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Tang Dynasty Series Guide: Empresses, Poets, and Palace Treason
In 618 CE, as Sui Dynasty excesses sparked rebellion, a daring aristocrat named Li Yuan seized Chang'an, founding the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE). Under his son, Emperor Taizong, Tang became a golden age—a cosmopolitan empire where Persian merchants, Korean scholars, and Uyghur horsemen mingled in silk-clad streets. Poetry flourished with Li Bai's verses, diplomacy stretched to Baghdad, and Buddhist pagodas pierced the skies. Yet Tang's splendor was tempered by treachery: palace coups, concubines' schemes, and the cataclysmic An Lushan Rebellion that left a million dead. The Tang's two centuries of zenith saw unmatched innovation: woodblock printing spread knowledge, imperial exams elevated commoners, and women like Empress Wu Zetian shattered ceilings, ruling as China's sole female emperor. But this was also…
Tang Dynasty Series Guide: Empresses, Poets, and Palace Treason
In 618 CE, as Sui Dynasty excesses sparked rebellion, a daring aristocrat named Li Yuan seized Chang'an, founding the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE). Under his son, Emperor Taizong, Tang became a golden age—a cosmopolitan empire where Persian merchants, Korean scholars, and Uyghur horsemen mingled in silk-clad streets. Poetry flourished with Li Bai's verses, diplomacy stretched to Baghdad, and Buddhist pagodas pierced the skies. Yet Tang's splendor was tempered by treachery: palace coups, concubines' schemes, and the cataclysmic An Lushan Rebellion that left a million dead. The Tang's two centuries of zenith saw unmatched innovation: woodblock printing spread knowledge, imperial exams elevated commoners, and women like Empress Wu Zetian shattered ceilings, ruling as China's sole female emperor. But this was also…
In 618 CE, as Sui Dynasty excesses sparked rebellion, a daring aristocrat named Li Yuan seized Chang'an, founding the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE). Under his son, Emperor Taizong, Tang became a golden age—a cosmopolitan empire where Persian merchants, Korean scholars, and Uyghur horsemen mingled in silk-clad streets. Poetry flourished with Li Bai's verses, diplomacy stretched to Baghdad, and Buddhist pagodas pierced the skies. Yet Tang's splendor was tempered by treachery: palace coups, concubines' schemes, and the cataclysmic An Lushan Rebellion that left a million dead. The Tang's two centuries of zenith saw unmatched innovation: woodblock printing spread knowledge, imperial exams elevated commoners, and women like Empress Wu Zetian shattered ceilings, ruling as China's sole female emperor. But this was also…
Tang Dynasty Series Guide: Empresses, Poets, and Palace Treason
In 618 CE, as Sui Dynasty excesses sparked rebellion, a daring aristocrat named Li Yuan seized Chang'an, founding the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE). Under his son, Emperor Taizong, Tang became a golden age—a cosmopolitan empire where Persian merchants, Korean scholars, and Uyghur horsemen mingled in silk-clad streets. Poetry flourished with Li Bai's verses, diplomacy stretched to Baghdad, and Buddhist pagodas pierced the skies. Yet Tang's splendor was tempered by treachery: palace coups, concubines' schemes, and the cataclysmic An Lushan Rebellion that left a million dead. The Tang's two centuries of zenith saw unmatched innovation: woodblock printing spread knowledge, imperial exams elevated commoners, and women like Empress Wu Zetian shattered ceilings, ruling as China's sole female emperor. But this was also…
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