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Topic: King Mo of Zhou


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In the News (Tue 17 Nov 09)

  
  Encyclopedia: Zhou Dynasty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
King Yi of Zhou (ch 周懿王; zhōu yì wáng) or King I of Chou was the seventh sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.
King Xiao of Zhou (ch 周孝王; zhōu xìao wáng) or King Hsiao of Chou was the eighth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.
King Yi of Zhou (ch 周夷王; zhōu yí wáng) or King I of Chou was the ninth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Zhou-Dynasty   (6125 words)

  
 King Mu of Zhou - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
King Mo of Zhou (ch 周穆王 zhōu mò wáng) or King Mo of Chou was the fifth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.
King Gong of Zhou and King Xiao of Zhou
Mo (pinyin mò wáng), literary meaning: "reverend"
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/King_Mo_of_Zhou   (75 words)

  
 940s BC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
947 BC - Death of Zhou mo wang, King of the Zhou Dynasty of China.
946 BC - Zhou gong wang becomes King of the Zhou Dynasty of China,
945 BC - Egypt: Psusennes III dies, the last king of the Twenty-first Dynasty.
hallencyclopedia.com /940s_BC   (213 words)

  
 Zhou Dynasty -- Political, Social, Cultural, Historical Analysis Of China -- Research Into Origins Of Huns, Uygurs, ...
King Xiangwang conferred onto Jinn Lord the title of Count and the land of Yangfan or 'he nei' (pronounced as He-rui in ancient Chinese to mean the winding section of the Yellow River).
One of the sons of King Shaokang of Xia Dynasty was permanently assigned to the Kuaiji land to guard the tomb, and the later Yue Principality was said to have descended from this lineage.
Zhou King Pingwang moved eastward to Luoyi in 770 BC under the escort of Qin lord, and promised to Qin the land of Feng and Qishan should Qin defeat Quanrong and recover the territories.
www.uglychinese.org /zhou.htm   (14632 words)

  
 Eastern Zhou Period
In its early days, the Western Zhou Dynasty (The 11th century BC to 711 BC) was sufficiently powerful to be able to control the vassal states.
Although the king retained his position as nominal overlord he was no longer able to control the activities of his vassals.
Before long, after King Yingzheng succeeded to the throne, he expedited his project of annexation and finally in 221 BC united China and established a unified, multi-national, autocratic and power-centralized state, putting an end to the Warring States Period.
www.warriortours.com /intro/history/zhou/eastern.htm   (1758 words)

  
 Creation of the Gods: A Somewhat Less Than Critical Commentary
King Zhou was named crown prince by his father King Di Yi due to a display of miraculous strength.
King Zhou later found that Daji was deathly ill. Daji convinced the king that the sword was a curse on her, and that King Zhou had been tricked by a sorceror.
King Zhou informed Daji that despite the barbaric torture, the ministers were not afraid to criticize the king.
clausius.engr.utk.edu /planetc/books/creation/text/outline.html   (10952 words)

  
 Ethics of Shang, Zhou and the Classics by Sanderson Beck
The king bragged of how the slandering of him had stopped because the people had become even afraid to talk; but the Duke of Shao pointed out that he had merely dammed it up, which could be as dangerous as preventing the flow of water.
In 771 BC King Yu was killed by invading barbarians, and the resulting split between two courts led to the acceptance of the eastern capital as primary, marking the beginning of the Eastern Zhou period.
The Zhou patriarch Wen Wang opposed the use of alcohol except in the ceremonies, as the fall of the Shang dynasty was attributed to excessive drinking.
www.san.beck.org /EC13-Chou.html   (14215 words)

  
 Ethics of Daoism and Mo-zi by Sanderson Beck
The eldest son of King Huai was made king of Chu, and he appointed the youngest son Premier; but the latter was blamed for the loss of his father and resented the criticism of Ju Yuan and had him banished.
With the decaying of the Zhou dynasty, the philosophies of Confucius, Mo-zi, and Yang Zhu competed with polemics.
Kings were established primarily to restrain violence and punish anarchy, but kings have come to take advantage of their power, becoming an instrument for burdening the people.
www.san.beck.org /EC15-Taoism.html   (15331 words)

  
 Ancient China: The Chou, 1050-256 BC
The only way to know that the mandate has passed is the overthrow of the king or emperor; if usurpation succeeds, then the mandate has passed to another, but if it fails, then the mandate still resides with the king.
The Chou king was killed, but his son, the heir to the throne, fled to Loyang and established his government there.
He, however, believed that the root cause of human misery was "selective love," and so he preached a "universal love." By that he did not mean some 1960's emotionalism; rather, he believed that humans should regard their obligations to other humans as universal.
www.wsu.edu:8080 /~dee/ANCCHINA/CHOU.HTM   (1525 words)

  
 The Philosophy of Mo Di   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Mo Di lived during the last half of the fifth century and into the opening decade of the fourth.
Mo Di was motivated by a conviction that only ungraded love, which recognized no special distinctions for one's own kin, would protect society from the evils of greed, partiality, and warfare.
Mo Di is called a commoner, to be ranked with clients and the ordinary populace, and refused a royal interview because of his base origins.
www.as.miami.edu /phi/bio/Buddha/modi.htm   (1179 words)

  
 Zhou Dynasty - China History - China
The Zhou Dynasty (周朝; Wade-Giles: Chou Dynasty) (late 10th century BC to late 9th century - 256 BC) followed the Shang Dynasty and preceded the Qin Dynasty in China.
The Zhou dynasty was founded by the Ji family and had its capital at Hao, near the city of Xi'an, or Chang'an, as it was known in its heyday in the imperial period.
The queen's son Ji Yijiu was proclaimed the new king by the nobles from the states of Zheng, Lu, Qin and the Marquess of Shen.
www.famouschinese.com /virtual/Zhou_Dynasty   (814 words)

  
 Zhuangzi [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
The first and most important of these schools was that of Confucius, who became the chief representative of the Ruists (Confucians), the scholars and propagators of the wisdom and culture of the tradition.
Their great rivals were the Mohists, the followers of Mozi ("Master Mo"), who were critical of what they perceived to be the elitism and extravagance of the traditional culture.
According to Sima Qian, Zhuangzi was born in a village called Meng, in the state of Song; according to Lu Deming, the Sui-Tang dynasty scholar, the Pu River in which Zhuangzi was said to have fished was in the state of Chen which, as Wang Guowei points out, had become a territory of Chu.
www.iep.utm.edu /z/zhuangzi.htm   (7196 words)

  
 Chronology of Asian maritime history
Guangzhou customs officer Zhou Qufei wrote of an island in the west (Madagascar?) from which people 'fl as lacquer' with frizzy hair were captured and sold as slaves to Arab countries.
Zhou Qufei also wrote that Srivijaya now had few goods of its own to sell, and relied on force to compel passing ships to stop at its ports.
C12th: Sri Lankan king Parakrama Bahu I gathered a fleet at Mahatittha to invade the Pandyan kingdom.
www.maritimeasia.ws /topic/chronology.html   (14220 words)

  
 Tsu-Jae King: Publications
She, Y.-C. King, T.-J. King and C. Hu, “Modeling and design study of nanocrystal memory devices,” presented at the 59th Annual Device Research Conference (Notre Dame, Indiana, USA), June 2001.
Yamada and T.-J. King, “Variable stress-induced leakage current and analysis of anomalous charge loss for flash memory application,” to be presented at the IEEE International Reliability Physics Symposium (Dallas, Texas, USA), April 2003.
Zhou, S. Qin, C. Chan and T.-J. King, “Investigation of plasma immersion ion implantation hydrogenation for poly-Si TFTs using an ICP plasma source,” presented at the MRS 1996 Fall Meeting (Boston, Massachusetts, USA), December 1996.
www.cs.berkeley.edu /~tking/pubs.html   (5946 words)

  
 940s BC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
947 BC - Death of Zhou mo wang[?], King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China.
946 BC - Zhou gong wang[?] becomes King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China,
945 BC - Egypt: Psuennes II[?] dies, the last king of the Twenty-first Dynasty[?].
www.city-search.org /94/940s-bc.html   (353 words)

  
 King Xiao of Zhou -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
King Xiao of Zhou -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
King Xiao of Zhou ((Click link for more info and facts about ch) ch 周孝王; zhōu xìao wáng) or King Hsiao of Chou was the eighth sovereign of the Chinese (The imperial dynasty of China from 1122 to 221 BC; notable for the rise of Confucianism and Taoism) Zhou Dynasty.
(Click link for more info and facts about King Mo of Zhou) King Mo of Zhou
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/k/ki/king_xiao_of_zhou.htm   (275 words)

  
 ipedia.com: King Mu of Zhou Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
King Mo of Zhou or King Mo of Chou was the fifth sovereign of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty.
Personal information family name Ji in Chinese given name Man in Chinese era name none father King Zhao of Zhou...
Mo 穆 (pinyin mò wáng), literary meaning: "reverend"
www.ipedia.com /king_mu_of_zhou.html   (114 words)

  
 Hetecon.com - The Heterodox Economics Portal
Mail: UMKC, Dept. of Economics, 211 Haag Hall, 5100 Rockhill Rd., Kansas City, MO 64110
• "Banking on Social Capital in the Era of Globalization: Chinese Ethnobanks in Los Angeles," with Wei Li, Yu Zhou, and Maria Chee, Environment and Planning A. Vol.
• "The traverse" in Elgar Companion To Post Keynesian Economics edited by King, J. [Edward Elgar: 2003 Cheltenham, pp 355-359 ISBN 1 84064 630 6].
www.open.ac.uk /socialsciences/hetecon/economists.htm   (9143 words)

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