
Empress Wu Zetian
The Legendary Women of World History, Book 5
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Narrated by:
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Richard Mann
About this listen
The most hated woman in Chinese history!
Travel back in time over 1,000 years and meet the first and only female emperor of China. Born Wu Zhao and given the reign title "Zetian" just weeks before her death in 705 CE, Empress Wu was the unwanted daughter of Chancellor Wu Shihuo—too bright, too educated, and too politically focused to make a good wife according to contemporary interpretations of the "Analects of Confucius."
Married off at age 14 as a low-ranking concubine to Emperor Taizong, Wu’s intelligence, beauty, and charm won her a place as his secretary and protégé, political experience that would empower her to transform the lives of countless billions.
Explore the life of Empress Wu and discover why the world is a vastly different place because she dared what no woman in China before or since ever dreamed of.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2016 Laurel A. Rockefeller (P)2018 Laurel A. RockefellerShort and Interesting story must listen
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An independent concubine
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A fantastic and educational listening experience
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Listener received this title free
This is more of a story than a nonfiction (what I expected). This did surprise me, but it did not put me off.
It starts of when Empress Wu Zetian was young and the people who influenced her. The book progresses through her life.
Now what I know of this Empress is that she is a cold woman and she got what she wanted. In this audiobook she is made out to be a great woman with a heart.
That is not to say that she was not a nice person or intelligent but from what I understood from history was that she was a heartless woman and I did not feel this book portrayed it. She was power hunger and she did whatever it took to stay in power.
Maybe if it was written in a nonfiction book I could have understood and believed the things she did and why but because it is made into a story, I did wonder what is true and what part the author felt.
This is my opinion and others might think differently.
Empress Wu Zetian
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