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imported>Darman36 I guess "engineer", since "architect" is for buildings? |
imported>Sol Pacificus Darman, did you read my previous edit summary regarding him being an "inventor"? He doesn't really qualify as a scientist. He was first and foremost a military general who also had an expertise in road construction. He didn't invent anything afaik. |
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'''Meng Tian''' (蒙恬; c. 250 BCE – 210 BCE) was a [[China|Chinese]] general and road builder of the [[Qin dynasty]] who served under [[Qin Shi Huang]]. He was placed in command of the Qin campaign against the [[Xiongnu]] in the northern frontier and oversaw the construction of the [[Great Wall of China]] with 300,000 labourers as a bulwark against further nomadic | '''Meng Tian''' (蒙恬; c. 250 BCE – 210 BCE) was a [[China|Chinese]] general and road builder of the [[Qin dynasty]] who served under [[Qin Shi Huang]]. He was placed in command of the Qin campaign against the [[Xiongnu]] in the northern frontier and oversaw the construction of the [[Great Wall of China]] with 300,000 labourers as a bulwark against further nomadic raids.<ref name="Lewis 2007">Lewis, Mark Edward. (2007). "The Paradoxes of Empire". In ''The Early Empires: Qin and Han''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 51–74.</ref> | ||
==Appearances== | ==Appearances== | ||
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[[Category:Han Chinese]] | [[Category:Han Chinese]] | ||
[[Category:Generals]] | [[Category:Generals]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Engineer]] | ||
Revision as of 18:19, 4 August 2023
Meng Tian (蒙恬; c. 250 BCE – 210 BCE) was a Chinese general and road builder of the Qin dynasty who served under Qin Shi Huang. He was placed in command of the Qin campaign against the Xiongnu in the northern frontier and oversaw the construction of the Great Wall of China with 300,000 labourers as a bulwark against further nomadic raids.[1]
Appearances
References
- ↑ Lewis, Mark Edward. (2007). "The Paradoxes of Empire". In The Early Empires: Qin and Han. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 51–74.
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