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  1. The Legend of Yang Guifei, also known as The Secret History of Concubine Yang, is a Chinese television series loosely based on the romance between Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang dynasty and his consort Yang Yuhuan. The series was directed by You Xiaogang and starred Yin Tao and Anthony Wong as the couple. It was first broadcast on Hunan Satellite ...

  2. Yang Yuhuan (Chinese: 楊玉環; 719 – 15 July 756), often known as Yang Guifei (楊貴妃, with Guifei being the highest rank for imperial consorts during her time), and known briefly by the Taoist nun name Taizhen (太真), was the beloved consort of Emperor Xuanzong of Tang during his later years. She is known as one of the Four Beauties ...

  3. 31 de mar. de 2021 · Yang Guifei was known as one of the four beauties of Ancient China. Being the favorite consort of Emperor Xuanzong, she was the important and influential wom...

    • 7 min
    • 136.3K
    • Story of Historical Figures
  4. The affair of the last Tang emperor in China and his beautiful concubine, Yang Guifei (Yang Kwei-fei) was the great love story of the age and often mentioned in ancient Chinese and Japanese literature. " The Song of Unending Sorrow ," by Po Chu-i (772-846), was the most popular Chinese poem in Heian Japan. With some embellishment, it recounted ...

  5. Yang Guifei (Yang Kuei-fey) concubine of the Tang emperor Xuanzong (Hs an-tsung; 685-762). Renowned beauty of Chinese history. Of humble origins, she is said to have won the favor and passion of the emperor to the extent that he eventually began to neglect state affairs. She adopted An Lu-shan, a general of Turkic origin, as her son and helped ...

  6. Yang Guifei (719 — 756), named Yang Yuhuan, Taoist Name Taizhen, respected as Lady Yang, was one of the Four Beauties in the history of China. No one knows her heart and real intention, but she had married the two most powerful men of that period. Her second husband, Li Longji (685 — 762), the Emperor Xuanzong of Tang or Tang Ming Huang ...

  7. Yang Guifei, however, was viewed more sympathetically when her story found its way into Chinese fictional tales, a development that was pursued further in Heian Japan with the dissemination of the “Song of Everlasting Sorrow” (Chang hen ge) a romantic ballad composed by the renowned Tang Chinese poet Bai Juyi (772-846) in 806, nearly fifty years after the death of Yang Guifei.