Li, He, 790-816

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  • Personality
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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Li, He, 790-816
Other forms of name
Li, Ho, 790-816
Ri, Ga, 790-816
Date of birth
0790
Date of death
0816
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 107037650
Wikidata: Q856223
Library of congress: n 82083394
Sources of Information
  • Author's Li Chʻang-chi ko shih, 1959.
  • Ri Ga shi sen, 1993:t.p. (李賀 = Li Ho [Chi. r.] = Ri Ga [Jpn. r.]) p. 3 (ji: 長吉 = Chʻang-chi [Chi. r.] = Chūkitsu [Jpn. r.])
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Wikipedia description:

Li He (c. 790–791 – c. 816–817) was a Chinese poet of the mid-Tang dynasty. His courtesy name was Changji, and he is also known as Guicai and Shigui. He was prevented from taking the imperial examination due to a naming taboo. He died very young, and was noted for his sickly appearance. He was a diligent poet, going out on journeys during the day and, when a line of poetry came to him, jotting it down, and completing the poems when he arrived home in the evening. His poems famously explored ghostly, supernatural and fantastic themes. His popularity and place in the Chinese literary canon has fluctuated throughout the centuries. His idiosyncratic style of poetry was frequently imitated in China until the Qing dynasty. During this era, the popularity of his poetry suffered from a change in literary tastes, with his works notably being excluded from the influential Three Hundred Tang Poems, but there was a revival of interest in him in the twentieth century. He was among the Tang poets most admired by Mao Zedong.

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