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The great Wu Daozi, famous for his …

Years: 760 - 760

The great Wu Daozi, famous for his Buddhist and Daoist landscape and figure paintings on the walls of temples, dies in about 760. (Although almost none of his works survive, contemporaries hailed his brushwork as extraordinarily bold and spontaneous, in contrast to the mannered Tang court style of painting.)

After Emperor Xuanzong's return to Chang'an, he had taken residence at Xingqing Palace, which is converted from his residence as an imperial prince.

Gao Lishi and the general Chen Xuanli attend to him, as do Emperor Xuanzong's younger sister Li Chiying the Princess Yuzhen, the lady in waiting Ru Xianyuan, and the eunuchs Wang Cheng'en and Wei Yue.

These attendants of Emperor Xuanzong do not respect Li Fuguo.

To retaliate, Li Fuguo begins to try to persuade Emperor Suzong that Emperor Xuanzong and his attendants were plotting to seize power back.

With Emperor Suzong's tacit, although not explicit, approval in 760, on one occasion when Emperor Xuanzong is out riding, Li Fuguo intercepts him and forces him to move back to the main palace.

Even on this occasion, however, Gao will not submit to Li Fuguo, and even yells at Li Fuguo to force him to get off his horse and to escort Emperor Xuanzong on foot, along with Gao.

Soon after Emperor Xuanzong is forcibly moved, Li Fuguo forces Chen to retire, Li Chiying to return to her temple (she had become an ordained Taoist nun in 711), and exiles Gao, Wang, Wei, and Ru.

Emperor Suzong has his daughters Princesses Wan'an and Xianyi attend to Emperor Xuanzong, but Emperor Xuanzong, depressed over his forced movement and the exile of his attendants, begins to be ill.

Emperor Suzong regrets this and considers killing Li Fuguo, but fears the fact that Li Fuguo has command of the imperial guards, and therefore does not act.

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