
thumb|300px|Map of Jiankang as the capital of the Southern Dynasties. Drawing by Chen Yi of the Ming dynasty Jiankang (), or Jianye (), as it was originally called, was the capital city of the Eastern Wu (229–265 and 266–280 CE), the Eastern Jin dynasty (317–420 CE) and the Southern Dynasties (420–552), including the Chen dynasty (557–589 CE). Its walls are extant as ruins in the modern municipal region of Nanjing. Jiankang was an important city of the Song dynasty. Its name was changed to Nanjing during the Ming dynasty.
via Open-Meteo
thumb|300px|Map of Jiankang as the capital of the Southern Dynasties. Drawing by Chen Yi of the Ming dynasty Jiankang (), or Jianye (), as it was originally called, was the capital city of the Eastern Wu (229–265 and 266–280 CE), the Eastern Jin dynasty (317–420 CE) and the Southern Dynasties (420–552), including the Chen dynasty (557–589 CE). Its walls are extant as ruins in the modern municipal region of Nanjing. Jiankang was an important city of the Song dynasty. Its name was changed to Nanjing during the Ming dynasty.
==History== thumb|A pixiu from the Yongning Tomb of [[Emperor Wen of Chen (). Qixia District]] Before the Eastern Jin the city was known as Jianye, and it was the capital of the kingdom of Wu during the Three Kingdoms period. It was renamed Jiankang during the Jin dynasty, in order to observe the naming taboo for Emperor Min of Jin.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).