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At age fourteen, she married a local resident named Cao Shishu and was called in the court by the name as Venerable Madame Cao (曹大家). Her husband died when she was still young. She never remarried, instead devoting her life to scholarship. [4] .
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.
By the age of 14, Ban Zhao had married Cao Shou, a fellow townsman, who died some years later, leaving Ban Zhao with several children. (Two of her sons, Cao Cheng and Cao Gu, became famous Han scholars.) Ban Zhao never remarried, and devoted herself instead to literary pursuits.
She married at the agof 14, thereby becoming the lowest-ranking member of her husband’s family, and bore children. Although her husband died young, Ban Zhao never remarried, devoting herself instead to literary pursuits and acquiring a reputation for scholarship and compositional grace that eventually brought her to the imperial.
Ban married at age 14 and had at least one child. Her husband died shortly after their marriage. She turned to writing and research, earning a reputation as a respected scholar.
Growing up Pan Chou (Ban Zhao) studied Confucian texts and history as well as astronomy and geography. At age 14 she married and her marriage was a happy one but her husband died young and she raised their son alone.
29 Οκτ 2016 · At the age of 14, she married a local resident, Cao Shishu, who unfortunately died after a few years. After the death of her husband, she moved with her brother Ban Gu and devoted herself to raising her children and to literature. At the time, her brother was completing their father’s work on the history of the Han Dynasty – “the Book of Han.”