Skip to content
Category

Yuan dynasty people

page 1
Luo Guanzhong
14th-century Chinese writer
Pakpa Lodro Gyeltsen
Tibetan Lama (1235-1280)
Chinkim
Zhenjin (, ; ; July 8, 1243 – 1285 or January 5, 1286), also rendered as Jingim, Chinkim, or Chingkim, was a crown prince of the Yuan dynasty of China. He was a son of Kublai Khan (Emperor Shizu) and grandson of Tolui. He was posthumously honored as an emperor by his son, Temür Khan (Emperor Chengzong).
Chen Youliang
Chinese rebel
Qu You
Chinese novelist
Jamal ad-Din
Persian astrologer in the court of Kublai Khan
Zhang Shicheng
Chinese rebel and self-declared king
Noguk
queen; Mongolian princess and Korean Queen
Yi Cha-ch'un
Korean general (1315 – 1360 or 1361)
Han Shantong
Red Turban rebellion leader (1318-1355)
Huang Daopo
Chinese inventor
Naghachu
Naghachu ( ; ; d. 31 August 1388), also written as Nahacu, was an ethnic Mongol leader and general of the Northern Yuan in Manchuria, which was under Liaoyang province of the former Yuan dynasty.
Ming Yuzhen
Emperor of Ming Xia from 1362 to 1366
Darmabala
Darmabala, also rendered as Dharmapala (; , ; ) was an imperial prince of the Yuan dynasty. He was a grandson of Kublai Khan and son of his Crown Prince Zhenjin. He was an ancestor of subsequent Yuan monarchs who came after Temür Khan (Emperor Chengzong) and Goryeo kings after King Gongmin.
Xu Shouhui
Chinese rebel, Tianwan emperor
Basalawarmi
Basalawarmi (, , died January 6, 1382), commonly known by his hereditary noble title, the Prince of Liang, was a Yuan dynasty prince and loyalist who fought against the Ming dynasty. He was a descendant of Khökhechi, the fifth son of Kublai Khan. After the Ming took over Yunnan, the Hongwu Emperor exiled Basalawarmi's family to Korea.
Zhongfeng Mingben
Chinese Chan master
Yeheidie'erding
'''Yeheidie'erding (, ? – 1312), also known as Amir al-Din' (, Amīr al-Dīn''), was a Muslim architect who helped design and led the construction of the capital of the Yuan dynasty, Khanbaliq, located in present-day Beijing, the current capital of the People's Republic of China. According to Cary Y. Liu interpretation of the Ma-ho-ma-sha Stele inscription, either Amir al-Din's ancestors came from the Western Regions, although originating from Arabia, or that he directly came from Arabia.
Shen Wansan
businessman during the beginning of Ming Dynasty
Deng Yu
Ming dynasty person CBDB = 67384
Dojo
grandfather of king Taejo of Joseon ? - 1342)
Hu Sihui
14th century Chinese therapist and dietician
Han Lin’er
Chinese rebel
Yasokjin
Yasokjin, Consort Ui (; died 1316) was a Mongol-born woman who became the second wife of King Chungseon of Goryeo. Although she was an ethnic Mongol, she was not a member of the Yuan imperial clan. As her second son was born in 1294, it seems like she became Chungseon's consort before that. She died in 1316 (3rd year of her son's reign) whilst in Yuan. On her death, she was granted the posthumous name of Royal Consort Ui, by which she was more commonly known.
Xu Heng
Chinese Confucianist and educator (1209–1281)
Katarina Vilioni
Italian woman who lived in China
Chen Li
last emperor of the Chen Han (Dahan, Great Han) during the Yuan dynasty Ming dynasty transition (1351-1408)
Zhu Shizhen
father of Hongwu Emperor
Uihye
queen; Grand Lady of Three Han State
Ismail
Iraqi mangonel expert
Chen Yuanjing
Southern Song and Yuan dynasty scholar
Wang Guangyang
Ming dynasty politician
Shireki
Shiregi (, , , ) was a Mongol prince from the Borjigin clan, great-grandson of Genghis Khan.