翻訳と辞書
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・ Xue Juan
・ Xue Juzheng
・ Xue Lang
・ Xue Lei
・ Xue Li
・ Xue Li (Han dynasty)
・ Xue Ming
・ Xue Muqiao
・ Xue Ne
・ Xue Pan
・ Xue Ping
・ Xue Rengao
・ Xue Rengui
・ Xue Ruipeng
・ Xue Song
Xue Susu
・ Xue Tao
・ Xue Wenjie
・ Xue Xiangdong
・ Xue Xiaolu
・ Xue Xinran
・ Xue Xu
・ Xue Ya'nan
・ Xue Yiju
・ Xue Ying
・ Xue Yong
・ Xue yuan
・ Xue Yuanchao
・ Xue Yue
・ Xue Yuyang


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Xue Susu : ウィキペディア英語版
Xue Susu

Xue Susu (; also known as Xue Wu, Xuesu, Sunjung among other pen names) (1564–1650? C.E.) was a Chinese courtesan. Known as one of the "Eight Great Courtesans of the Ming Dynasty", she was an accomplished painter and poet, and was noted for her skill at mounted archery. She was particularly noted for her figure paintings, which included many Buddhist subjects. Her works are held in a number of museums both in China and elsewhere. Her archery was commented upon by a number of contemporary writers, as were her masculine, martial tendencies; these were regarded as an attractive feature by the literati of the period.
She lived in Eastern China, residing for most of her life in the Zhejiang and Jiangsu districts. After a career as a celebrated courtesan in Nanjing, Xue married several times, but none of these unions lasted. During her later life, she eventually opted for the life of a Buddhist recluse.
==Biography==
Xue was born in either Suzhou or Jiaxing (contemporary sources disagree). According to the historian Qian Qianyi she spent at least some of her childhood in Beijing. She spent her professional life in the Qinhuai pleasure quarter of Nanjing in the 1580s, where she became something of a celebrity among the literati and government officials who frequented the "flower houses" there.〔 She was highly selective in her clientele, accepting only learned and scholarly men as her lovers and declining to proffer her affections for mere financial gain; suitors might spend thousands of taels on her to no avail.〔
In the 1590s she returned to Beijing, where the parties and literary gatherings that she hosted, as well as her archery demonstrations, further cemented her reputation.〔 Xue referred to herself as "a female knight-errant",〔 and took her name from a famous woman warrior from history;〔 she also chose the sobriquet Wulang 五郎 ("fifth young gentleman") as a nickname.〔 The "female knight-errant" epithet was reiterated by both the bibliophile Hu Yinglin and Fan Yulin, Secretary to the Ministry of War.〔 Apparently fond of martial causes, she was not above using her position to influence military affairs, on one occasion abandoning her lover Yuan Baode when he refused to fund an expedition against the Japanese in Korea.〔〔
At some point after 1605 her career as a courtesan came to an end when she married the playwright and bureaucrat Shen Defu.〔 She was married several times (making many of the proposals herself) but none of these unions lasted. As well as Shen Defu, her husbands included General Li Hualong, art critic Li Rihua and, in later life, an unnamed (but wealthy) merchant from Suzhou.〔 Although she wanted children, she was never able to have any.
In later life she converted to Buddhism and remained single thereafter, largely retiring from the world.〔〔 Even in her eighties, however, she was still active in the literary world, entertaining female artists such as Huang Yuanjie and Yi Lin at her home on the West Lake after the collapse of the Ming Dynasty.〔〔 With her Buddhist friend Yang Jiangzi (the sister of Xue's fellow courtesan Liu Yin), she made pilgrimages to sacred sites such as Mount Lu and Mount Emei. The date of her death is uncertain; some sources suggest that she may have lived into the 1650s whilst others put her death in the late 1630s or early 1640s. Qian Qianyi mentions her death in a work published in 1652, so it is evident that she must have died before this date.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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