- by his
temple name as the
Emperor Xianzong of Ming,
personal name Zhu
Jianshen,
changed to Zhu
Jianru in 1457, was the
ninth emperor of the Ming dynasty...
-
Emperor Tianshun may
refer to
emperors of
China who used the era name
Tianshun (天順):
Ragibagh Khan (1320–1328,
reigned 1328),
emperor of the Yuan dynasty...
- Yingzong's two-year-old son Zhu
Jianshen was
still crown prince. In
order to
prevent enemies from
getting close to Zhu
Jianshen,
Empress Dowager Sun appointed...
- Feng
Jianshen (Chinese: 冯健身;
August 1952 – 16 May 2022) was a
Chinese politician, and
former chairman of the
Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference...
-
Baoding balls (Chinese: 保定健身球; pinyin: Bǎodìng
Jiànshēn Qiú; Wade–Giles: Pao3-ting4 Chien4-sheng1 Ch'iu2) are
metal balls small enough to hold in one hand...
- by his
eldest son, Zhu
Jianshen, who
became the
Chenghua Emperor. The
relationship between Emperor Yingzong and Zhu
Jianshen was strained, as the father...
- Tumu Crisis, the
Jingtai Emperor sought to
depose the
crown prince Zhu
Jianshen, son of
Emperor Yingzong, and
appoint his own son as the new
crown prince...
-
monarchical rank E.g. Chénghuà Dì (成化帝), "Chénghuà"
being the era name of Zhu
Jianshen,
while "Dì"
refers to his rank as an
emperor Regnal names (尊號; zūn hào)...
-
January 1465 – 13
January 1488
Leisure in
royal garden,
depicting the
Chenghua Emperor,
painted in 1485.
Location China Monarch(s) Zhu
Jianshen Chronology...
- Qizhen's
eldest daughter the
Princess Chongqing and his
eldest son, Zhu
Jianshen (the ****ure
Chenghua Emperor). When
Emperor Yingzong was
captured by the...