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Deng and Zhi
When Sun He succeeded Sun Deng as the new crown prince, he was supported by Lu Xun and Zhuge Ke, while his rival Sun Ba was supported by Quan Cong and Bu Zhi and their clans.
An envoy from Shu Han named Deng Zhi subsequently persuades Sun Quan to renew the former alliance with Shu Han.
He sent Deng Zhi and Chen Zhen to make peace with Eastern Wu and re-entered an alliance with Wu.
According to Records of Three Kingdoms, Xiahou Ba succeeded Deng Zhi as the General of Chariots and Cavalry after his death in 251, and Zizhi Tongjian noted he was alive in 255.
Zhuge Liang first sent generals Zhao Yun and Deng Zhi to attack Mei, while he personally led a force towards Mount Qi.
Lu Zhishen, Yang Zhi and Cao Zheng kill Deng Long and seize control of the stronghold and become outlaws.
Lu Zhishen pretends to be drunk and allows Cao Zheng and Yang Zhi to tie him up and send him to Deng Long.
When Eastern Wu and Shu Han re-established their alliance against Cao Wei, Deng Zhi was sent by Zhuge Liang as envoy, and one of his mission was to ask the release and the return of Zhang Yi.
It was only then did Sun Quan met Zhang Yi for the first time since his imprisonment in Eastern Wu and Sun was shocked by Zhang's capability after having a long talk at the farewell banquet he held for Deng Zhi and Zhang Yi.
After Zhang Yi left with Deng Zhi, Sun Quan started to have a second thought and regretting let Zhang go, and wanted to keep Zhang Yi for himself so that Zhang would serve Eastern Wu.
Under his staff members ' suggestion, Sun sent troops to catch Deng's departing envoy, but Zhang Yi had already realized what Sun would do after observing his attitude on the banquet, and thus he and Deng Zhi quickly left Eastern Wu by speeding up their journey, and made back to Shu Han just one day ahead of Sun Quan's troops sent after them.

Deng and minister
* Son and daughters of Deng Xiaoping: Deng Pufang ( 邓朴方 ), chairman of the Handicapped Association ; Deng Nan ( 邓楠 ), former vice minister Science and Technology
In 162 BC, Emperor Wen permitted the prime minister Shentu Jia ( 申屠嘉 ) to discipline Deng for his arrogance and threaten him with death, before pardoning Deng.
It was around this time that his later prime minister, Deng Yu ( 鄧禹 ), joined him ; other later important figures who joined him around this time included Feng Yi ( 馮異 ) and Geng Chun ( 耿純 ).
Supports the full legalization of drugs, and once compared former Canadian cabinet minister Allan Rock to Deng Xiaoping for his refusal to consider an end to Canada's prohibition laws.
After Liu declared himself emperor in 25, he gave Deng the title of prime minister and created him the Marquess of Zhan — the same title as Xiao He, his ancestor Emperor Gao's famed prime minister — implicitly comparing Deng to Xiao.
Deng, at age 23, was the youngest prime minister in Han history.
After the surrender of the Chimei, Emperor Guangwu, seeing that Deng was more useful as a prime minister who governs and a strategist than a general himself, summoned Deng back to the capital to be the head of his administration.
Deng, like a number of other generals, realizing that Emperor Guangwu wanted to preserve their status by not giving them major duties, resigned his prime minister post.

Deng and under
The Communist Party's ideology was redefined under Deng Xiaoping to incorporate principles of market economics, and the corresponding reforms enabled rapid and sustained economic growth.
The party's organizational structure was destroyed during the Cultural Revolution and rebuilt afterwards by Deng Xiaoping, who subsequently initiated " Socialism with Chinese characteristics " and brought all state apparatuses back under the rule of the CPC.
Following the death of Mao in 1976, however, the CPC under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping moved towards Socialism with Chinese characteristics and instituted Chinese economic reform.
His second wife, Jin Weiying, left him after Deng came under political attack in 1933.
Deng made controversial economic reforms to the PRC's economy involving effective economic liberalization under the policy of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.
Despite some optimistic talk in the foreign press the impetus of these reforms has not been followed with, for example, a large-scale decollectivization such as occurred in China under Deng.
For example, it is a common misconception that reforms under Deng Xiaoping resulted in the privatization of agricultural land and a creation of a land tenure system similar to those found in Western countries.
Following the 1988 Beidaihe meeting, the party leadership under Deng Xiaoping agreed to a transition to a market-based price system.
The university entrance exams were cancelled after 1966, and were not restored until 1977 under Deng Xiaoping.
One group, composed of various ideologically nonaligned groups, gave weak support to the new Chinese leadership under Deng Xiaoping.
Throughout the 1980s Hu pursued a series of economic and political reforms under the direction of Deng.
In the 1940s, Hu worked under Deng as the a political commissar in the Second Field Army.
He died under harsh treatment in late 1969, but he was posthumously rehabilitated by Deng Xiaoping's government in 1980 and given a state funeral.
Perhaps the most bizarre hybrid form of neoliberalism is neoliberal communism, as practised in China and introduced in 1978 under the Chinese Economic Reforms of Deng Xiaoping.
Deng was an ally of Zhou Enlai, and was placed under house arrest in Guangzhou.
Deng also proposed that they should consider another candidate for a further future transition, preferably someone under fifty to represent the next generation of leaders.
With the reforms under Deng Xiaoping, the PRC's attitude toward overseas Chinese became much more favorable, and overseas Chinese were seen as a source of capital and expertise.
Media controls were most relaxed during the 1980s under Deng Xiaoping, until they were tightened in the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square Protests.
His family migrated south of the Yangtze River when Lü Meng was young, and he lived with his brother-in-law Deng Dang ( 鄧當 ), who served under Sun Ce.
Liu Chen opposed the plans of Qiao Zhou to surrender to the opposing force under general Deng Ai from the rival state of Cao Wei.
After the Sino-Vietnamese War in 1979, Deng Xiaoping abandoned People's War for " People's War under Modern Conditions ," which moved away from reliance on troops over technology.
The printing of gazetteers was revived in 1956 under Mao Zedong and again in the 1980s, after the reforms of the Deng era to replace the people's communes with traditional townships.
When the Campaign of the North China Plain Pocket broke out in the summer of 1946, he failed to destroyed the communist forces under Marshal Liu Bocheng and Deng Xiaoping and was relieved of his command once more.
Liu and Deng's relationship was greatly exaggerated by the Chinese general populace as a way to protest Mao Zedong's disastrous Cultural Revolution: In 1972, shortly after the death of Chinese Field Marshal Chen Yi, Liu told his family that after his death, he wanted his funeral to be held by Deng, and his eulogy to be done by Deng, and this was when Deng was still under house arrest and Liu did so to show his support.

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