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Chu Yuan Warring States Period Chu State poet, about 340 BC-278 BC, surnamed Mi, Qu, Mingping, Ziyuan.
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The Constitution and laws stipulate that procuratorial organs are created by the people's congress and are responsible to and supervised by the people's congress. Accordingly, the resolution stipulates that procuratorial organs should conscientiously accept the supervision of the people's congresses and their standing committees, and that the people's congresses and their standing committees at all levels should supervise the people's procuratorates' effective performance of their legal supervision duties in accordance with the law by hearing and deliberating special work reports, carrying out law enforcement inspections, and organizing special inspections.
Iron striking also requires its own strength, and the procuratorial organs must have the courage and determination to turn the blade inward. The resolution stipulates that the people's procuratorates should improve internal management and supervision mechanisms such as case evaluation, strictly implement the judicial responsibility system, consolidate responsibilities at all levels, and implement internal supervision.
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Qu Yuan was a native of Chu during the Warring States period. 2. Profile Qu Yuan (340 BC-278 BC), a native of Chu during the Warring States Period, surnamed Mi, Qu Shi, Mingping, Ziyuan, with words; In "Lisao", he said: "The name is more than the regular, and the word is more than Lingjun."
Born in Danyang, Chu (in present-day Yichang City, Hubei Province), he was a descendant of Qu Bian, the son of Xiong Tong, King Wu of Chu, and was a propagator of Huang Lao's learning, Qu Yuan was the earliest romance in China.
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Qu Yuan was a native of the late Warring States period, a poet and a politician during the Warring States period.
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1. Qu Yuan was a native of Chu during the Warring States Period.
2. Character profile.
Qu Yuan (340 BC, 278 BC), a native of Chu during the Warring States Period, surnamed Mi, Qu Shi, Mingping, Ziyuan, with the word line; In "Lisao", he said: "The name is more than the regular, and the word is more than Lingjun." Born in Danyang, Chu State (in present-day Yichang City, Hubei Province), he was a descendant of Qu Bian, the son of Xiong Tong, King Wu of Chu, and a disseminator of Huang Lao's learning, Qu Yuan was the earliest romantic poet in China and the first great patriotic poet to leave his name in the history of Chinese literature.
His appearance marked the beginning of a new era of Chinese poetry from collective singing to individual singing.
Qu Yuan is the founder and representative author of "Chu Ci", and also created the tradition of "vanilla beauty". Qu Yuan is also a politician, serving as a doctor in Sanlu, a leftist disciple and in charge of internal and foreign affairs, after Wu Qi, another advocate of changing the law in Chu is Qu Yuan. He advocated raising meritocracy internally, cultivating the law, and externally advocating the joint resistance to Qin.
Later, because he was squeezed out by the nobles, he was exiled to the Yuanxiang Valley.
1953 was the 2,230th anniversary of Qu Yuan's death, and the World Peace Council passed a resolution to identify Qu Yuan as one of the world's four major cultural celebrities commemorated that year.
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Qu Yuan Dynasty: End of the Warring States Period.
Qu Yuan (c. 340 BC – 278 BC) was a poet and statesman of Chu during the Warring States period of China. Born in Zigui, Danyang, Chu State (now Yichang, Hubei). Mi surname, Qu family, name Ping, word original; It is also from the cloud name regular, and the word is even.
A descendant of Qu Bian, the son of Xiong Tong, King of Chuwu. As a teenager, he was well-educated, well-informed, and ambitious. In his early years, he was trusted by King Chu Huai, and served as a leftist disciple and a doctor in Sanlu, and was also in charge of domestic and foreign affairs.
He advocated "American politics", advocated the internal promotion of meritocracy, the cultivation of the law, and the external force to unite to resist Qin. Because he was excluded and slandered by the nobles, he was exiled to the northern Han and Yuanxiang valleys. After the state of Chu was defeated by the Qin army, he sank himself in the Miluo River and died as a martyr.
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Qu Yuan was from the State of Chu, a person from the Warring States Period.
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Qu Yuan's Sky Magic Mirror only went abroad to boil It is to go out.
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Qu Yuan was from the Warring States period.
Qu Yuan (c. 340 BC-278 BC), surnamed Mi, Qu Shi, Mingping, Ziyuan, also known as Yun Zheng, Zi Lingjun, was born in Zigui, Danyang, Chu (now Yichang, Hubei), a poet and politician of Chu during the Warring States Period.
Qu Yuan wrote many famous patriotic poems in his life, and later, because the king of Chu did not accept his patriotic ideas, resulting in the loss of the country, he was full of grief and anger, and jumped into the Miluo River (a Danjiang River) to commit suicide. Thus, in order to commemorate him, the world has the Dragon Boat Festival.
The idea of empowering the virtuous and empowering the United States
Qu Yuan's work is a record of his adherence to the ideal of "American politics" and his struggle against the decadent Chu aristocratic group. The so-called "promoting the virtuous and conferring ability" means that the truly talented people are selected to govern the country regardless of whether they are high or low, oppose the Shiqing Shilu, and limit the monopoly of the old aristocracy on power.
He also cited the historical deeds of the slave Fu Shuo, the butcher Lu Wang, and the merchant Ning Qi as examples to illustrate the rationality of selecting talents regardless of status. The so-called "following the rope and ink without being quite" is to cultivate the law, that is, the law is not expensive, and limit the various privileges of the old aristocracy.
Although Qu Yuan was slandered, neglected, and even exiled, he always thought of the rise and fall of the motherland and the suffering of the people, and hoped that the king of Chu would repent, work hard, and be the master of Zhongxing. He knew that loyalty and uprightness would lead to disaster, but he always "endured it and could not give up."
He knew that he was facing a lot of dangers, and he could go to other countries to seek a way out in the era of "Chu Cai Jinyong", but he never refused to leave Chu State for half a step. It shows his infinite loyalty to the motherland and his personality and will to "compete with the sun and the moon".
Qu Yuan was a native of the Warring States period. >>>More
two, one is the Miluo River, where he is buried; One is the tomb of Qu Yuan, which is located on the top of Miluo Mountain in the north of Miluo City, with 12 tombs. ]
c. 340 B.C. c. 278 B.C.), Han nationality, a native of Chu during the Warring States Period, surnamed Qu, Mingping, and the word Yuan; It is also from the cloud name regular, and the word is even. A native of Danyang of Chu at the end of the Warring States Period of China, a descendant of Qu Bian, the son of Xiong Tong, King Wu of Chu. >>>More
Han Yu (768-824), the word retreated. He was a writer and philosopher in the Tang Dynasty, and an advocate of the ancient literature movement at that time. A native of Heyang, Henan (now Meng County), his ancestral home is Changli, known as Han Changli, and in his later years, he served as a waiter in the Ministry of Officials, also known as the Ministry of Han Officials. >>>More
Yi Di and Du Kang were both from the Xia Dynasty, and the historical data taken say that Yi Di was the first person to make wine, and now the commercial promotion of Du Kang seems to be more in the limelight. In fact, it is a legend that all ethnic groups around the world have made wine in different places, which is an inevitable law, not a coincidence, because grain fermentation becomes wine, regardless of national borders. >>>More