Concubines
Gong pin, Chinese word, Pinyin: G ō NGP í n, interpretation: imperial concubine.
interpretation
The emperor's concubine.
source
Gu Kuang's Gong CI in Tang Dynasty
example sentence
Tang Gu Kuang's "Gong Ci" poem: Yu Lou Sheng song in the middle of the sky, the wind sent palace concubines laughing and singing.
Tang xuediao's wushuangzhuan said, "I heard that the imperial concubines were chosen in yeting, most of them were children in clothes."
Wang Dingbao of the Five Dynasties wrote in Tang Zhiyan · agile: "Shang (emperor Wuzong of Tang Dynasty) was always angry with his concubines for a long time, and then he was called again."
The 13th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "Guo Si led the troops into the palace, plundered the imperial concubines, took the women into the camp, and set the palace on fire."
The first volume of Suiyuan Shihua written by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty: "there are many tombs of imperial concubines in the Southern Song Dynasty. There are twenty-four tombs on the shore of the lake and on the side of the lion mountain. It's said that "twenty four piles" are the same. "
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Chinese PinYin : Gong Pin
Concubines