- Li Chih-tsao (Chinese mathematician and astronomer)
Li Zhizao was a Chinese mathematician, astronomer, and geographer whose translations of European scientific books greatly contributed to the spread of Western science in China. Originally from a military family, Li was made a jinshi (the highest scholar-official title in imperial China) in 1598. In
- Li Chin-chung (Chinese official)
Wei Zhongxian was a eunuch who completely dominated the Chinese government between 1624 and 1627, ruthlessly exploiting the population and terrorizing the official class. He is usually considered by historians to have been the most powerful eunuch in Chinese history. Wei’s career began as a butler
- Li Chongguang (Chinese poet and ruler)
Li Yu was a Chinese poet and the last ruler of the Nan (Southern) Tang dynasty (937–975). Li Yu succeeded his poet father, Li Jing, as ruler in 961. His country was invaded in 974 by Taizu, founder of the Song dynasty (960–1279). When Li Yu’s capital, Jinling, fell the next year, he surrendered and
- Li Chunfeng (Chinese mathematician and astronomer)
Li Chunfeng was a Chinese mathematician and astronomer. Li was the son of a widely educated state official. He was given a position in the Imperial Astronomical Bureau in 627, following his critique of the Wuyin calendar, which had been introduced in 619. Later he submitted a report concerning the
- Li Cunxu (Chinese leader)
Five Dynasties: …by one of its generals, Zhuangzong (personal name Li Cunxu), who established the Hou (Later) Tang dynasty in 923. Although Zhuangzong and his successors ruled relatively well for 13 years, the Hou Tang was finally terminated when one of its generals, Gaozu (personal name Shi Jingtang), overthrew his master with…
- Li Dan (emperor of Tang dynasty)
Ruizong was the temple name (miaohao) of the sixth emperor of the Tang dynasty of China. He was placed on the throne by his mother, the future empress Wuhou, in 684, before she decided to set him aside and rule the country herself in 690. This was the first such usurpation in Chinese history.
- Li Daoyuan (Chinese author)
Chinese literature: Prose: …Buddhist Temples in Luoyang”), and Li Daoyuan, author of Shuijingzhu (“Commentary on the Water Classic”). Although both of these works seem to have been planned to serve a practical, utilitarian purpose, they are magnificent records of contemporary developments and charming storehouses of accumulated folklore, written with great spontaneity and artistry.…
- Li Dazhao (Chinese communist)
Li Dazhao was a cofounder of the Chinese Communist Party and mentor of Mao Zedong. After studying at Tianjin and at Waseda University in Tokyo, Li became an editor for Xinqingnian (“New Youth”), the principal journal of the new Western-oriented literary and cultural movements. In 1918 he was
- Li Deyu (Chinese minister)
China: The struggle for central authority: Wuzong and his minister, Li Deyu, managed to impose some restrictions on the eunuchs’ power, especially in the military.
- Li Er (Chinese Daoist philosopher)
Laozi was the first philosopher of Chinese Daoism and the alleged author of the Daodejing, a primary Daoist writing. Modern scholars discount the possibility that the Daodejing was written by only one person but readily acknowledge the influence of Daoism on the development of Buddhism. Laozi is
- Li Feigan (Chinese author)
Ba Jin was a Chinese anarchist writer whose novels and short stories achieved widespread popularity in the 1930s and ’40s. Having been born to a wealthy gentry family, Li Yaotang received a traditional Confucian education as well as training in modern foreign languages and literatures. While in
- Li Gong (Chinese philosopher)
Yan Yuan: …of his most eminent student, Li Gong (1659–1733), became the major works of a new philosophical movement known as the Yan-Li school. A short-lived society to study and disseminate its doctrines was formed in 1920 in Beijing. Yan’s major works were reprinted in the late 19th century as the Yan-Li…
- Li Gonglin (Chinese painter)
Li Gonglin was one of the most lavishly praised Chinese connoisseurs and painters in a circle of scholar-officials during the Northern Song period. Li Gonglin was born into a scholarly home, received the jinshi (“advanced scholar”) degree in 1070, and followed the common career of going to the
- Li He (Chinese poet)
Li He was a brilliant Chinese poet who showed great promise until his untimely death at age 26. Literary legend describes Li He as a man of guicai (“devilish talent”) who composed his haunting verses by jotting down single lines on small slips of paper while on horseback, dropping the slips into an
- Li Ho (Chinese poet)
Li He was a brilliant Chinese poet who showed great promise until his untimely death at age 26. Literary legend describes Li He as a man of guicai (“devilish talent”) who composed his haunting verses by jotting down single lines on small slips of paper while on horseback, dropping the slips into an
- Li Hong (Chinese sage)
Daoism: Revolutionary messianism: …a sage of western China, Li Hong, who had actually lived during the 1st century bce, became the favourite recurrent figure of later would-be messiahs. Such revolutionary religious movements, which included Daoist ideological elements, remained a persistent feature of medieval Chinese history. The last recorded Li Hong was executed in…
- Li Hongzhang (Chinese statesman)
Li Hongzhang was a leading Chinese statesman of the 19th century, who made strenuous efforts to modernize his country. In 1870 he began a 25-year term as governor-general of the capital province, Zhili (Chihli; now Hebei), during which time he initiated projects in commerce and industry and, for
- Li Hongzhi (Chinese-born religious leader)
Li Hongzhi is the Chinese-born founder and leader of Falun Gong, a spiritual movement that won a wide following in China and elsewhere but was eventually condemned as a “heretical cult” by Chinese government officials. In the late 1980s and early ’90s, China saw a resurgence in the popularity of
- Li Houzhu (Chinese poet and ruler)
Li Yu was a Chinese poet and the last ruler of the Nan (Southern) Tang dynasty (937–975). Li Yu succeeded his poet father, Li Jing, as ruler in 961. His country was invaded in 974 by Taizu, founder of the Song dynasty (960–1279). When Li Yu’s capital, Jinling, fell the next year, he surrendered and
- Li Hsien-nien (president of China)
Li Xiannian was a Chinese politician, one of the eight “revolutionary elders” and a leftist hard-liner who opposed economic reform. Li, a member of the Chinese Communist Party by 1927, was a veteran of the Long March (1934–35), having served as army captain and political commissar. He became
- Li Hsiu-ch’eng (Chinese general)
Li Xiucheng was a Chinese general and leader of the Taiping Rebellion, the giant religious-political uprising that occupied most of South China between 1850 and 1864. After 1859, when the Taipings were beset by internal dissension, poor leadership, and corruption, Li’s military and administrative
- Li Hsüeh (Chinese philosophy)
Lu Jiuyuan: …the Learning of Principle (lixue), often called the Cheng-Zhu school after its leading philosophers, Cheng Yi and Zhu Xi.
- Li Hung-chang (Chinese statesman)
Li Hongzhang was a leading Chinese statesman of the 19th century, who made strenuous efforts to modernize his country. In 1870 he began a 25-year term as governor-general of the capital province, Zhili (Chihli; now Hebei), during which time he initiated projects in commerce and industry and, for
- Li Ji (Chinese archaeologist)
Li Chi was an archaeologist chiefly responsible for establishing the historical authenticity of the semilegendary Shang dynasty of China. The exact dates of the Shang dynasty are uncertain; traditionally, they have been given as from c. 1766 to c. 1122 bce, but more recent archaeological evidence
- Li Jiancheng (Chinese prince)
China: Early Tang (618–626): …army under the crown prince Jiancheng at the beginning of 623. The prolonged resistance in Hebei and the comparatively harsh Tang conquest of the region were the beginning of resistance and hostility in the northeast that continued to some degree throughout the Tang dynasty.
- Li Jie (Chinese architect)
Chinese architecture: The Song (960–1279), Liao (907–1125), and Jin (1115–1234) dynasties: …Hao and the state architect Li Jie were educated men. The latter is known today chiefly as the compiler of Yingzao fashi (“Building Standards”), which he presented to the throne in 1100. This illustrated work deals in encyclopaedic fashion with all branches of architecture: layout, construction, stonework, carpentry, bracketing, decoration,…
- Li Jinfa (Chinese poet)
Chinese literature: 1927–37: …daring were Dai Wangshu and Li Jinfa, poets published in Xiandai (“Contemporary Age”), a Shanghai literary magazine. The latter wrote very sophisticated, if frequently baffling, poetry in the manner of the French Symbolists.
- Li Jingzhai (Chinese mathematician)
Li Ye was a Chinese mathematician and scholar-official who contributed to the solution of polynomial equations in one variable. Li passed the mandarin jinshi examination (the highest scholar-official title in imperial China) in prose literature at the late age of 38. He was appointed to the
- Li Jinhai (Chinese politician)
Jiang Qing was the third wife of Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong and the most influential woman in the People’s Republic of China for a while until her downfall in 1976, after Mao’s death. As a member of the Gang of Four she was convicted in 1981 of “counter-revolutionary crimes” and
- Li Jinzhong (Chinese official)
Wei Zhongxian was a eunuch who completely dominated the Chinese government between 1624 and 1627, ruthlessly exploiting the population and terrorizing the official class. He is usually considered by historians to have been the most powerful eunuch in Chinese history. Wei’s career began as a butler
- Li Jun Fan (American-born actor)
Bruce Lee was an American-born film actor who was renowned for his martial arts prowess and who helped popularize martial arts movies in the 1970s. Lee was born in San Francisco, but he grew up in Hong Kong. He was introduced to the entertainment industry at an early age, as his father was an opera
- Li K’o-jan (Chinese artist)
Li Keran was a painter and art educator who was a prominent figure in 20th-century Chinese art. He developed a personal style of landscape painting that was based upon the emulation of both ancient and contemporary masters. Li showed a gift for painting, calligraphy, and music as a child. When he
- Li K’o-yung (Turkish-Chinese general)
Li Keyong was a Tang general of Turkish origin who suppressed the great peasant rebellion of Huang Chao (died 884), which threatened the Tang dynasty (618–907) in its last years. Afterward the empire was divided between powerful warlords, and Li became a leading contender for power in North China.
- Li Ka-shing (Chinese entrepreneur and philanthropist)
Li Ka-shing is a Chinese entrepreneur and philanthropist, widely considered one of the most influential businessmen in Asia. His companies were involved in real estate, ports, and infrastructure, among other ventures. Li was born into a poor family who fled mainland China for Hong Kong in 1940
- Li Kan (Chinese painter)
Chinese painting: Yuan dynasty (1206–1368): Li Kan carefully studied the varieties of bamboo during his official travels and wrote a systematic treatise on painting them; he remains unsurpassed as a skilled bamboo painter. Gao Kegong followed Mi Fu and Mi Youren in painting cloudy landscapes that symbolized good government. Wang…
- Li Keqiang (prime minister of China)
Li Keqiang was a Chinese politician and government official who served as premier of China from 2013 to 2023. Li grew up in Anhui province in east-central China, where his father was a local official. His formal schooling was interrupted in 1974–78 during the latter part of the Cultural Revolution
- Li Keran (Chinese artist)
Li Keran was a painter and art educator who was a prominent figure in 20th-century Chinese art. He developed a personal style of landscape painting that was based upon the emulation of both ancient and contemporary masters. Li showed a gift for painting, calligraphy, and music as a child. When he
- Li Keyong (Turkish-Chinese general)
Li Keyong was a Tang general of Turkish origin who suppressed the great peasant rebellion of Huang Chao (died 884), which threatened the Tang dynasty (618–907) in its last years. Afterward the empire was divided between powerful warlords, and Li became a leading contender for power in North China.
- Li Kung-lin (Chinese painter)
Li Gonglin was one of the most lavishly praised Chinese connoisseurs and painters in a circle of scholar-officials during the Northern Song period. Li Gonglin was born into a scholarly home, received the jinshi (“advanced scholar”) degree in 1070, and followed the common career of going to the
- Li Kuo (emperor of Tang dynasty)
Dezong was the temple name (miaohao) of the 10th emperor (reigned 779–805) of the Tang dynasty and the only emperor in the latter half of the dynasty to reign more than 20 years. In spite of his long reign, he never successfully controlled the militarists who commanded the provinces and ignored
- Li languages
Li: …groups, most of whom speak languages distantly related to the Tai language family. Until Chinese linguists created a romanized orthography for their language in the 1950s, they had no writing system of their own.
- Li Li-san (Chinese revolutionary)
Li Lisan was a Chinese revolutionary who was one of the early leaders of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Li went to study in Paris in 1919 and returned to China in 1921. He joined the CCP in the same year and became one of the party’s principal labour organizers. After 1928 he became one of the
- Li Lianjie (Chinese actor)
Jet Li is a Chinese film actor noted for his superlative martial arts skills and for his portrayals of virtuous, humble heroes. In 1971 Li entered a summer sports program and was randomly assigned to a wushu (martial arts) class. At the age of nine, he received an award at the first wushu
- Li Lieh-chün (Chinese general)
China: Yuan’s attempts to become emperor: Joined by Li Liejun (Li Lieh-chün) and other revolutionary generals, they established the National Protection Army (Huguojun) and demanded that Yuan cancel his plan. When he would not, the Yunnan army in early January 1916 invaded Sichuan and subsequently Hunan and Guangdong, hoping to bring the southwestern and southern…
- Li Linfu (Chinese minister)
An Lushan: Early life and career: …rule of China’s chief minister, Li Linfu, who was unwilling to appoint native Chinese as generals for fear that they would gain prestige that would enable them to rival his own position at court.
- Li Lisan (Chinese revolutionary)
Li Lisan was a Chinese revolutionary who was one of the early leaders of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Li went to study in Paris in 1919 and returned to China in 1921. He joined the CCP in the same year and became one of the party’s principal labour organizers. After 1928 he became one of the
- Li Longji (emperor of Tang dynasty [685–762])
Xuanzong was the temple name (miaohao) of the seventh emperor of the Tang dynasty (618–907) of China, which during his reign (712–756) achieved its greatest prosperity and power. Li Longji was the third son of the Ruizong emperor, who was himself a son of the empress Wuhou. Li Longji was born
- Li Longzhi (Chinese revolutionary)
Li Lisan was a Chinese revolutionary who was one of the early leaders of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Li went to study in Paris in 1919 and returned to China in 1921. He joined the CCP in the same year and became one of the party’s principal labour organizers. After 1928 he became one of the
- Li Mi (Chinese rebel)
China: Foreign affairs under Yangdi: …become the various local rebels: Li Mi in the area around Luoyang, Dou Jiande in the northeast, Xue Ju in the far northwest, and Li Yuan (who remained nominally loyal but had established a local position of great power) in Shanxi. At the beginning of 617, Li Yuan inflicted a…
- Li Nangxiao (emperor of Xi Xia)
Li Yuanhao was the leader of the Tangut (Chinese: Dangxiang) tribes, a people who inhabited the northwestern region of China in what are now parts of Gansu and Shaanxi provinces and the Ningxia Hui and Inner Mongolia autonomous regions. Li founded the Xia (or Daxia) dynasty (1038–1227), usually
- Li Ning (Chinese gymnast and entrepreneur)
Li Ning is a Chinese gymnast and entrepreneur, who amassed six medals at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Later he founded Li-Ning Sports Goods, an athletic apparel and shoe company. Li took up gymnastics at age eight and joined the national team in 1980. He made his mark on the international
- Li P’eng (prime minister of China)
Li Peng was the premier of China from 1988 to 1998 and, from 1998 to 2003, chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC). The son of writer Li Shuoxun, who was executed by the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) in 1930, Li Peng from 1939 was cared for by Deng Yingchao, the
- Li Pai (Chinese poet)
Li Bai was a Chinese poet who rivaled Du Fu for the title of China’s greatest poet. Li Bai liked to regard himself as belonging to the imperial family, but he actually belonged to a less exalted family of the same surname. At age 24 he left home for a period of wandering, after which he married and
- Li Peng (prime minister of China)
Li Peng was the premier of China from 1988 to 1998 and, from 1998 to 2003, chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC). The son of writer Li Shuoxun, who was executed by the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) in 1930, Li Peng from 1939 was cared for by Deng Yingchao, the
- Li Po (Chinese poet)
Li Bai was a Chinese poet who rivaled Du Fu for the title of China’s greatest poet. Li Bai liked to regard himself as belonging to the imperial family, but he actually belonged to a less exalted family of the same surname. At age 24 he left home for a period of wandering, after which he married and
- Li Qingzhao (Chinese poet)
Li Qingzhao was China’s greatest woman poet, whose work, though it survives only in fragments, continues to be as highly regarded as it was in her own day. Li Qingzhao was born into a literary family and produced well-regarded poetry while still a teenager. In 1101 she married Zhao Mingcheng, a
- Li Qiuren (Chinese mathematician)
Li Shanlan was a Chinese mathematician who was instrumental in combining Western mathematical and scientific knowledge and methods with traditional Chinese methods. Li was educated by Chen Huan (1786–1863), a famous philologist, and from an early age demonstrated a remarkable talent for
- Li Renshu (Chinese mathematician)
Li Shanlan was a Chinese mathematician who was instrumental in combining Western mathematical and scientific knowledge and methods with traditional Chinese methods. Li was educated by Chen Huan (1786–1863), a famous philologist, and from an early age demonstrated a remarkable talent for
- Li River (river, China)
Ling Canal: …into Hunan province, with the Li River, one of the headwater tributaries of the Gui River (itself a tributary of the Xi River) leading eventually to Guangzhou (Canton). Near the city of Xing’an in northern Guangxi, these two rivers are separated by a low divide broken by a saddle. A…
- Li Rui (Chinese mathematician and astronomer)
Li Rui was a Chinese mathematician and astronomer who made notable contributions to the revival of traditional Chinese mathematics and astronomy and to the development of the theory of equations. Having failed the Chinese civil service examinations several times, Li Rui could obtain no official
- Li Ruigang (Chinese businessman)
Li Ruigang is a Chinese businessman who rose to prominence as president of the state-owned conglomerate Shanghai Media Group (SMG). Li studied journalism at Shanghai’s Fudan University, where he earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees. After completing his master’s degree in 1994, he worked as
- Li sao and Other Poems of Qu Yuan (poem by Qu Yuan)
Qu Yuan: …with the long melancholic poem Lisao (“On Encountering Sorrow”; Eng. trans. Li sao and Other Poems of Qu Yuan, 2001), Qu Yuan’s most famous work, which initiated a tradition of romanticism in Chinese literature. Qu Yuan’s other works available in English include The Nine Songs: A Study of Shamanism in…
- Li Shang-yin (Chinese poet)
Li Shangyin was a Chinese poet remembered for his elegance and obscurity. A member of a family of minor officials, Li Shangyin pursued a generally unsuccessful career as a government official, composing poetry during and between his various posts. Until the second half of the 20th century little of
- Li Shangyin (Chinese poet)
Li Shangyin was a Chinese poet remembered for his elegance and obscurity. A member of a family of minor officials, Li Shangyin pursued a generally unsuccessful career as a government official, composing poetry during and between his various posts. Until the second half of the 20th century little of
- Li Shanlan (Chinese mathematician)
Li Shanlan was a Chinese mathematician who was instrumental in combining Western mathematical and scientific knowledge and methods with traditional Chinese methods. Li was educated by Chen Huan (1786–1863), a famous philologist, and from an early age demonstrated a remarkable talent for
- Li Shao-Chün (Chinese Daoist)
Li Shaojun was a noted Chinese Daoist who was responsible for much of the mystical content of popular Daoist thought. Li was not only the first known Daoist alchemist but also the first to make the practice of certain hygienic exercises a part of Daoist rites. He was also the first to claim that
- Li Shaojun (Chinese Daoist)
Li Shaojun was a noted Chinese Daoist who was responsible for much of the mystical content of popular Daoist thought. Li was not only the first known Daoist alchemist but also the first to make the practice of certain hygienic exercises a part of Daoist rites. He was also the first to claim that
- Li Shih-chen (Chinese scholar)
Li Shizhen was a Chinese scholar of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) who compiled a highly influential materia medica, the Bencao gangmu (Compendium of Materia Medica), which described 1,892 drugs and presented directions for preparing some 11,000 prescriptions. Completed in 1578, the book was in part
- Li Shijen (Chinese scholar)
Li Shizhen was a Chinese scholar of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) who compiled a highly influential materia medica, the Bencao gangmu (Compendium of Materia Medica), which described 1,892 drugs and presented directions for preparing some 11,000 prescriptions. Completed in 1578, the book was in part
- Li Shimin (emperor of Tang dynasty)
Taizong was the temple name (miaohao) of the second emperor (reigned 626–649) of the Tang dynasty (618–907) of China. Li Shimin was the second son of the dynastic founder, the Gaozu emperor. Traditional historians have portrayed him as the driving force behind his father’s uprising against the
- Li Shizhen (Chinese scholar)
Li Shizhen was a Chinese scholar of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) who compiled a highly influential materia medica, the Bencao gangmu (Compendium of Materia Medica), which described 1,892 drugs and presented directions for preparing some 11,000 prescriptions. Completed in 1578, the book was in part
- Li Si (Chinese statesman)
Li Si was a Chinese statesman who utilized the ruthless but efficient ideas of the political philosophy of Legalism to weld the warring Chinese states of his time into the first centralized Chinese empire, ruled by the Qin dynasty (221–207 bce). In 247 bce he entered the state of Qin to begin
- Li Sixun (Chinese painter)
Li Sixun was a Chinese painter who was later seen as the chief exponent of a decoratively coloured landscape style of the Tang dynasty and as the founder of the so-called Northern school of professional painters. Li was related to the Tang imperial family, led an active political life including
- Li Ssu (Chinese statesman)
Li Si was a Chinese statesman who utilized the ruthless but efficient ideas of the political philosophy of Legalism to weld the warring Chinese states of his time into the first centralized Chinese empire, ruled by the Qin dynasty (221–207 bce). In 247 bce he entered the state of Qin to begin
- Li Ssu-hsün (Chinese painter)
Li Sixun was a Chinese painter who was later seen as the chief exponent of a decoratively coloured landscape style of the Tang dynasty and as the founder of the so-called Northern school of professional painters. Li was related to the Tang imperial family, led an active political life including
- Li T’ai-kuo (British diplomat)
Horatio Nelson Lay was a British diplomat who organized the Maritime Customs Bureau for the Chinese government in 1855. In 1854 the Taiping Rebellion had cut off the Chinese trading city of Shanghai from the capital, Beijing, and, because the Western powers in Shanghai were required by treaty to
- Li T’ang (Chinese painter)
Li Tang was a major Chinese painter who lived during both the Northern and the Southern Song dynasties and established a style of painting that became the base for the academy-style landscape of the Southern Song. He earned the highest rank in the academy of painting of Emperor Huizong, and, after
- Li T’ieh-kuai (Chinese religious figure)
Li Tieguai, in Chinese religion, one of the Baxian, the Eight Immortals. He was an ascetic for 40 years, often foregoing food and sleep, until Laozi (also surnamed Li) agreed to return to earth and instruct his fellow clansman on worldly vanities. Returning one day from a celestial visit to his
- Li T’ung (Chinese philosopher)
Zhu Xi: Life: …Tongan, Zhu Xi called on Li Tong, a thinker in the tradition of Song Confucianism who decisively influenced his future thinking. He visited Li again in 1158 and spent several months studying with him in 1160. Li was one of the ablest followers of the 11th-century neo-Confucians who had created…
- Li Ta-chao (Chinese communist)
Li Dazhao was a cofounder of the Chinese Communist Party and mentor of Mao Zedong. After studying at Tianjin and at Waseda University in Tokyo, Li became an editor for Xinqingnian (“New Youth”), the principal journal of the new Western-oriented literary and cultural movements. In 1918 he was
- Li Taibai (Chinese poet)
Li Bai was a Chinese poet who rivaled Du Fu for the title of China’s greatest poet. Li Bai liked to regard himself as belonging to the imperial family, but he actually belonged to a less exalted family of the same surname. At age 24 he left home for a period of wandering, after which he married and
- Li Taiguo (British diplomat)
Horatio Nelson Lay was a British diplomat who organized the Maritime Customs Bureau for the Chinese government in 1855. In 1854 the Taiping Rebellion had cut off the Chinese trading city of Shanghai from the capital, Beijing, and, because the Western powers in Shanghai were required by treaty to
- Li Tang (Chinese painter)
Li Tang was a major Chinese painter who lived during both the Northern and the Southern Song dynasties and established a style of painting that became the base for the academy-style landscape of the Southern Song. He earned the highest rank in the academy of painting of Emperor Huizong, and, after
- Li Tieguai (Chinese religious figure)
Li Tieguai, in Chinese religion, one of the Baxian, the Eight Immortals. He was an ascetic for 40 years, often foregoing food and sleep, until Laozi (also surnamed Li) agreed to return to earth and instruct his fellow clansman on worldly vanities. Returning one day from a celestial visit to his
- Li Tong (Chinese philosopher)
Zhu Xi: Life: …Tongan, Zhu Xi called on Li Tong, a thinker in the tradition of Song Confucianism who decisively influenced his future thinking. He visited Li again in 1158 and spent several months studying with him in 1160. Li was one of the ablest followers of the 11th-century neo-Confucians who had created…
- Li Tsung-jen (Chinese official)
China: Communist victory: Li Tsung-jen (Li Zongren), the problem of holding the government together and trying to negotiate a peace with Mao Zedong. Li’s peace negotiations (February–April) proved hopeless. The Nationalists were not prepared to surrender; they still claimed to govern more than half of China and still…
- Li Tzu-ch’eng (Chinese rebel)
Li Zicheng was a Chinese rebel leader who dethroned Chongzhen, the last emperor of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). A local village leader, Li joined the rebel cause in 1630 following a great famine that had caused much unrest in the northern part of the country. He made his headquarters in the
- Li Xian (emperor of Tang dynasty)
Ruizong: …made Wuhou’s heir, his brother Zhongzong, under the domination of a clique of court officials, succeeded to the throne in 705, after a palace coup overthrew the empress. A further coup led by Ruizong’s son put Ruizong back on the throne in 710. He ruled for two years before abdicating…
- Li Xiannian (president of China)
Li Xiannian was a Chinese politician, one of the eight “revolutionary elders” and a leftist hard-liner who opposed economic reform. Li, a member of the Chinese Communist Party by 1927, was a veteran of the Long March (1934–35), having served as army captain and political commissar. He became
- Li Xiucheng (Chinese general)
Li Xiucheng was a Chinese general and leader of the Taiping Rebellion, the giant religious-political uprising that occupied most of South China between 1850 and 1864. After 1859, when the Taipings were beset by internal dissension, poor leadership, and corruption, Li’s military and administrative
- Li Yaotang (Chinese author)
Ba Jin was a Chinese anarchist writer whose novels and short stories achieved widespread popularity in the 1930s and ’40s. Having been born to a wealthy gentry family, Li Yaotang received a traditional Confucian education as well as training in modern foreign languages and literatures. While in
- Li Ye (Chinese mathematician)
Li Ye was a Chinese mathematician and scholar-official who contributed to the solution of polynomial equations in one variable. Li passed the mandarin jinshi examination (the highest scholar-official title in imperial China) in prose literature at the late age of 38. He was appointed to the
- Li Yeh (Chinese mathematician)
Li Ye was a Chinese mathematician and scholar-official who contributed to the solution of polynomial equations in one variable. Li passed the mandarin jinshi examination (the highest scholar-official title in imperial China) in prose literature at the late age of 38. He was appointed to the
- Li Yi (Chinese musician)
sanxian: …musicians Bai Fengyan (1899–1975) and Li Yi (b. 1932) made the sanxian popular as a solo instrument.
- Li Yi’an (Chinese poet)
Li Qingzhao was China’s greatest woman poet, whose work, though it survives only in fragments, continues to be as highly regarded as it was in her own day. Li Qingzhao was born into a literary family and produced well-regarded poetry while still a teenager. In 1101 she married Zhao Mingcheng, a
- Li Yishan (Chinese poet)
Li Shangyin was a Chinese poet remembered for his elegance and obscurity. A member of a family of minor officials, Li Shangyin pursued a generally unsuccessful career as a government official, composing poetry during and between his various posts. Until the second half of the 20th century little of
- Li Yongfang (Chinese commander)
Nurhachi: …was captured when its commander, Li Yongfang, defected to the Manchu side. This defection was possible only because the Chinese official saw in the Manchu system the opportunity of serving a Manchu ruler without abandoning his Chinese cultural and political experience. He was only the first of a number of…
- Li Yongshun (Chinese artist)
Li Keran was a painter and art educator who was a prominent figure in 20th-century Chinese art. He developed a personal style of landscape painting that was based upon the emulation of both ancient and contemporary masters. Li showed a gift for painting, calligraphy, and music as a child. When he
- Li Youcai banhua (work by Zhao Shuli)
Chinese literature: 1949–76: …early stories, such as “Li Youcai banhua” (“The Rhymes of Li Youcai”), were models of proletarian literature, both in form and in content. As the civil war neared its conclusion, novels of land reform, such as Ding Ling’s prizewinning Taiyang zhao zai Sangganhe shang (1949; The Sun Shines over…
- Li Yu (Chinese poet and ruler)
Li Yu was a Chinese poet and the last ruler of the Nan (Southern) Tang dynasty (937–975). Li Yu succeeded his poet father, Li Jing, as ruler in 961. His country was invaded in 974 by Taizu, founder of the Song dynasty (960–1279). When Li Yu’s capital, Jinling, fell the next year, he surrendered and