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- HuanLing_part2.pdf accessdate "2012-05-01".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf archivedate "2006-09-07".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf archiveurl HuanLing_part2.pdf.
- HuanLing_part2.pdf first "Rafe".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf isCitedBy Disasters_of_the_Partisan_Prohibitions.
- HuanLing_part2.pdf isCitedBy Jupiter.
- HuanLing_part2.pdf isCitedBy Liang_Nüying.
- HuanLing_part2.pdf last "De Crespigny".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote ""The women of the harem, however, are now more than a thousand; can their numbers be reduced? The horses in the stables are in the tens of thousands; can their numbers be diminished? The attendants of the Emperor are powerful and oppressive; can they be removed?" 1750 All replied, "That is not possible." Then Wei Huan sighed and said, "So you are asking that I go alive [to the court] and come back dead [because I would be compelled to speak out against abuses and would inevitably meet with execution for making such criticisms]. What is the point?" So he went into hiding and he would not appear again in public".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "An edict proclaimed rewards for the successful destruction of Liang Ji. Shan Chao, Xu Huang, Ju Yuan, Zuo Guan and Tang Heng were all made marquises of counties. Shan Chao had the income from twenty thousand households, while Xu Huang and the others each had more than ten thousand households. They were known by the people of the time as "the five marquises." Zuo Guan and Tang Heng were also appointed Regular Palace Attendants. The Prefect of the Masters of Writing Yin Xun and six other men became marquises of villages.38".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "As a result of this, power and authority was concentrated in the hands of the eunuch officials. EE The "five marquises" [Shan Chao, Xu Huang, Ju Yuan, Zuo Guan and Tang Heng] were particularly greedy and lawless, and the repercussions [of their abuse of power] were felt both at the capital and in the provinces.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "In the autumn, in the seventh month on the day bingwu [9 Aug], the Empress Liang died.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "Li Yun of Ganling, the Prefect of Boma [in Dong commandery], sent in an open memorial, with a copy to the offices of the Three Excellencies, saying, "Though Liang Ji had arrogated power and usurped authority for himself, and his tyranny extended throughout the empire, the punishment for his crimes was carried out by a few servants of the [imperial] household upon orders issued for his arrest and execution [so it was not a particularly complex and dangerous affair]. "Since then, however, several enfeoffments have been granted to assorted eunuchs, each valued at ten thousand households or more. Had Emperor Gaozu heard of this, he would never have approved.55 And the generals of the northwest must surely be disturbed.56 "Confucius said, 'To be an emperor is to be a judge.'57 But at the present time, official positions are mistaken and confused; petty men gain advancement through flattery; wealth and property are publicly misused, and every day the good influence of government is brought further into decline. When the documents [of imperial decrees] one foot long are issued without proper care,58 this shows that the Emperor does not want to act as a judge!"".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "Many disasters and portents appeared at this time.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "On the day renwu [14 Sep] the Honoured Lady Liang [Meng] was established as Empress. The Yiling Tomb [of the late Empress Liang Nüying] was demoted to be the tomb of an Honoured Lady.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "On the day yichou [28 Aug] the Gentle and Generous Empress was buried at Yiling".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "Then Ju Yuan led [a party of] grooms from the imperial stables, Rapid Tiger and Feathered Forest guards, and Warriors with Swords and Lances of the Captains at the Capital,30 a thousand men altogether, to join the Colonel Director of Retainers Zhang Biao and surround Liang Ji's lodgings. The Superintendent of the Imperial Household, Yuan Xu, was sent in with the Staff of Authority to take away Liang Ji's seal and ribbon as Generalin-Chief,31 and to transfer his fief to the marquisate of the chief district of Bijing.32 Liang Ji and his wife Sun Shou both committed suicide on that same day. Liang Buyi and Liang Meng had died earlier. All other members of the Liang and Sun clans, both inside and outside, were arrested and sent to the imperial jails, and they then suffered public execution. No consideration was given to age or youth. Of others who were implicated, excellencies, ministers, colonels, provincial inspectors and other senior officials, scores of them died.33 M The Grand Commandant Hu Guang, the Minister over the Masses Han Yan and the Minister of Works Sun Lang were all found guilty of subservience to the Liang clan and of failing to protect the throne. They were detained at the Hostel of Long Life,34 then sentenced to the death penalty remitted by one degree, and were dismissed to become commoners.35 N More than three hundred of [Liang Ji's] former subordinates and clients were dismissed.36 The court was empty.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf quote "Xu Huang apparently complained that the astronomy office had failed to give them proper emphasis to the eclipse and to other portents, including the movement of the planet Jupiter . At his instigation, Chen Shou/Yuan was summoned and questioned, and it was under this pressure that his advice implicated Liang Ji.".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf title "Emperor Huan and Emperor Ling Part 2".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf title "Emperor Huan and Emperor Ling".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf title "Emperor Huan and Ling Part 2".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf url HuanLing_part2.pdf.
- HuanLing_part2.pdf url "http://www.anu.edu.au/asianstudies/decrespigny/HuanLing_part2.pdf".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf work "Asian Studies".
- HuanLing_part2.pdf work "Asian studies, Online Publications".