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| | Sichuan / the state of Shu in Sichuan at different periods / the Shu Han dynasty (214-263) of Liu Bei 劉備|刘备 during the Three Kingdoms | |
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| | surname Shu | |
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| | surname Shu / (name of an ancient place) | |
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| | surname Shu | |
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| | Shu Han (c. 200-263), Liu Bei's kingdom in Sichuan during the Three Kingdoms, claiming legitimacy as successor of Han | |
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| | Guan Yu (-219), general of Shu and blood-brother of Liu Bei in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, fearsome fighter famous for virtue and loyalty / posthumously worshipped and identified with the guardian Bodhisattva Sangharama | |
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| | surname Shu | |
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| | Zhao Yun (-229), general of Shu in Romance of the Three Kingdoms | |
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| | Shu Qi (1976-), Taiwanese actress | |
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| | Liu Shan (207-271), son of Liu Bei, reigned as Shu Han emperor 233-263 / Taiwan pr. [Liu2 Chan2] | |
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| | Ma Chao (176-222), general of Shu in Romance of the Three Kingdoms | |
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| | Huang Zhong (-220), general of Shu in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, portrayed as an old fighter | |
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| | Liu Bei (161-223), warlord at the end of the Han dynasty and founder of the Han kingdom of Shu 蜀漢|蜀汉 (c. 200-263), later the Shu Han dynasty | |
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| | courtesy name of Lin Shu 林紓|林纾 | |
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| | "he failed to complete his quest before death" (line from the poem "The Premier of Shu" 蜀相 by Du Fu 杜甫) | |
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| | Zhang Fei (168-221), general of Shu and blood-brother of Liu Bei in Romance of the Three Kingdoms, famous as fearsome fighter and lover of wine | |
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| | courtesy name of Zhao Yun 趙雲|赵云, general of Shu in Romance of the Three Kingdoms | |
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| | Lin Shu (1852-1924), writer and influential translator and adaptor of vast swathes of Western literature into Classical Chinese | |
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| | the Prime Minister of Shu (i.e. Zhuge Liang 諸葛亮|诸葛亮) | |
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| | Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong 羅貫中|罗贯中, one of the Four Classic Novels of Chinese literature, a fictional account of the Three Kingdoms at the break-up of the Han around 200 AD, portraying Liu Bei's 劉備|刘备 Shu Han 蜀漢|蜀汉 as heroes and Cao Cao's 曹操 Wei 魏 as villains | |
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| | the Qinling plank road to Shu, a historical mountain road from Shaanxi to Sichuan | |
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| | Zi Wei Dou Shu, a form of Chinese fortune-telling | |
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| | Shu Menglan (1759-1835), Qin dynasty writer, poet and editor of Anthology of ci poems tunes 白香詞譜|白香词谱 | |
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| | Shu Qingchun (1899-1966), the real name of author Lao She 老舍 | |
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| | Zhuge Liang (181-234), military leader and prime minister of Shu Han 蜀漢|蜀汉 during the Three Kingdoms period / the main hero of the fictional Romance of Three Kingdoms 三國演義|三国演义, where he is portrayed as a sage and military genius / (fig.) a mastermind | |
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| | A-dou, nickname of Liu Shan 劉禪|刘禅 (207-271), son of Liu Bei, reigned as Shu Han emperor 233-263 / (fig.) weak and inept person | |
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| | Uncle Tom's Cabin, translated and adapted by Lin Shu 林紓|林纾 | |
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| | Kusha-shū (Japanese Buddhism school) | |
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| | lit. Shu Han 蜀漢|蜀汉 and Cao Wei 曹魏 cannot coexist (idiom) / fig. two enemies cannot live under the same sky / (former KMT slogan against CCP) "gentlemen and thieves cannot coexist" | |
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