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Ding Feng (died 271),
courtesy name Chengyuan, was a
Chinese military general and
politician of the
state of
Eastern Wu
during the
Three Kingdoms period...
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Chinese Communist Party.
Considered a
close confidant of CCP
general secretary Xi Jinping,
Ding served as Xi's
staff during his
tenure in Shanghai, then followed...
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Ding **** (丁會) (died 910/911),
courtesy name
Daoyin (道隱), was a
general who, for most of his career,
served under Zhu
Quanzhong (formerly
known as Zhu Wen)...
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Ding Sheng (Chinese: 丁盛; 1913–1999) was a
Chinese general and politician. He
served as the
Governor of China's
Guangdong province from 1972
until 1974...
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Retrieved 2017-09-01. Clay, Marcus; Lee, Rod (24
September 2021). "Star
General Chang Dingqiu Takes Command of China's Air Force". thediplomat.com/. Archived...
- Wu
Ding (Chinese: 武丁; died c. 1200 BC);
personal name Zi Zhao (子昭), was a king of the
Chinese Shang dynasty who
ruled the
central Yellow River valley c...
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Ding Dexing (simplified Chinese: 丁德兴;
traditional Chinese: 丁德興; 1327–1367) was a
Chinese general of the Ming
dynasty in
service of the
Hongwu Emperor....
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Ding Wenjiang (Chinese: 丁文江; pinyin:
Dīng Wénjiāng;
March 20, 1887 –
January 5, 1936),
courtesy name Zaijun, was a
Chinese essayist, geologist, and writer...
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Ding Chao (Chinese: 丁超; Wade–Giles: Ting Ch'ao; 1883–1950s) was a
military general of the
Republic of China,
known for his
defense of
Harbin during the...
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Ding Baozhen (simplified Chinese: 丁宝桢;
traditional Chinese: 丁寶楨; pinyin:
Dīng Bǎozhēn; Wade–Giles: Ting Pao-chen) (1820–1886),
courtesy name Weihuang...