Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Hung Hsiu-chu is a Taiwanese politician. As a member of the Kuomintang (KMT), she has served the party as a Deputy Chairperson and Deputy Secretary-General. Hung was first elected to the legislature in 1990, and was the Vice President of the Legislative Yuan from 2012 to 2016, her eighth term. She became the first female deputy speaker of the Legislative Yuan. She became the Kuomintang's first ...

  2. Hong Xiu Quan in British English. (ˈhɒŋ ˈʃjuː ˈtʃwɑːn ) or Hung Hsiu-Ch'uan. noun. 1814–64, Chinese religious leader and revolutionary. Claiming (1851) to be Christ's brother, he led the Taiping rebellion; died by suicide when it was defeated. Collins English Dictionary.

  3. Learn about Hung Hsiu Chuan, the self-appointed leader of the Taiping movement who declared himself the 'brother' of Jesus. Explore his impact on Chinese history and the Taiping Rebellion.

  4. Hung Hsiu-Ch’üan. Born Jan. 1, 1814, in Huahsien, Kwangtung Province; died June 30, 1864, in Nanking. Organizer and chief leader of the Taiping rebellion of 1850–64 in China. Hung, who was of peasant birth, worked for a time as a village teacher. In 1843 he founded the Society of God-Worshipers (Pai Shang-ti Hui).

  5. Hong Xiuquan. Este nombre sigue la onomástica china; el apellido es Hong. Tiangwanfu, hasta el 30 de julio de 1864 cuando Zeng Guofan ordenó hacer desaparecer el cuerpo por incineración. Hóng Xiùquán (en chino, 洪秀全; pinyin, Hóng Xiùquán; Wade-Giles, Hung Hsiu-ch’üan; en chino estándar AFI: [xʊŋ˧˥ ɕi̯ou̯˩˥ tɕʰy̆ɛn ...

  6. Hung Hsiu Chuan and Taiping Tien Kuo. In the 19th year of the Chia Ch'ing reign (1814), Hung Hsiu Chuan was born in a peasant family in Kwangtung province. He began to study at 7. Hung leaved school at 16 and followed his father as a peasant. He became a village teacher at 18.

  7. Hung Hsiu-chuan (1814-64), who was born in Kwangtung, was the leader of a peasant revolutionary war in the middle of the 19th century. In 1851 he led a mass uprising in Kwangsi and proclaimed the establishment of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, which held many provinces and fought the Ching Dynasty for fourteen years.