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- Donglin_movement abstract "The Donglin movement (Chinese: 東林黨; pinyin: Dōnglíndǎng; Wade–Giles: Tung-lin-tang) was an ideological and philosophical movement of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties of China.The movement was established in 1604, during the Wanli era of Ming, when Gu Xiancheng (1550–1612), a Grand Secretary, and Gao Panlong (高攀龍, 1562–1626), a scholar, restored the Donglin Academy in Wuxi with the financial backing of local gentry and officials.The motivation for restoring the Academy was concern about the state of the bureaucracy and its inability to bring about improvement. The movement represented a resort to moral Confucian traditions as a means of arriving at fresh moral evaluations. Thereafter the Academy became a centre of dissent for public affairs in the late Ming and early Qing periods. Many supporters of Donglin were found in the bureaucracy and it become deeply involved in factional politics. The movement got momentum when the Donglin Academy in Wuxi was joined by the academies of the nearby Wujin and Yixing.Many of the academy's creators were among the mandarins who a few years previously had forced the Wanli Emperor to appoint his first-born son, Zhu Changluo (the future Taichang Emperor) as the heir to the throne, even though the emperor himself would rather have the throne go to Zhu Changxun (the emperor's son from his favorite concubine, Lady Zheng).During the reign of the Tianqi Emperor, Donglin opposition to the eunuch Wei Zhongxian resulted in the closure of the Academy in 1622 and the torture and execution of its head, Yang Lian, and five other members in 1624.The accession of the Chongzhen Emperor restored the fortunes of the Donglin faction.Later during Chongzhen's reign, Donglin partisans found themselves opposed to the Grand Secretary Wen Tiren, eventually arranging his dismissal in 1637.The Donglin movement represented growth of the literati influence on the political life in late Imperial China. In this, it was inherited by the Suzhou-centered Fushe movement (復社) before the fall the Ming dynasty, and by the Changzhou School of Thought during the Qing. China's defeat in the Opium War (1839–42) served for revival of interest to the Donglin movement, as a prominent instance of literati solidarity.".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageExternalLink ft6g5006xv.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageID "12201338".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageLength "3773".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageRevisionID "698570260".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chinese_philosophy.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ming_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_movements_in_Asia.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Category:Qing_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Changzhou_School_of_Thought.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Chongzhen_Emperor.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Confucianism.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Donglin_Academy.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Fushe_movement.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Gao_Panlong.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Gu_Xiancheng.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Ming_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Qing_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Suzhou.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Taichang_Emperor.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Tianqi_Emperor.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Wanli_Emperor.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Wei_Zhongxian.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Wen_Tiren.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Wujin_District.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Wuxi.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Yang_Lian_(Donglin_movement).
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Yixing.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLink Zhu_Changxun.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLinkText "Donglin Society".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLinkText "Donglin faction".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLinkText "Donglin movement".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageWikiLinkText "Donglin party".
- Donglin_movement p "Dōnglíndǎng".
- Donglin_movement t "東林黨".
- Donglin_movement w "Tung-lin-tang".
- Donglin_movement wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ming_dynasty_topics.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Donglin_movement wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Zh.
- Donglin_movement subject Category:Chinese_philosophy.
- Donglin_movement subject Category:Ming_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement subject Category:Political_movements_in_Asia.
- Donglin_movement subject Category:Qing_dynasty.
- Donglin_movement hypernym Movement.
- Donglin_movement type Organisation.
- Donglin_movement type Dynasty.
- Donglin_movement type Redirect.
- Donglin_movement comment "The Donglin movement (Chinese: 東林黨; pinyin: Dōnglíndǎng; Wade–Giles: Tung-lin-tang) was an ideological and philosophical movement of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties of China.The movement was established in 1604, during the Wanli era of Ming, when Gu Xiancheng (1550–1612), a Grand Secretary, and Gao Panlong (高攀龍, 1562–1626), a scholar, restored the Donglin Academy in Wuxi with the financial backing of local gentry and officials.The motivation for restoring the Academy was concern about the state of the bureaucracy and its inability to bring about improvement. ".
- Donglin_movement label "Donglin movement".
- Donglin_movement sameAs Q1074692.
- Donglin_movement sameAs Movimiento_Donglin.
- Donglin_movement sameAs Mouvement_Donglin.
- Donglin_movement sameAs 東林党.
- Donglin_movement sameAs 동림당.
- Donglin_movement sameAs m.02vvn26.
- Donglin_movement sameAs Дунліньська_партія.
- Donglin_movement sameAs Q1074692.
- Donglin_movement sameAs 东林党.
- Donglin_movement wasDerivedFrom Donglin_movement?oldid=698570260.
- Donglin_movement isPrimaryTopicOf Donglin_movement.