Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q496787> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 83 of
83
with 100 triples per page.
- Q496787 subject Q20078995.
- Q496787 subject Q7135243.
- Q496787 subject Q7721725.
- Q496787 subject Q8446573.
- Q496787 subject Q8493330.
- Q496787 subject Q8735097.
- Q496787 subject Q9473968.
- Q496787 abstract "Jizi or Qizi (Chinese: 箕子; Wade–Giles: Chi-tzu, Gija or Kija in Korean) was a semi-legendary Chinese sage who is said to have ruled Gojoseon in the 11th century BCE. Early Chinese documents like the Book of Documents and the Bamboo Annals described him as a virtuous relative of the last king of the Shang dynasty who was punished for remonstrating with the king. After Shang was overthrown by Zhou in the 1040s BCE, he allegedly gave political advice to King Wu, the first Zhou king. Chinese texts from the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE) onwards claimed that King Wu enfeoffed Jizi as ruler of Chaoxian (朝鮮, pronounced "Joseon" in Korean). According to the Book of Han (1st century CE), Jizi brought agriculture, sericulture, and many other facets of Chinese civilization to Joseon. Gija was Chinese.Gija (the Korean pronunciation of "Jizi") may have been the object of a state cult in sixth-century Goguryeo, and a mausoleum to him was established in Goryeo in 1102, but the first extant Korean text to mention Gija was the Samguk Sagi (1145). Starting in the late thirteenth century, Gija was fully integrated into Korean history, being described as a successor to the descendants of Dangun in the state of Old Joseon. Following the spread of Neo-Confucianism in Korea in the fourteenth century, scholars of the Joseon Dynasty (est. 1392) promoted Gija as a culture hero who had raised Korean civilization to the same level as China, and Gija became an integral part of Korean cultural identity.Following the rise of Korean nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, however, Korean intellectuals lost their pride in association with Gija and started to doubt the traditional account of his enfeoffment as ruler of Gojoseon. Shin Chaeho (1880–1936) questioned the extent of Gija's cultural contributions, in part because Gija, a Chinese, did not fit into Shin's view of Korean history as the history of the Korean minjok, or "race-nation." Postwar Korean scholars in both North and South Korea have also strongly criticized the story of Gija's migration to Korea in the eleventh century BCE.His family name was Zi/Ja (子) and given name was Xuyu/Suyu (胥餘/서여 xūyú/seoyeo, or 須臾/수유 xūyú/suyu).".
- Q496787 thumbnail Ping_Sien_Si_-_072_Ji_Zi_(16137921534).jpg?width=300.
- Q496787 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=QxztLeLoVkQC.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q1051287.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q1055713.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q1061289.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q11451.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q128938.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q148.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q15905515.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q17006833.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q181937.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q18808.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q188953.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q192296.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q20078995.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q23498.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q247318.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q272530.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q276015.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q28179.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q28208.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q28370.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q28405.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q28511.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q2856647.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q35216.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q379653.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q423.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q43934.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q470072.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q485538.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q485552.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q488527.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q490525.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q493830.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q495636.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q503585.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q5047198.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q5288775.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q549567.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q59223.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q626601.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q6501380.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q6513165.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q697610.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q701346.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q701376.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q702166.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q711336.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q712541.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q7135243.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q716341.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q7209.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q7721725.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q796873.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q805994.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q825754.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q836410.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q83790.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q8446573.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q846905.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q8493330.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q864650.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q8733.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q8735097.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q875313.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q884.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q9176.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q9372.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q9473968.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q977690.
- Q496787 wikiPageWikiLink Q992792.
- Q496787 comment "Jizi or Qizi (Chinese: 箕子; Wade–Giles: Chi-tzu, Gija or Kija in Korean) was a semi-legendary Chinese sage who is said to have ruled Gojoseon in the 11th century BCE. Early Chinese documents like the Book of Documents and the Bamboo Annals described him as a virtuous relative of the last king of the Shang dynasty who was punished for remonstrating with the king. After Shang was overthrown by Zhou in the 1040s BCE, he allegedly gave political advice to King Wu, the first Zhou king.".
- Q496787 label "Jizi".
- Q496787 depiction Ping_Sien_Si_-_072_Ji_Zi_(16137921534).jpg.