- Lü
Wukui (Chinese: 呂無虧; pinyin: Lǚ
Wúkuī) was
ruler of the Qi
state for
three months in
early 642 BC. He was
succeeded by his
younger brother, Duke Xiao...
- high
officials as well as six of the duke's sons.
These six,
namely Zhao,
Wukui, Pan, Shangren, Yuan, and Yong, were all the
children of
different concubines...
- Pengcheng, Penglai, Sangong, Sanhe, Sanxing, Shezi, Sichun, Silin, Tongrong,
Wukui, Xingmei, Xinrong,
Xinsheng and Yongchun. Many
inhabitants speak the Taiwanese...
-
realm under control.
These factions were led by six of his sons: Zhao,
Wukui, Pan, Shangren, Yuan, and Yong.
Since all of them were the
children of different...
-
method in
Europe for
naming years. The
interregnum in Rome ends.
Ancus Marcius becomes the
fourth king of Rome
Wukui,
ruler of the
state of Qi v t e...
- Qing (庆氏) of the
ancestral name
Jiang (姜姓) and a
distant descendant of
Wukui of Qi, had good
education and was
proficient in the art of the sword. His...
- when Qi
reached zenith of its power.
Starved to
death by
ministers none
Wukui or
Wugui 無虧 or 無詭 643 Son of Duke Huan
Killed by
supporters of Duke Xiao...
- Yaonian, and Yila.
Other tribes are also mentioned: the Yishi, Pin, Chute,
Wukui, Niela, Tulübu, and Tuju. The Tang
governor An
Lushan launched two invasions...
- name Lü Zhao, was a duke of the Qi state.
Succeeding his
older brother Lü
Wukui to the throne, Duke Xiao
reigned from 642 BC to 633 BC, and was in turn...
- Jinping: A New ****essment.
Leiden University Press. ISBN 9789087284411. 吐乌大、乌奎高速公路将改扩建 (Tuwuda,
Wukui Expressways to
undergo expansion). (in Chinese)...