Difference between revisions of "China"

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One of the most ancient cultures of the Eastern Hemisphere of [[Earth]], and one of the most wizard-friendly.  The name is an Anglicization of the term ...
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One of the most ancient cultures of the Eastern Hemisphere of [[Earth]], and one of the most wizard-friendly.  (The name is an Anglicization of the term 中國 or ''Zhōngguó''. See the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China Wikipedia entry] for much, much more information about everything Chinese except the wizardry.)
  
An unusually high percentage of the wizards classified as the "world's greatest" have come from China, especially during the period of its greatest cultural flowering...
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An unusually high percentage of the wizards classified as the "world's greatest" have come from China, especially during the period of its greatest cultural flowering. Notable among these were the wandering healer [[Fei Chang-fang]]; the strategist and tactician [[Kiang Tzu-ya]]; [[Ko Hsuan]] the "Ghost Catcher";  the mystic [[T'ai-hsuan Nu]], widely known as "the Lady of the Great Mysteries"; [[Mahku]], the "People's Protector":  the prodigy [[Tung-fang Shuo]]; and the unpredictable [[T'ang Kuang-chen]], also known as "the Woman Who Flew on a Toad".  
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(See also:  [[National character in wizardry]].)
  
 
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Revision as of 10:50, 10 December 2005

One of the most ancient cultures of the Eastern Hemisphere of Earth, and one of the most wizard-friendly. (The name is an Anglicization of the term 中國 or Zhōngguó. See the Wikipedia entry for much, much more information about everything Chinese except the wizardry.)

An unusually high percentage of the wizards classified as the "world's greatest" have come from China, especially during the period of its greatest cultural flowering. Notable among these were the wandering healer Fei Chang-fang; the strategist and tactician Kiang Tzu-ya; Ko Hsuan the "Ghost Catcher"; the mystic T'ai-hsuan Nu, widely known as "the Lady of the Great Mysteries"; Mahku, the "People's Protector": the prodigy Tung-fang Shuo; and the unpredictable T'ang Kuang-chen, also known as "the Woman Who Flew on a Toad".

(See also: National character in wizardry.)

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