izzat Feidi, Chief, Fish Utilisation and Marketing Service, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
Izzat Feidi, Chief, Fish Utilisation and Marketing Service, FAO Rome: Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries: a contribution to global regulations of fish trade
www.fao.org /DOCREP/MEETING/004/X8488E/x8488e05.htm   (10232 words)

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