. . . . . "Zh\u0101ng H\u00F3ngj\u00ECng"@en . . . . . "Zhang Hongjing"@en . . . . . . "\u5F35\u5F18\u9756"@en . . . . . "\u5F35\u5F18\u9756"@zh . . . . "\u5F35\u5F18\u9756\uFF08760\u5E74\uFF0D824\u5E747\u670824\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u84B2\u5DDE\u7317\u6C0F\u53BF\uFF08\u4ECA\u5C71\u897F\u81E8\u7317\uFF09\u4EBA\u3002 \u5F35\u5EF6\u8CDE\u4E4B\u5B50\uFF0C\u4EE5\u9580\u852D\u5165\u4ED5\uFF0C\u521D\u6388\u6CB3\u5357\u5E9C\u53C3\u8ECD\uFF0C\u88DC\u862D\u7530\u7E23\u5C09\uFF0C814\u5E74\u4EE5\u6CB3\u4E2D\u7BC0\u5EA6\u4F7F\u5165\u671D\u70BA\u5211\u90E8\u5C1A\u66F8\uFF0C\u5F8C\u70BA\u76F8\u3002"@zh . . . "\u5F35\u5F18\u9756\uFF08760\u5E74\uFF0D824\u5E747\u670824\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u84B2\u5DDE\u7317\u6C0F\u53BF\uFF08\u4ECA\u5C71\u897F\u81E8\u7317\uFF09\u4EBA\u3002 \u5F35\u5EF6\u8CDE\u4E4B\u5B50\uFF0C\u4EE5\u9580\u852D\u5165\u4ED5\uFF0C\u521D\u6388\u6CB3\u5357\u5E9C\u53C3\u8ECD\uFF0C\u88DC\u862D\u7530\u7E23\u5C09\uFF0C814\u5E74\u4EE5\u6CB3\u4E2D\u7BC0\u5EA6\u4F7F\u5165\u671D\u70BA\u5211\u90E8\u5C1A\u66F8\uFF0C\u5F8C\u70BA\u76F8\u3002"@zh . "\u5F20\u5F18\u9756"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Zhang Hongjing (simplified Chinese: \u5F20\u5F18\u9756; traditional Chinese: \u5F35\u5F18\u9756; pinyin: Zh\u0101ng H\u00F3ngj\u00ECng) (760 \u2013 July 24, 824), courtesy name Yuanli (\u5143\u7406), formally the Marquess of Gaoping (\u9AD8\u5E73\u4FAF), was an official of the Tang dynasty of China, serving as a chancellor during the reign of Emperor Xianzong. He was blamed in traditional histories for misruling (\u76E7\u9F8D, headquartered in modern Beijing), leading to Lulong soldiers' subsequent rebellion against the imperial government under Zhu Kerong."@en . . . . . . "Zhang Hongjing (simplified Chinese: \u5F20\u5F18\u9756; traditional Chinese: \u5F35\u5F18\u9756; pinyin: Zh\u0101ng H\u00F3ngj\u00ECng) (760 \u2013 July 24, 824), courtesy name Yuanli (\u5143\u7406), formally the Marquess of Gaoping (\u9AD8\u5E73\u4FAF), was an official of the Tang dynasty of China, serving as a chancellor during the reign of Emperor Xianzong. He was blamed in traditional histories for misruling (\u76E7\u9F8D, headquartered in modern Beijing), leading to Lulong soldiers' subsequent rebellion against the imperial government under Zhu Kerong."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "1106717695"^^ . . . . . "22097369"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "16183"^^ . . . . . .