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- Confucian school, founded by Confucius 孔子[Kong3 zi3] (551-479 BC) and Mencius 孟子[Meng4 zi3] (c. 372-c. 289 BC)
- New Confucianism, a social and political movement founded in 1920s China that combines aspects of Western and Eastern philosophy
- see also 當代新儒家|当代新儒家[Dang1 dai4 Xin1 Ru2 jia1]
- Li Yingru (1913-1989), calligrapher and writer, author of many novels about the war as seen by the communists
Trad. 獨尊儒術
- dismiss the hundred schools, revere only the Confucians (slogan of the Former Han dynasty)
- The Scholars, satirical Qing dynasty novel by Wu Jingzi 吳敬梓|吴敬梓[Wu2 Jing4 zi3]
Trad. 焚書坑儒
- to burn the Confucian classics and bury alive the Confucian scholars (acts supposedly committed by the first emperor 秦始皇[Qin2 Shi3 huang2])
- Great European Scholar (honorific title of Matteo Ricci)
Trad. 當代新儒家
- Contemporary New Confucianism
- see 新儒家[Xin1 Ru2 jia1]
Trad. 現代新儒家
- Modern New Confucianism
- see also 新儒家[Xin1 Ru2 jia1]
Trad. 儒勒·凡爾納
- Jules Verne (1828-1905), French novelist specializing in science fiction and adventure stories
Trad. 坎貝爾侏儒倉鼠
- Campbell's dwarf hamster (Phodopus campbelli)
Trad. 罷黜百家,獨尊儒術
- Dismiss the hundred schools, revere only the Confucian (idiom)
- sole dominant ideology
