Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DaišanDaišan - Wikipedia

    Daišan was born in the Manchu Aisin Gioro clan as the second son of Nurhaci, the founder of the Qing dynasty. His mother was Nurhaci's first consort, Lady Tunggiya (佟佳氏). He was an older half-brother of Nurhaci's successor, Hong Taiji .

  2. DAIŠAN 代善, Aug. 19, 1583–1648, Nov. 25, the first Prince Li (禮親王), was the second son of Nurhaci [q. v.], founder of the Ch'ing Dynasty. At first Daišan held the rank of Hošoi Beile 和碩貝勒, the highest that a Manchu prince could have before 1636.

  3. Daišan 代善, Aug. 19, 1583-1648, Nov. 25, the first Prince Li (禮親王), was the second son of Nurhaci [q.v.], founder of the Ch'ing Dynasty. At first Daišan held the rank of Hošoi Beile 和碩貝勒, the highest that a Manchu prince could have before 1636.

    • 1583
    • today
    • 1648 (64-65)
    • Private User
  4. GIYEŠU 傑書, 1645–1697, April, the first Prince K'ang (康親王), was a great-grandson of Nurhaci [ q. v.] and a grandson of Daišan [ q. v. ]. His father, Huse 祜塞 (d. 1646, posthumous name 惠順) was the eighth and youngest son of Daišan and held the rank of a prince of the fifth degree.

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › DaišanDaišan - Wikiwand

    Daišan was an influential Manchu prince and statesman of the Qing dynasty. Introduction Daišan; Family background; Career Nurhaci's reign Hong Taiji's reign Shunzhi Emperor's reign Death and legacy; Family; Ancestry; See also; References –.. (). , .. ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CuyenCuyen - Wikipedia

    He and his brother Daišan stormed the town of Fio Hoton (belonging to present-day Sanjiazi Manchu Village, Hunchun, Yanbian) in an attempt to complete the resettlement of another Jurchen tribe who was said to be suffering oppression from the Ula clan, a strategic rival to Nurhaci.

  7. CUYEN 褚英 (出燕), 1580–1615, Sept.–Oct., was the eldest son of Nurhaci [ q. v. ]. His mother was Hahana Jacing (see under Nurhaci ), who likewise gave birth to Daišan [ q. v. ], and to a daughter who married Hohori [ q. v. ]. Cuyen was at first given the title taiji, a Mongolian word for 'prince.'.