Emperor Song Everyone says it’s good to be an emperor, who wrote it?

Everyone says it’s good to be an emperor. Who wrote it?

"Pretend"

Huangmei Opera

Lyrics: (Female) Do You are good at it.

This is ridiculous.

I have heard about all kinds of businesses.

I have never heard of this business.

(Male) What I do requires expertise.

What I do is better than others.

I have a reputation passed down from generation to generation.

I must dress like one. Emperor Ming of Tang Dynasty.

(Female) Tang Minghuang has a long beard,

white teeth and red lips,

You don’t look like Tang Minghuang at all,

It's quite like being a eunuch.

(Male) Do you know the beard is long after you have seen him?

(Female) Although I have never seen him in real life,

I have seen Emperor Tang Ming in the play.

You don’t look like him without a beard.

Just pretend to be fake,

Just pretend.

/p>

Don't rush.

Be dignified in your behavior.

Don’t look at people too frivolously.

Look at others with your eyes.

Don’t look like a gangster.

Like a gangster! Who wrote the Emperor's Internal Classic?

The Yellow Emperor's Internal Classic - a medical classic. It is called "Nei Jing" for short. It is written in the form of questions and answers from Huang Di and Qi Bo. It is the earliest existing systematic theoretical medical work in my country. It was written around the Warring States Period. The original book consists of eighteen volumes, namely "Suwen" and "Acupuncture Classic" (renamed "Lingshu" in later versions of the Tang Dynasty) with nine volumes each. "Nei Jing" has a relatively complete theoretical system, including human beings and nature, health preservation, disease prevention, physiology, organs, meridians, disease syndromes, diagnosis and treatment, Chinese medicine, prescriptions, acupuncture, moxibustion, guidance, compression, and the five movements. The six qi and other theories are all comprehensive and can be regarded as the origin of traditional Chinese medicine theory. Doctors of all ages have regarded it as a guideline. In addition to medical theory, it also extensively covers astronomy, geography, meteorology, phenology, calendar, philosophy and many other aspects. Therefore, some people call it an encyclopedia of my country's pre-Qin era. The Huangdi Neijing inherits the philosophical thought of "Qi Monism", and its simple materialism and dialectics ideas develop and enrich the ancient philosophy before the "Inner Canon". "Huangdi Neijing" has been widely circulated and has many biographies. Among them, the two biographical systems of "Suwen" and "Nine Volumes" are the most representative. In the sixth century AD, Quan Yuanqi made a comprehensive commentary on Su Wen. However, since the seventh volume was lost long ago, Quan only noted eight volumes. In the first year of Baoxing of Tang Dynasty (AD 762), Wang Bing, the emperor of Qi Xuan, reorganized "Su Wen", added a large number of annotations, and added seven chapters based on the secret book collected by his predecessor Zhang Gong, as the lost seventh chapter. Volume contents. Due to the large number of annotations added by Wang Bing, "Suwen" was expanded from the original nine volumes to twenty-four volumes. From then on, the book "Suwen" became increasingly popular. The Emperor of the Northern Song Dynasty established the Correcting Medical Book Bureau, and Lin Yi and others carefully and meticulously collated and annotated the "Suwen of the Yellow Emperor's Internal Medicine" annotated by Wang Bing. Corrected" version of "Suwen". It became the study of later generations and annotated the main version of "Suwen". The book "Nine Volumes" was passed down to around the 6th century AD, and there were copies with various titles such as "Acupuncture Classic", "Nine Ruins", "Nine Spirits" and "Lingshu", but all of them were later lost. In the Yihai year of Shaoxing in the Southern Song Dynasty (1135), Shi Song re-edited the nine volumes of "Lingshu" in his family collection, expanded it to twenty-four volumes, and published it. From then on, "Lingshu" became the only collated version of "Nine Volumes". Although various publications including twelve volumes appeared later, they were all based on this. "Huangdi Taisu" is another ancient version of the "Nei Jing" that has been handed down. In the Sui Dynasty, Yang Shangshan compiled and annotated "Huangdi Taisu" and named it "Huangdi Neijing Taisu". It was expanded from the original twenty volumes to thirty volumes, but only twenty-five volumes remain so far. The "Jia Yi Jing" written by Fumi of the Jin Dynasty is a compilation of the three books "Su Wen", "The Acupuncture Classic" and "The Essentials of Acupuncture and Moxibustion at Mingtang Kong Points". Therefore, it should also be regarded as another ancient biography of the "Huangdi Nei Jing" Book. Later generations of doctors attached great importance to the study and research of the Huangdi Neijing. In addition to the above, there are many doctors who annotated the "Huangdi Neijing". Among them, the representative doctors and works include: Ma Shi of the Ming Dynasty, "The Yellow Emperor's Neijing Su Wen Zhu Zheng Fa Wei", "The Huang Di Nei Jing Ling Shu Zhu Zheng Fa Wei", Wu Kun of the Ming Dynasty, "Su Wen Zhu", and the Ming Dynasty Zhang Jiebin's "Su Wen Zhu" Lei Jing", Qing Dynasty Zhang Zhicong's "Collected Commentary on Su Wen of Huang Di Nei Jing" and "Zhi Jie of Su Wen of Huang Di Nei Jing", Gao Shizhen's "Zhi Jie of Su Wen of Huang Di Nei Jing", Huang Yuanyu's "Su Wen Xuan Jie" and "Lingshu Xuan Jie" , Zhang Qi's "Explanation of Suwen", Zhou Xuehai's "Commentary on Nei Jing", etc. There are also sections that annotate the "Nei Jing", such as "Xu Su Wen Chao" written by Hua Shou in the Yuan Dynasty, "Commentary on Su Wen Jie Wen by Huang Di Nei Jing Su Wen" by Huang Qiu, "Zhi Yao of the Nei Jing" written by Li Zhongzi in the Ming Dynasty, and "Su Wen" written by Wang Ang in the Qing Dynasty. "Lingshu Lei Compilation Notes", Chen Nianzu's "Lingshu Su Wen Jie Yao Bian Yao", and Tang Zonghai's "Traditional Chinese Medicine Huitong Medical Classics Essence", etc.

The Yellow Emperor had twenty-five sons, fourteen of whom were given surnames.

These fourteen people received twelve surnames. They are: "Ji, You, Qi, Ji, Teng, Jun (salty under the grass flower head, pronounced "true"), Ren, Xun, Xi, Ji, and Yan ( (pronounced "Xuan"), clothes. Every nation has its own legendary era. The Yellow Emperor is a representative figure of the Chinese legendary era. People concentrated on him various advantages and many creations of the ancients. He led Chinese civilization to develop from barbarism to civilization, thus transforming them into Be regarded as the ancestor of humanities. According to the "New Chapter of the Twenty-Five Histories": Huangdi may have been a real person, a tribal alliance leader in the Central Plains during the patriarchal clan period. Through war, he united the various tribes in the Central Plains and did many good deeds. Therefore, he occupied an important position in the oral history of the ancients. Everyone calls him the Dog Emperor!

A dog is scolded because a mouse is meddling in its own business.

The emperor uses the art of imperial control. The principle of handling matters is to weigh interests and maintain imperial power as the fundamental purpose:

p>

Therefore, in order to achieve their goals, it is common for all dynasties to unjustly sacrifice certain people. The more famous one is Chao Cuo during the period of Emperor Jing of the Han Dynasty. If someone says something good about the emperor, what will happen to the emperor?

At least the emperor would be happy, whether that was true or not. Which emperor was not good at being an emperor? Which emperor wrote good poems?

Li Yu Li Yu, the king of the Southern Tang Dynasty during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, Han nationality, reigned (961-975), courtesy name Chongguang, first name Congjia, nickname Zhong Yin, layman Lianfeng. A native of Pengcheng (now Xuzhou, Jiangsu). The sixth son of Li Jing, Yuanzong of the Southern Tang Dynasty, succeeded to the throne in the second year of Jianlong of the Song Dynasty (961), and was known as empress Li in history. In the eighth year of Kaibao's reign, the country was defeated and surrendered to the Song Dynasty. He was captured in Bianjing and was named General You Qianniu Guard and Marquis of Disobedience. Later, he was poisoned to death by Song Taizong. Although Li Yu has no political knowledge, his artistic talent is extraordinary. He is proficient in calligraphy, good at painting, proficient in music and rhythm, and has certain attainments in poetry and prose, especially his greatest achievement in poetry. He is known as the "Eternal Poetry Emperor" for his eternal masterpieces such as "Poppy Poppies", "Lang Tao Sha", "Crying at Night" and other poems. "

Sentences describing the emperor in The Emperor's New Clothes

Emperor: fatuous, stupid.

Minister: flattery, stupid, hypocritical, selfish.

Children: innocent, brave and bold to expose the scam

People: Beheaded, afraid of being laughed at. The emperor represents the leader, and they often cannot see their own problems. The reason for this result is precisely this group of ministers. They are people who directly serve the leadership. They know well the meaning of accompanying the emperor like a tiger and the harsh words of advice. Therefore, after discovering the truth, they will not tell the truth for their own benefit. Yes! This is equivalent to a vicious circle. The ministers dare not say it, and the emperor cannot detect it. Then the farce described in the story will naturally occur! Agree 1 | Comment on the emperor’s son becoming the emperor

< p> Yes, are all imperial edicts written by the emperor, or do the emperor say it and the eunuchs write it

Hello

According to reports, the imperial edicts and edicts of the Ming and Qing dynasties (Officials of the first to fifth grades are called imperial edicts, and officials of the sixth grade and below are called imperial orders). They were all drafted by the Hanlin Academy, and then finalized by the cabinet ministers, and then issued according to grade. It is worth mentioning that imperial edicts were written in the Qing Dynasty. The emperor personally selected the best among the Jinshi - "Shu Jishi" - because the imperial edict was completed by top cultural experts from drafting to copying, so the writing was concise and concise, almost reaching the level of edict. Adding one character would make it seem cumbersome, while subtracting one would make the meaning unclear.

Note: The above content is taken from Du Niang Encyclopedia.

There is also a special case. Zhu Yuanzhang is one. The emperor who wrote the imperial edict himself, most of the emperors after him left this task to ministers.

Taking the Ming Dynasty as an example, the eunuchs in charge of rites only had the power to criticize the emperor, not the emperor. Write an imperial edict. The emperors of the Qing Dynasty were very diligent and learned the lessons of the Ming Dynasty. They generally did not let eunuchs get involved in politics too much.

I hope you will adopt the method of stir-frying mushrooms with beans. How to make delicious mushrooms, Emperor

Introduction Chrysanthemum chrysanthemum is very similar to this emperor's dish, but the leaves of chrysanthemum are larger, while the leaves of emperor's vegetable are a bit "jagged" and more slender. It turns out that chrysanthemum has the effect of resolving phlegm, relieving coughs, and clearing away headaches. Anyway, I personally feel that the taste of the two vegetables is the same. My friend planted a lot of king vegetables and spinach this year, so my family can often eat fresh. The recipe is very simple, just add a few garlics. What is the name of a person who writes a poem for the emperor and says it was written by the emperor?

1. The disciples. Lu Buwei’s "Lu Shi Chun Qiu" was written by the disciples (of course you are asking about the emperor~~)

2. The imperial literati

3. Gunner (a very modern term)

2. This kind of thing is called "catching a knife", which is related to Cao Cao~~

The idiom "catching a knife as a ghostwriter": refers to a person's contribution or contribution Ghostwriting articles.

From Liu Yiqing's "Shishuo Xinyu·Ke Zhi" of the Southern Dynasties and Song Dynasty: "When Cui Jigui was appointed, the emperor took a knife and set it on the bedside. After that, he ordered the spy to ask: 'How is the King of Wei?' The Huns The emissary replied: "The king of Wei is very elegant, but the person who catches the knife on the bedside is a hero."

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