Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology of the Chinese dynasties
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The historical development of the aristocratic families
- 3 Origins of the Ts'uis in the Han
- 4 The Ts'uis in the aristocratic age
- 5 The Ts'uis as an old family in the T'ang
- 6 Implications and conclusions
- Notes to the text
- Appendix I The reliability of the genealogical tables in the Hsin T'ang shu
- Appendix II Annotated genealogy of the descendants of Ts'ui Yen, d. 646
- Appendix III Marriages of Po-ling Ts'uis during the T'ang
- Bibliography
- Glossary
- Index
Appendix III - Marriages of Po-ling Ts'uis during the T'ang
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology of the Chinese dynasties
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The historical development of the aristocratic families
- 3 Origins of the Ts'uis in the Han
- 4 The Ts'uis in the aristocratic age
- 5 The Ts'uis as an old family in the T'ang
- 6 Implications and conclusions
- Notes to the text
- Appendix I The reliability of the genealogical tables in the Hsin T'ang shu
- Appendix II Annotated genealogy of the descendants of Ts'ui Yen, d. 646
- Appendix III Marriages of Po-ling Ts'uis during the T'ang
- Bibliography
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
When marriages are mentioned in historical sources, the personal name of the spouse is not always supplied. The following tables list all known marriages of Po-ling Ts'uis in which the personal name of the Ts'ui (or one of his or her close relatives) was given. In cases where the status of the non-Ts'ui spouse's family can be determined, it has been classified as not prominent, a prominent family (one listed on the national genealogical compendiums reconstructed by Ikeda On, ‘Tōdai no gumbō hyō’, or Niida Noboru, Chūgoku hōseishi kenkyū, III, 630–49), an old family (one of the twenty-nine families prominent since the Northern and Southern Dynasties listed in the eighth-century essay by Liu Fang [HTS 199/18b–19a]), or one of the seven families forbidden to intermarry in 659 (Po-ling and Ch'ing-ho Ts'ui, Chao-chün and Lung-hsi Li, Fan-yang Lu, Jung-yang Cheng, T'ai-yüan Wang). In these tables ‘D.’ stands for daughter.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Aristocratic Families in Early Imperial ChinaA Case Study of the Po-Ling Ts'ui Family, pp. 191 - 201Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1978