- Ming dynasty. He
ruled as the
Zhengtong Emperor (simplified Chinese: 正统帝;
traditional Chinese: 正統帝; pinyin:
Zhèngtǒng Dì) from 1435 to 1449, and as the...
-
Zhengtong (simplified Chinese: 正统;
traditional Chinese: 正統; pinyin:
Zhèngtǒng; Wade–Giles: Cheng-t'sung; lit. 'right governance'; 18
January 1436 – 13...
- Laozi's Scripture].
Zhengtong daozang 正統道藏 [
Zhengtong Daoist Canon]. 雲笈七籤.說戒部 [Yunji Qiqian. Precepts].
Zhengtong daozang 正統道藏 [
Zhengtong Daoist Canon]. Vol...
- September, Esen
routed Zhengtong's army, and
Zhengtong was captured—an
event known as the Tumu Crisis. The
Oirats held the
Zhengtong Emperor for ransom....
- in the Tumu Crisis,
resulting in the
Zhengtong Emperor being captured. Esen
attempted to use the
captured Zhengtong Emperor to
raise a
ransom and negotiate...
- as the
Grand coordinator of
Shanxi and Henan.
During the
reign of the
Zhengtong Emperor (r. 1435–1449), he
offended the
influential court eunuch Wang...
- are
minor differences to fit in with
Chinese society.
According to the
Zhengtong daozang (1445)[full
citation needed], the five
basic precepts are: The...
- 15th-century
monastery complex built between 1440 and 1446
during the
Zhengtong Emperor's
reign (1427–64).
Dabei Hall
enshrines a thousand-armed wooden...
- shrines, on
special occasions, may use
Confucian liturgy (儒 rú or 正统
zhèngtǒng, "orthoprax") led by
Confucian "sages of rites" (礼生 lǐshēng), who in many...
- was a
Chinese empress consort during the Ming dynasty,
married to the
Zhengtong Emperor. She was
addressed posthumously as
Empress Xia****angrui (simplified...