5-652: Julu may refer to: Julu Commandery (鉅鹿郡), within present-day Xingtai Prefecture, Hebei Julu County (Han Dynasty) (鉅鹿縣), now Pingxiang County, Xingtai, Hebei Julu (ancient town) (巨鹿), now in Pingxiang County, Xingtai, Hebei Battle of Julu Julu (modern town) (巨鹿镇), in Julu County, Xingtai, Hebei Julu County (巨鹿县), a present-day county in Xingtai, Hebei [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
10-680: A total population of 827,177, in 155,951 households. During Emperor Wu 's reign, a separate Guangping Commandery (廣平郡) was formed on the territories of Julu, and was later converted to a principality granted to Liu Yan (劉偃), a nephew of the emperor as his fief. 16 counties were listed under Guangping in the Book of Han , namely Guangping (廣平), Zhang (張), Chaoping (朝平), Nanhe (南和), Lieren (列人), Chizhang (斥章), Ren (任), Nanzhou (曲周), Nanqu (南曲), Quliang (曲梁), Guangxiang (廣鄉), Pingli (平利), Pingxiang (平鄉), Yangtai (陽臺), Guangnian (廣年) and Chengxiang (城鄉). Another principality, Guangzong (廣宗), briefly existed from 2 AD to
15-404: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Julu Commandery Julu Commandery ( simplified Chinese : 巨鹿郡 ; traditional Chinese : 鉅鹿郡 ) was a historical commandery of China, located in modern-day southern Hebei . The commandery was established by Qin after it annexed Zhao in 222 BC. In early Western Han dynasty, it
20-421: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Julu&oldid=853234330 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
25-669: Was part of the Zhao Kingdom . After the failed Rebellion of the Seven States of which Zhao was a participant, Julu became directly administered by the Han government. In 2 AD, the commandery administered 20 counties, namely Julu (鉅鹿), Nandu (南讀), Guang'e (廣阿), Xiangshi (象氏), Yingtao (廮陶), Songzi (宋子), Yangshi (楊氏), Linping (臨平), Xiaquyang (下曲陽), Shi (貰), Qiao (郻), Xinshi (新巿), Tangyang (堂陽), Anding (安定), Jingwu (敬武), Lixiang (歷鄉), Lexin (樂信), Wutao (武陶), Baixiang (柏鄉) and Anxiang (安鄉), with
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