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Ban Zhao (Chinese: 班昭; 45 or 49 – c. 117/120 CE), courtesy name Huiban (Chinese: 惠班), was a Chinese historian, philosopher, and politician. She was the first known female Chinese historian and, along with Pamphile of Epidaurus, one of the first known female historians.
Ban Zhao was a Chinese historian, philosopher, and politician. She was the first known female Chinese historian. Ban Zhao was born in 45, in Anling, near modern Xianyang, Shaanxi province. Ban Zhao was the daughter of the famous historian Ban Biao and younger of 2 sisters of the general Ban Chao and of historian Ban Gu.
Ban Zhao (Chinese: 班昭; 45 – c. 115 CE), courtesy name Huiban (Chinese: 惠班; pinyin: Huìbān; Wade–Giles: Hui 4-Pan 1), was a Chinese historian, philosopher, and politician. She was the first known female Chinese historian.
Bān Zhāo (45 - 116 C.E.) (Chinese: 班昭; Wade-Giles: Pan Chao), courtesy name Huiban (惠班), was a poet and writer, and the first known female Chinese historian. Born into a family of imperial scholars around 45 C.E., she was educated by her mother.
Ban Zhao (Chinese: 班昭; 45 or 49 – c. 117/120 CE), courtesy name Huiban (Chinese: 惠班), was a Chinese historian, philosopher, and politician. She was the first known female Chinese historian and, along with Pamphile of Epidaurus , one of the first known female historians .
Despite being the only woman in Ancient China to have worked on a major historiographic and intellectual text, Ban Zhao remained unappreciated for many centuries, save for two historians from the Tang and Song dynasties respectively.
Ban Zhao (born 45 ce, Anling, Fufeng [now Xianyang, Shaanxi province], China—died c. 115, China) was a renowned Chinese scholar and historian of the Dong (Eastern) Han dynasty. The daughter of a prominent family, Ban Zhao married at age 14, but her husband died while she was still young.