On Fri, 03 Aug 2007 07:47:31 -0000
Mother's eyes are sparkling diamonds
Still the moon shows no light
This rose is withered, may God deliver
The rake at the gates of hell tonight
Post by Mohammed the Holy FuckerYan Jing is the same as Yen Jing.
Swallow =Yan Jing = Yen Jing .
The third Ming emperor, Yongle (b. May 2, 1360, d. August 12, 1424)
during his reign in the 15th century (1402 - 1424) shifted the capital
from Nanjing (Yingtianfu) to Beijing (Yenjing).
Post by Mohammed the Holy FuckerDuring the Tang Dynasty ,
An Rokhan , a Sogdian-Turkish person,
By distinguishing himself in the border wars of the northwestern
frontier, particularly the Khitan invasion of 751-752, Rokhan rose
through the ranks to become the military governor of Fanyang Province
(Hopeh Hebei) as (jiedushi) of Manchuria. He became the favorite of the
Emperor's concubine, the lady Yang Guifei. Through her influence, he was
appointed a Duke in the latter year, and eventually was made governor of
three major frontier provinces in the northeast, each with a sizable
army.
Rokham launched the An Lushan Rebellion in 755, which he led an army of
about 150,000 soldiers from Peking (Beijing) and captured the eastern
capital city of Loyang (Luoyang) in the fall of that year. Gross
military incompetence by the Chief Minister Yang Guozhong (Lady Yang's
cousin and An's accuser) caused the capture of the main T'ang capital of
Chang'an (Sian/Xi'an) in 756, and Rokhan proclaimed himself emperor.
However, he was forced to abandon the city to Uyghur mercenaries under
T'ang service before he could establish a new dynasty. In 757, he was
murdered by his own son, when he showed signs of extreme paranoia to
those around him. Although the rebellion was eventually crushed, it
forced the Tang dynasty to became overdependent on the goodwill of
provincial governors and military commanders, thus irretrievably eroding
the Tang's central authority.
Post by Mohammed the Holy Fuckerso the Tang Chinese did not control Beijing ,
but Before 222 BC, the Huns and the Mongols were in Beijing area ,
before the Chinese Yan Jing YenJing .
during 500 BC , the Mongols and the Huns controlled the Beijing
region ? or not ?
The Uigher tribe invaded Mongolia in 744 AD and allied themselves with
the Tang Chinese, but their defeat by the Kirghiz in 840 AD allowed the
Khitans, a Mongol tribe from north-east China, to take control. By the
10th century, the Khitans held much of Manchuria, eastern Mongolia and
most of China north of the Yellow River. Even so the various Mongol
tribes still waged wars among themselves. The Chinese finally defeated
the Khitan empire in 1122 AD.
<snip unnecessary comments>
Post by Mohammed the Holy Fuckerreally idiot !!! you know nothing !!!! look at beijing's historyhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beijing#History
you fucking too many monkeys, negroman in cambodia jungle !!!!!
On Aug 2, 5:19 pm, "st. Mary' s Fucking Cunt hole"
Post by st. Mary' s Fucking Cunt holethe region of Beijing was not called Beijing in the ancient
history,
the town area of Beijing was called Yen Jing in ancient time,
meaning the city of the swallows , because of the ancient
Kingdom of Yen in the north of China.
Early Chinese manuscripts refer to turkic speaking peoples, whom they
called the Xiongnu, living in the area which is now Mongolia as early as
the 4th or 5th century BC. A major war between these people and the
Chinese, in which the Xiongnu warriors would charge on horseback,
wielding lances and swords and firing arrows, was the motivation behind
the building of the Great Wall of China.
Post by Mohammed the Holy FuckerPost by st. Mary' s Fucking Cunt holeBut before the Chinese Yen Kingdom came into existence in the
area of Beijing,
the Huns and the Mongols had passed through this Beijing
region, and
the Xien-Bee tribe had occupied this Beijing region after
the Mongols left.
From about 200 BC, warfare between the Chinese and the Xiongnu
barbarians was almost continuous until the Chinese finally expelled
their enemy around the middle of the first century AD. Other nomadic
tribes, such as the Xianbei and the Turk arrived in Mongolia from the
north, and the remnants of the Xiongnu moved west. Their descendants,
the Huns, terrorised central Europe under Attila from 434 to 453 AD.
Post by Mohammed the Holy FuckerPost by st. Mary' s Fucking Cunt holeThen in the 6 th century , the Uyghurs had ruled this Beijing
region
from their Uyghur bases in Mongolia,
in the 11th century , the Khitans built their Khitan summer south
palace in Beijing region .
the Khitans called Beijing as Nanjing in the 11th century,
When the Qidan (Khitan) people founded the Liao Dynasty (907-1125),they
established Beijing (Jingshi, Shuntianfu), which was then under their
occupation, as the secondary capital under the name of Nanjing (southern
capital).
The Tang Dynasty ended in 907 CE and China again suffered invasion in
from Mongolia in the form of the Khitan Kings, establishing a Liao
Dynasty with its capitol at Beijing in 947 CE. Meanwhile in 979 CE the
Sung Dynasty establishes Nanjing as it's capitol and reunites much of
the Chinese land under two protectorates in the North and South.
Post by Mohammed the Holy FuckerPost by st. Mary' s Fucking Cunt holeso was Beijing a Mongol region originally ,
in the era - around 500 BC?
<snip>
Xinjiang has been part of China since ancient times. The Uygurs,
together with other ethnic groups, have opened up the region and have
had very close economic and cultural ties with people in other parts of
the country, particularly central China.
Xinjiang was called simply "Western Region" in ancient times. The Jiaohe
ruins, Gaochang ruins, Yangqi Mansion of "A Thousand Houses," Baicheng
(Bay) Kizil Thousand Buddha Grottoes, Bozklik Grottoes in Turpan,
Kumtula Grottoes in Kuqa and Astana Tombs in Turpan all contain a great
wealth of relics from the Western and Eastern Han dynasties (206 B.C. --
A.D.220). They bear witness to the efforts of the Uygurs and other
ethnic groups in Xinjiang in developing China and its culture.
Zhang Qian, who lived in the second century B.C., went to the Western
Region as an official envoy in 138 and 119 B.C., further strengthening
ties between China and central Asia via the "Silk Road." In 60 B.C.,
Emperor Xuan Di of the Western Han Dynasty established the Office of
Governor of the Western Region to supervise the "36 states" north and
south of the Tianshan Mountains with the westernmost border running
through areas east and south of Lake Balkhash and the Pamirs.
During the Wei, Jin, Northern and Southern dynasties (220-581 A.D.) the
Western Reigon was a political dependent of the government in central
China. The Wei, Western Jin, Earlier Liang (317-376), Earlier Qin
(352-394) and Later Liang (386-403) dynasties all stationed troops and
set up administrative bodies there. In 327, Zhang Jun of the Earlier
Liang Dynasty set up in Turpan the Gao Chang Prefecture, the first of
its kind in the region.
In the mid-seventh century, the Tang Dynasty established the Anxi
Governor's Office in Xizhou (present-day Turpan, it later moved to
Guizi, present-day Kuqa) to rule areas south and north of the Tianshan
Mountains. The superintendent's offices in the Pamirs were all under the
jurisdiction of the Anxi Governor's Office. In the meantime, four Anxi
towns of important military significance -- Guizi, Yutian (present-day
Hotan), Shule (present-day Kaxgar) and Suiye (on the southern bank of
the Chu River) -- were established.
Uygur means "unity" or "alliance." The origin of the ethnic group can be
traced back to the Dingling nomads in northern and northwestern China
and in areas south of Lake Baikal and between the Irtish River and Lake
Balkhash in the third century B.C. Some people maintain that the
forefathers of the Uygurs were related to the Hans. The Dingling were
later called the Tiele, Tieli, Chile or Gaoche (high wheel). The Yuanhe
tribe reigned supreme among the Gaoche tribes during the fifth century
A.D., and the Weihe among the Tiele during the seventh century. Several
tribes rallied behind the Weihe to resist Turkic oppression.
These ancient Uighur people were finally conquered by Turkic Kirghiz in
the mid-ninth century. The majority of the Uighurs, who were scattered
over many areas, moved to the Western Region under the Anxi Governor's
Office, and areas west of Yutian. Some went to the Tufan principality in
western Gansu Province. The Uighurs who settled in the Western Region
lived commingled with Turkic nomads in areas north of the Tianshan
Mountains and western pasturelands as well as with Hans, who had
emigrated there after the Western and Eastern Han dynasties. They
intermarried with people in southern Xinjiang and Tibetan, Qidan
(Khitan) and Mongol tribes, and evolved into the group now known as the
Uygurs.
Morpheus Descends (http://tinyurl.com/6gkxv)
"Out of the belly of Hell cried I, and thou heardest me."
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| rather, out of Hell itself, rise melancholy |
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