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Tao Qian (born 365, Xunyang [now Jiujiang, Jiangxi province], China—died 427, Xunyang) was one of China’s greatest poets and a noted recluse. Born into an impoverished aristocratic family, Tao Qian took a minor official post while in his 20s in order to support his aged parents.
Tao Yuanming (simplified Chinese: 陶渊明; traditional Chinese: 陶淵明; pinyin: Táo Yuānmíng; 365–427), also known as Tao Qian (pinyin: Táo Qián; also T'ao Ch'ien in Wade–Giles), was a Chinese poet and politician who was one of the best-known poets during the Six Dynasties period.
Tao Qian has been described as the first great poet of t'ien-yüan (“fields and gardens”), and praised as a paragon of simple country virtue. For later scholars, Tao Qian represented the ideal of an official who escaped "the world's net" for a life closer to spiritual values.
Tao Yuanming (365?–427), also known as Tao Qian, courtesy name Yuanliang, and the alternate name of Wuliu Xiansheng (Mr. Five Willows), was a native of today’s Jiujiang, Jiangxi province. He was a famous poet and philosopher in the transitional period of between the Eastern Jin (317–420) and the Liu Song (420–479), a time of political ...
Tao Yuanming, also known as Tao Qian, is believed to have been born in the year 365 in Jiujiang, China. Known for his reclusive nature, he is remembered today as one of the great hermit poets of ancient Chinese literature.
Poet of the Eastern Jin dynasty and generally regarded as being one of the foremost pre-Tang poets. A native of Chaisang (present-day Jiangxi), Tao's family belonged to the Xi minority, and although it boasted some illustrious forebears was poor by the time of the poet's birth.
15 Νοε 2016 · How do we understand Tao Qian and his poetry in the context of the Chinese literary tradition in general and of his own time—the Wei-Jin period—in particular? What is the significance of his idea of garden as home? And how does his work give expression to a Chinese vision of an ideal society?