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Words near each other
・ Sang Sarlengeh
・ Sang Sefid
・ Sang Sefid Rural District
・ Sang Sefid, Bardaskan
・ Sang Sefid, Hoseynabad-e Jonubi
・ Sang Shakan Nazerkayizami
・ Sang Si
・ Sang Si-ye Do
・ Sang Sinxay
・ Sang Tarashan
・ Sang Tarashan, Lorestan
・ Sang Tarashan, Mazandaran
・ Sang Tarashan, Tehran
・ Sang Tash
・ Sang til Sandefjord
Sang Weihan
・ Sang Whang
・ Sang Won Kang
・ Sang Won Park
・ Sang Xue
・ Sang Yang
・ Sang Yifei
・ Sang Yoon
・ Sang'e
・ Sang, Bueng Kan
・ Sang, Kerman
・ Sang, South Khorasan
・ Sang, Uttarakhand
・ Sang-chul
・ Sang-dong Station


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Sang Weihan : ウィキペディア英語版
Sang Weihan
Sang Weihan (桑維翰) (898〔''Old History of the Five Dynasties'', vol. 89.〕 – January 12, 947〔''Zizhi Tongjian'', vol. 285.〕〔(Academia Sinica Chinese-Western Calendar Converter ).〕), courtesy name Guoqiao (國僑), formally the Duke of Wei (魏公), was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period state Later Jin, serving as chief of staff (''Shumishi'') during the reigns of both of Later Jin's emperors, Shi Jingtang and Shi Chonggui. While not a soldier by training, he was said to be capable and respected as the overseer of the armies of the realm.
== Background ==
Sang Weihan was born in 898, during the reign of Emperor Zhaozong of Tang. He was from the Tang Dynasty eastern capital Luoyang — as his father Sang Gong (桑珙) was a "guest general" (客將, ''kejiang'') under Zhang Quanyi, the mayor of Henan Municipality (河南, i.e., the Luoyang region). (The fact that Sang Gong was described as a "guest general" suggests that Sang Gong himself was not from Luoyang or vicinity, but later joined Zhang's army after first having served under another warlord.)〔
Sang Weihan was said to have an unusual, repulsive appearance — short in stature, with a very long face. However, it was said that he considered his appearance to be a reason to have great ambition.〔 When he submitted himself for imperial examinations, however, the chief examiners initially did not want to pass him, because they disliked his surname Sang (a homophone of 喪, "funereal"). When others, hearing of this, tried to dissuade him from submitting for the imperial examinations, he was lamenting and yet not discouraged, and wrote a poem entitled, "Ode to the Sun Rising from Fusang" to declare his ambition.〔''New History of the Five Dynasties'', vol. 29.〕 He eventually passed the imperial examinations during the ''Tongguang'' era (923-926) of Later Tang's emperor Li Cunxu.〔

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