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Yongle emperor
(redirected from Emperor Yongle)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

Yongle emperor

 or Yung-lo emperor orig. Zhu Di

(born May 2, 1360, Yingtian [Nanjing], China—died Aug. 5, 1424, Yumuchuan, Inner Mongolia) Third emperor of China's Ming dynasty, which he raised to its greatest power. Son of the Hongwu emperor, founder of the Ming, he was his father's favourite. He was enfeoffed as the Prince of Yan (the region around present-day Beijing) and spent his youth patrolling the northern frontier and keeping the Mongols fragmented. When his nephew succeeded to the throne, Zhu Di rebelled and became emperor in 1402. As emperor, he worked to extend China's sway. He sent out ships of exploration, most notably under Zheng He; these returned with envoys bearing tribute to acknowledge China's overlordship. He became the only ruler in Chinese history to be acknowledged suzerain by the Japanese. A foray into Annam (now Vietnam), which he attempted to incorporate into China, led to years of guerrilla warfare. He five times led large armies north to the Gobi Desert, forestalling the creation of a Mongol confederation that might have threatened China. He transferred China's capital from Nanjing to Beijing. He built the Forbidden City and repaired the Grand Canal so that Beijing could be provisioned without relying on sea transport. He sponsored the compilation and publication of the Confucian Classics and the preparation of the Yongle dadian (“Great Canon of the Yongle Era”), an 11,000-volume compendium.



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Classed as an 'urban resort' Grand Hyatt Beijing boasts 825 rooms and suites and gives guests insight into ancient Chinese architecture -- the hotel occupies a Taoist building constructed in 1420 during the reign of Emperor Yongle.
This encyclopedia, initiated by the Emperor Yongle (1403-1425) of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) at the beginning of his reign, was compiled under the general editorship of Yao Guangxiao (1335-1418), involved 2,169 scholars working for four years, and was completed in two copies in 1408.
Wild goes on to make the rather startling suggestion that it was the arrival of Chinese expeditions that first introduced the concept of drinking infusions--that, in fact, we have the celebrated Ming dynasty treasure fleets of the Emperor Yongle in the 15th century to thank for the discovery of coffee.
 
 
 
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