Luo Binwang
978-613-4-11865-1
6134118656
88
2010-12-24
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Luo Binwang Luò Bīnwáng; Wade–Giles: Lo Pinwang, ca. 640–December 29, 684), courtesy name Guanguang was a Chinese poet of the Tang Dynasty. His family was from modern Wuzhou, Zhejiang, but he was raised in Shandong. Luo is grouped with Wang Bo, Yang Jiong and Lu Zhaolin as one of the Four Greats of the Early Tang as the most outstanding writers of their time. It was said that Luo Binwang could recite poetry when he was six years old. In adulthood, after a period serving on the staff of Li Yuanqing Prince of Dao, an uncle of then-ruling Emperor Gaozong, Luo worked in the central government in Chang'an from 665. In 670, he was exiled to Xinjiang, after which he travelled to Yunnan with the army. He later served on staff of the prominent general Pei Xingjian while Pei was serving as the commandant at Tao Prefecture and was in charge of the military correspondences, but he did not have a good relationship with Pei, who also disapproved of the other three greater writers grouped with Luo — Wang, Yang, and Lu, instead favoring the talents of Wang Bo's brother Wang Ju and Su Weidao
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