- Li
Fuguo (李輔國; 704 –
November 12, 762), né Li
Jingzhong (李靜忠),
known from 757 to 758 as Li
Huguo (李護國),
formally Prince Chou of Bolu (博陸醜王), was a Chinese...
- In
early 757,
after Li Tan
repeatedly accused Li
Fuguo and
Consort Zhang of corruption, Li
Fuguo and
Empress Zhang in turn
falsely accused him of trying...
- Feng'en
fuguo gong (Chinese: 奉恩輔國公, Manchu: ᡴᡝᠰᡳ ᠪᡝᡨᡠᠸᠠᡴᡳᠶᠠᡵᠠᡤᡠᡵᡠᠨ ᡩᡝᠠᡳᠰᡳᠯᠠᡵᠠᡤᡠᠩ, Möllendorff: kesi-be
tuwakiyara gurun-be
aisilara gung, Mongolian: Хишигийг...
- An
attached county or
satellite county,
sometimes left
untranslated in its
Chinese name as a fuguoxian, was a kind of
historical tertiary administrative...
- buru
bafen fuguo gong from 1837 to 1842,
stripped of his
title in 1842
Mianti (綿悌; 1811–1849), Yonglin's
fifth son, held a buru
bafen fuguo gong title...
- the
title would generally not be
downgraded to any
lower than a feng'en
fuguo gong
except under special cir****stances. The
first bearer of the
title was...
- the
title would generally not be
downgraded to any
lower than a feng'en
fuguo gong
except under special cir****stances. It was p****ed down over ten generations...
- the
title would generally not be
downgraded to any
lower than a feng'en
fuguo gong
except under special cir****stances. The
first bearer of the
title was...
- the
title would generally not be
downgraded to any
lower than a feng'en
fuguo gong
except under special cir****stances. The
first bearer of the
title was...
- began, with Li
Fuguo becoming the
commander of the
imperial guards and
possessing nearly absolute power near
Emperor Suzong's reign. Li
Fuguo allied and befriended...