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・ Banakoro
・ Banal
・ Banal nationalism
・ Banal Sojourn
・ Banalakshmi
・ Banalata Sen
・ Banalata Sen (book)
・ Banalek
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・ Ban Yang, Phitsanulok
・ Ban Yong
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Ban Zhao
・ Ban'ei
・ Ban'ei Kinen
・ Ban'etsu East Line
・ Ban'etsu West Line
・ Ban, Burkina Faso
・ Ban, Iran
・ Ban, Murree
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Ban Zhao : ウィキペディア英語版
Ban Zhao

Bān Zhāo (45 – c. 116 CE) (), courtesy name Huiban (惠班), was the first known female Chinese historian. She completed her brother Ban Gu's work on the history of the Western Han, the ''Book of Han''. She also wrote ''Lessons for Women'', an influential work advising women on how to best honour patrilineal relationships as a wife. She also had great interest in astronomy and mathematics and wrote poems, commemorative writings, argumentations, commentaries, essays and several longer works, not all of which survive. She became China's most famous female scholar.
==Family==

Ban Zhao was born in Anling, near modern Xianyang, Shaanxi province. At age fourteen, she married a local resident named Cao Shishu, and was called in the court by the name as Venerable Madame Cao (曹大家). Her husband died when she was still young. She never remarried, instead devoting her life to scholarship. She was the daughter of the famous historian Ban Biao and younger sister of the general Ban Chao and of historian Ban Gu. She was also the grandniece of the notable scholar and poet Consort Ban.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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