The name of "Mi Yue" is not the queen dowager's real personal name and the History books never tell her personal name and early life. It based on the interpretation from Professor Duan Xizhong (段熙仲) of the character "脾" in the Terracotta Warriors which Duan believed that these are two independent characters, namely "月" on the left and "芈" on the right. Chen Jingyuan (陈景元) further believes that "Yue Mi" is the real name of Queen Dowager Xuan.[1] There was a report [2]Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine tell that in addition to the remnants of Qin Shi Huang's terracotta warriors, “Mi Yue” also comes from King Huiwen's A'fang Palace (阿房宫) as a combination of pottery inscriptions. Meanwhile, at the same time, there are reports that deny the claims of these information.
xm.ifeng.com
The name of "Mi Yue" is not the queen dowager's real personal name and the History books never tell her personal name and early life. It based on the interpretation from Professor Duan Xizhong (段熙仲) of the character "脾" in the Terracotta Warriors which Duan believed that these are two independent characters, namely "月" on the left and "芈" on the right. Chen Jingyuan (陈景元) further believes that "Yue Mi" is the real name of Queen Dowager Xuan.[1] There was a report [2]Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine tell that in addition to the remnants of Qin Shi Huang's terracotta warriors, “Mi Yue” also comes from King Huiwen's A'fang Palace (阿房宫) as a combination of pottery inscriptions. Meanwhile, at the same time, there are reports that deny the claims of these information.
The name of "Mi Yue" is not the queen dowager's real personal name and the History books never tell her personal name and early life. It based on the interpretation from Professor Duan Xizhong (段熙仲) of the character "脾" in the Terracotta Warriors which Duan believed that these are two independent characters, namely "月" on the left and "芈" on the right. Chen Jingyuan (陈景元) further believes that "Yue Mi" is the real name of Queen Dowager Xuan.[1] There was a report [2]Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine tell that in addition to the remnants of Qin Shi Huang's terracotta warriors, “Mi Yue” also comes from King Huiwen's A'fang Palace (阿房宫) as a combination of pottery inscriptions. Meanwhile, at the same time, there are reports that deny the claims of these information.