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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Zhu_ShizhenZhu Shizhen - Wikipedia

    Zhu Shizhen (Chinese: 朱世珍; pinyin: Zhū Shìzhēn; 1281–1344), born Zhu Wusi (Chinese: 朱五四; pinyin: Zhū Wǔsì), was the father of Zhu Yuanzhang, the founding emperor of the Ming dynasty.

    • Zhu Wusi, (朱五四), 1281, Zhiyuan 18, (至元十八年), Jurong
    • Empress Chun
    • 1344 (aged 63), Zhizheng 4, (至正四年)
    • Ming Imperial Mausoleum (明皇陵, in present-day Fengyang, Anhui)
  2. Zhu Shuzhen (chino: 朱淑真, c. 1135–1180) poetisa china de la dinastía Song. Se casó con un oficial que le dio problemas durante el matrimonio. Sus padres quemaron sus poemas porque, o se suicidó, o tuvo una aventura.

  3. Hongwu Emperor (21 October 1328 – 24 June 1398), also known by his temple name as the Emperor Taizu of Ming (明太祖), personal name Zhu Yuanzhang (朱元璋; Chu Yüan-chang), courtesy name Guorui (國瑞; 国瑞), was the founding emperor of the Ming dynasty, reigning from 1368 to 1398.

    • Forefathers of House of Zhu
    • Numbers of Actual Peerages
    • List of Actual Princely Peerages
    • Posthumous Imperial Princes and Untitled Imperial Princes
    • Non-Imperial Princes

    For convenience to shows relationships of these imperial princes and emperors, this text will shows forefathers of Hongwu Emperorand their sons.

    First rank princely peerages

    1. Hongwu Emperor's line: 25 peerages (including Prince of Jingjiang); two were absorbed into the crown (Yongle Emperor and Southern Ming Longwu Emperor), seven were abolished, and two had no heir 2. Zhu Biao's line: three peerages, all of them abolished. 3. Yongle Emperor's line: two peerages 4. Hongxi Emperor's line: eight peerages; four had no heir 5. Xuande Emperor's line: one peerage, absorbed into the crown (Jingtai Emperor) 6. Emperor Yingzong's line: eight peerages, one absorbed into...

    By Southern Ming

    1. By Longwu Emperor: Three peerages, two from the line of the Prince of Tang, one from the cadet peerage of the line of the Prince of Yi 2. By Zhu Yihai: one peerage, from the cadet peerage of the line of Prince of Ning

    By Hongwu Emperor

    1. Prince of Qin(inherited) 2. Prince of Jin(晉) (inherited) 3. Prince of Yan (absorbed into crown) 4. Prince of Zhou(inherited) 5. Prince of Chu(inherited) 6. Prince of Qi(abolished) 7. Prince of Tan (heirless) 8. Prince of Lu(鲁) (inherited) 9. Prince of Jingjiang(inherited) 10. Prince of Shu (inherited) 11. Prince of Xiang (湘) (heirless) 12. Prince of Dai(inherited) 13. Prince of Su (inherited) 14. Prince of Liao (inherited) 15. Prince of Qing (inherited) 16. Prince of Ning(inherited) 17. Pr...

    By Jianwen Emperor

    1. Prince of Wu (demoted to Comm. Prince of Guangze, not inherited) 2. Prince of Heng (demoted to Comm. Prince of Huai'en, no heir) 3. Prince of Xu (徐) (demoted to Comm. Prince of Fuhui and Comm. Prince of Ouning, no heir)

    By Yongle Emperor

    1. Prince of Han(漢) (second creation, abolished) 2. Prince of Zhao(second creation, inherited)

    After the Hongwu Emperor was enthroned, he posthumously honored and bestowed on his brothers and patrilineal relatives various second-rank princely titles. Also, some imperial sons who died prematurely were posthumously bestowed with first-rank princely titles, but some of them also had not posthumous titles, too. Below shows all of the posthumous ...

    According to the regulation of the Ming dynasty, only imperial sons and other imperial clan members (excluding matrilineal relatives of the imperial house) can award princely titles. For non-imperial and nobles (excluding matrilineal relatives of the imperial house), the highest rank title that could be awarded was “duke” (国公), they could only post...

  4. Li Shizhen (1518–1593) was a famous medical scholar who has sort of the same stature as Leonardo da Vinci in the West. He was born in Hubei in 1518 at a time of relative prosperity in the middle of the Ming era.

  5. Dr. Zhu's laboratory focuses on i) exploring the in vivo contributions of new genetic findings emerging from integrative genomic studies to neuroblastoma pathogenesis, ii) uncovering molecular mechanisms that underlie the tumor initiation and progression, and iii) developing novel targeted therapies for this devastating childhood malignancy. 2.

  6. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Li Shizhen | SpringerLink

    The great Chinese naturalist and pharmacologist Li Shizhen was born in 1518 near modern Qichun (Hubei). Born into a family of doctors, he concentrated on the study of medicine at an early age under the guidance of his father.