Jiao Bingzhen (
Chinese: 焦秉貞, 1689–1726) was a native of
Jining,
Shandong who became a noted painter and astronomer. He is noteworthy as one of the first
Qing dynasty painters to be influenced by the West
Deaths
Zhang Dai (張岱;
pinyin: Zhāng Dài,
courtesy name: Zhongzhi (宗子), pseudonym: Tao'an (陶庵)) (1597–1684)[1] a
Ming DynastyChinese writer, historian,
essayist, a
biographer of his own privileged aristocratic family. His bibliographical collection Dream Memories of Tao'an, a is considered a masterpiece of late Ming dynasty xiaopin and a key reference of the tangible culture assets of his time.[2][3]
Yolo (岳樂; 1625–1689),
Abatai's fourth son, held the title
Prince An of the Second Rank from 1651 to 1654
^Ning, Jiayu; Li, Ruishan (2003). Luo, Zongqiang; Chen, Hong (eds.). 中国古代文学发展史 (Zhongguo gu dai wen xue fa zhan shi) (Di 1 ban ed.). Tianjin: Nan kai da xue chubanshe. pp. 41–42.
ISBN978-7-310-01915-1.
^Mair, Victor H. (2001). The Columbia history of Chinese literature. New York: Columbia University press. p. 7.
ISBN978-0-231-10984-0.
Spence, Jonathan D. (2002),
"The K'ang-hsi Reign", in Peterson, Willard J. (ed.), Cambridge History of China, Vol. 9, Part 1: The Ch'ing Dynasty to 1800, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 120–182,
ISBN0521243343.
Jiao Bingzhen (
Chinese: 焦秉貞, 1689–1726) was a native of
Jining,
Shandong who became a noted painter and astronomer. He is noteworthy as one of the first
Qing dynasty painters to be influenced by the West
Deaths
Zhang Dai (張岱;
pinyin: Zhāng Dài,
courtesy name: Zhongzhi (宗子), pseudonym: Tao'an (陶庵)) (1597–1684)[1] a
Ming DynastyChinese writer, historian,
essayist, a
biographer of his own privileged aristocratic family. His bibliographical collection Dream Memories of Tao'an, a is considered a masterpiece of late Ming dynasty xiaopin and a key reference of the tangible culture assets of his time.[2][3]
Yolo (岳樂; 1625–1689),
Abatai's fourth son, held the title
Prince An of the Second Rank from 1651 to 1654
^Ning, Jiayu; Li, Ruishan (2003). Luo, Zongqiang; Chen, Hong (eds.). 中国古代文学发展史 (Zhongguo gu dai wen xue fa zhan shi) (Di 1 ban ed.). Tianjin: Nan kai da xue chubanshe. pp. 41–42.
ISBN978-7-310-01915-1.
^Mair, Victor H. (2001). The Columbia history of Chinese literature. New York: Columbia University press. p. 7.
ISBN978-0-231-10984-0.
Spence, Jonathan D. (2002),
"The K'ang-hsi Reign", in Peterson, Willard J. (ed.), Cambridge History of China, Vol. 9, Part 1: The Ch'ing Dynasty to 1800, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 120–182,
ISBN0521243343.