-
Zhufan (simplified Chinese: 朱范;
traditional Chinese: 朱範; pinyin:
zhūfàn,
local accent: zhuf or Juf), also
called West
Zhufan or
Xizhufan (Chinese: 西朱范村)...
- Maguindanao, it
already existed as a
separate nation. The
Chinese chronicle Zhufan Zhi (諸蕃志)
published in 1225,
described it as a
country southeast of Shahuagong...
- had
trade links into
Western Asia. The
later Chinese historical chronicle Zhufan zhi 諸蕃志
published at 1225;
wrote once
again about Sanmalan but it was now...
- Singapore. A
kingdom called Suwu was
mentioned in the 1225
Chinese Annals, the
Zhufan Zhi (諸蕃志), and
during the 17th
Century this was the same name used for Cebu...
-
Shoumeng (620–561 BC)
Zhufan (d. 548 BC) Helü (537–496 BC)
Fuchai of Wu (d. 473 BC)...
-
Jueyou 蹶由 (20)
Zhufan 诸樊 ?–561–548 BC (21) Yuji 余祭 ?–548–531 BC (22)
Yumei 餘昧 ?–531–527 BC
Yanyu 掩余
Zhuyong 烛庸
Jizha 季札
Crown Prince Zhufan 太子诸樊
Qingji 庆忌...
- A
Chinese Gazetteer of
Foreign Lands A new
translation of Part 1 of the
Zhufan zhi 諸蕃志 (1225) By Shao-yun Yang (Department of History,
Denison University)...
- (possibly Pulilan, near present-day Manila). In the
Chinese Gazetteer the
Zhūfān zhì 諸蕃志 (1225), they were
described as
tributary states of the more powerful...
- ****an. Chao Jukua, a
customs inspector in ****ien province,
China wrote the
Zhufan Zhi ("Description of the
Barbarous Peoples").
William Henry Scott said,...
-
Chinese Gazetteer of
Foreign Lands: A new
translation of Part 1 of the
Zhufan zhi 諸蕃志 (1225)". Storymaps.
Retrieved 19
October 2023.
Nugroho 2011, p. 138...