Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - There are very few fortune tellers _ What kind of loneliness will fortune tellers create?

There are very few fortune tellers _ What kind of loneliness will fortune tellers create?

What do you mean, am I?

I mean: I mean a person who doesn't have much virtue, that is, a person who doesn't do enough morally.

I am a humble name given to myself by ancient monarchs and princes. In ancient China, the rule of virtue was emphasized, which means that the power of monarchs and vassals was given by heaven, while God only gave power to virtuous people. When monarchs and vassals lose their virtue, they lose their noble power, and humility and humility are also virtues, so ancient monarchs and vassals called themselves widows.

I was a very common self-proclaimed person in the pre-Qin period. I'm nothing special. Everyone can call himself me, regardless of rank. According to "Er Ya Shi Shu", "My body." I am the first person. Since the reunification of the Qin Dynasty, Qin Shihuang thought he had made some achievements to the Three Emperors and Five Emperors, and stipulated that he was the only one who could page me. Since then, the emperors of the unified dynasty have called themselves "I" or "I".

The origin of my words

From the Han Dynasty to the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, some people called themselves "widowers". Liu Bang was Hanwang, Han Xin was King of Qi, Yang Di was King of Jin, and the later Han met Liu Yun, calling themselves me. This title was common in the Han dynasty, but after the Han dynasty, there were very few people who claimed to be mine.

In ancient China, monarchs were actually divided into emperors and kings. Since Qin Shihuang, emperors have used "I", which everyone used to call themselves, as their exclusive title, but no one can use it except the emperor. Kings are different. In ancient China, the king told me to wait instead of calling me. But after the Tang Dynasty, few monarchs claimed to be me.