عرض مشاركة واحدة
قديم 08-05-2010, 10:17 PM
المشاركة 96
ايوب صابر
مراقب عام سابقا

اوسمتي

  • موجود
افتراضي رد: دراسة احصائية عن اليتم والشخصيات الخالدة
82
سوى ون تي



The Sui, 589-618 AD
The chaos of the Three Kingdoms finally came to an end under the hand of Sui Wen-ti, a general of mixed blood. He reunified the northern kingdoms, centralized the government, reformed the taxation structure, and conquered the south--all in a single lifetime. The government he established was remarkably stable during his lifetime, and he began ambitious building and economic projects. However, unlike the founders of the Han dynasties, Sui Wen-ti did not adopt Confucianism as the state philosophy, but rather embraced Buddhism and Taoism, both of which had spread so rapidly during the Three Kingdoms period. Sui Wen-ti employed a cadre of Buddhist advisors in his program to unify the country, and Buddhism would become the government philosophy until the founding the Sung dynasty several centuries later.

Sui-Wen-ti's son, Sui Yang-ti, who rose to be emperor on the death of his father, soon overextended himself, meddling first in the politics of the northern tribes and then leading military expeditions against Korea. Eventually, these wars with Korea, in combination with a series of unlucky natural disasters, bankrupted the government, which soon suffered under the weight of widespread rebellion. In the fight for power which followed the assassination of Sui-Yang-ti, the control of the new, centralized government fell to Li Yuan, one of Sui Yang-ti's generals. Li Yuan began a new dynasty, the T'ang, which lasted for another three hundred years
http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/CHEMPIRE/SUI.HTM

Sui Wen-ti (541-604) is the formal posthumous name of the Chinese emperor Yang Chien, founder of the Sui dynasty. He brought about the unification of China after more than 3 centuries of political division.
The ancestry of Sui Wen-ti, born Yang Chien, is not certain, but it is likely that his antecedents served as officials under several of the non-Chinese states in North China. His father, Yang Chung, was a soldier and was given a title of nobility and a fief by the last ruler of the Northern Wei and again earned a noble title and fief by his distinguished military service to Yü-wen T'ai, the founder of the Western Wei dynasty. Yü-wen T'ai gave him the title of Duke of Sui, a title which Yang Chien inherited.
Yang Chien was born in a Buddhist monastery in North China and grew up in the care of a nun. When he was 13 he entered the imperial college in the capital, a school dedicated to teaching the Confucian classics to the children of officials and nobles. At the school he was said to have been reserved and distant in manner.
http://www.answers.com/topic/sui-wen-ti


Yang
Jian was born in 541. His mother Lady Lü was probably Yang Zhong's wife. Yang Jian was said to be serious in his young age, and even his closest friends did not dare to

Name: Sui Wen-ti
Birth Date: 541
Death Date: 604
Place of Birth: China
Place of Death: China
Nationality: Chinese
Gender: Male
Occupations: emperor

Encyclopedia of World Biography on Sui Wen-ti
Sui Wen-ti (541-604) is the formal posthumous name of the Chinese emperor Yang Chien, founder of the Sui dynasty. He brought about the unification of China after more than 3 centuries of political division.
The ancestry of Sui Wen-ti, born Yang Chien, is not certain, but it is likely that his antecedents served as officials under several of the non-Chinese states in North China. His father, Yang Chung, was a soldier and was given a title of nobility and a fief by the last ruler of the Northern Wei and again earned a noble title and fief by his distinguished military service to Yü-wen T'ai, the founder of the Western Wei dynasty. Yü-wen T'ai gave him the title of Duke of Sui, a title which Yang Chien inherited.
Yang Chien was born in a Buddhist monastery in North China and grew up in the care of a nun. When he was 13 he entered the imperial college in the capital, a school dedicated to teaching the Confucian classics to the children of officials and nobles
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/...ror_Wen_of_Sui

Emperor Suiwen (AD 541-604), named Yang Jian, was born in Huayin, Hongnong (present Huayin County, Shaanxi Province). His father Yang Zhong was a military nobility of the Western Wei and Northern Zhou Dynasties. During the reign of Emperor Wu of the Western Zhou Dynasty, Yang Zhong served as the General-in-chief, and was entitled with "Duke Sui". Yang Jian inherited his father's bannerette.
Jiazi Day (a cycle of sixty years) of February, AD 581, Emperor Jing of the Northern Zhou Dynasty voluntarily announced to demise the throne to Yang Jian according to people’s expectation. After three refusals, Yang Jian succeeded to the throne, established Great Sui as the title of his country, changed the title of his reign to Kaihuang, and gave an imperial edict for an amnesty.
.
http://history.cultural-china.com/en/46History3516.html
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404706223.html
http://panlogcom.nayk.ru:8881/cgi-bi...erson&id=23953


- هناك ما يشير الى انه تربى في دير بوذي من قبل ممرضة Nurse
- Yang Chien was born in a Buddhist monastery in North China and grew up in the care of a nun.
- هناك ما يشير إلى أن والده مات وهو صغير ولكن ليس هناك تواريخ محددة who rose to be emperor on the death of his father.
- على الأغلب انه فقد الأم في طفولته.


سنعتبره مجهول