83,149 research outputs found
Identification of areas prone to rain-induced landslides of Shi-To area in central Taiwan
Ming maritime governance and the Suppression of Lin Feng
Piracy in Ming China during the 1560s and 1570s, while not frequently discussed, posed a unique maritime problem for officials to tackle. One threat they faced in this period was Lin Feng (active 1568–1580s), a pirate appearing on the coasts of Guangdong and Fujian provinces since the early Longqing period (1567–1572). Lin Feng was constantly seen clashing with the Ming military and had considerable influence; in 1574, he even sailed to Luzon, part of the modern-day Philippines, and appointed himself as the lord there. Eventually, he was evicted back to the Ming coasts, where the military suppressed his forces in 1576, early in the reign of the Wanli emperor (1572–1620). Previous scholars have noted Lin Feng’s trans-local impacts and portrayed him as a cultural broker between imperial China and the Philippines. What they neglected to do, however, was treat the conflicts and encounters he shared with officials as instances of Ming maritime governance.
To revisit the case of Lin Feng from a political perspective, this thesis uses records from gazetteers, Ming shilu, memorials, legal codes, and letters. It places him with Longqing and Wanli officials to trace the complex processes through which officials reached their decisions. This thesis presents four seemingly separate incidents involving Lin Feng and various Ming officials that became the milestones of the Suppression of Lin Feng, the campaign to eliminate his forces. Each of the officials discussed in these examples came from diverse backgrounds with varying levels of prestige. Yet they were all, as this thesis argues, motivated by two kinds of factors interwoven with each other: structural—the broader political, geographic, social, and economic contexts as well as the experience of their predecessors—and personal—opportunities to keep their careers or elevate their statuses while gaining material benefits. Making this argument can help this thesis highlight the paramount roles that officials played in this campaign and, in doing so, offer new understandings of Lin Feng as a historical character and position county and provincial-level officials as being integral to creating and enforcing policies for Ming maritime governance.Arts, Faculty ofHistory, Department ofGraduat
Shang han ming li lun
張仲景述 ; 王叔和撰次 ; 成無己注解 ; 吳勉學閱 ; 徐鎔校. 傷寒明理論 : 四卷 / 成無己撰 ; 吳勉學閱 ; 徐鎔校.綫裝.框20x13.5公分, 10行20字, 小字雙行同. 白口, 四周單邊(間或左右雙邊), 單黑魚尾. 版心上鐫題名, 中鐫卷次, 下鐫葉次.書名頁刻"張仲景著傷寒論, 張卿子先生手定, 成無己註, 附諸名家, 大文堂藏板"《中國中醫古籍總目》(00671)著錄清廣州大文堂刻本.卷前附附: 醫林列傳 -- 論圖.鈐"莊兆祥印", "莊兆祥"Xian zhuang.Kuang 20 x 13.5 gong fen, 10 hang 20 zi, xiao zi shuang hang tong. Bai kou, si zhou dan bian (jian huo zuo you shuang bian), dan hei yu wei. Ban xin shang juan ti ming, zhong juan juan ci, xia juan ye ci.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.Zhang Zhongjing shu ; Wang Shuhe zhuan ci ; Cheng Wuji zhu jie ; Wu Mianxue yue ; Xu Rong jiao. Shang han ming li lun : si juan / Cheng Wuji zhuan ; Wu Mianxue yue ; Xu Rong jiao.Juan qian fu fu: Yi lin lie zhuan -- Lun tu.Qian "Zhuang Zhaoxiang yin", "Zhuang Zhaoxiang
Shi ming
[V.1-2]. 爾雅 : [二卷] / 郭璞注 ; 葉自本重訂 ; 郎奎金糾譌 -- [v.3]. 小爾雅 / 孔鮒纂集 ; 宋咸注釋 ; 朱師賓重訂 ; 郎壁金糾譌 -- [v.3-4]. 逸雅 : 八卷 / 劉熙撰 ; 石九鼎重訂 -- [v.5-6]. 廣雅 : 十卷 / 張揖纂集 ; 曹憲音釋 ; 葉自本重訂 ; 郎奎金糾譌 -- [v.7-16]. 埤雅 : 二十卷 / 陸佃撰 ; 葉自本叅閱 ; 郎奎金糾譌.[V.1-2]. Er ya : [er juan] / Guo Pu zhu ; Ye Ziben chong ding ; Lang Kuijin jiu e -- [v.3]. Xiao er ya / Kong Fu zuan ji ; Song Xian zhu shi ; Zhu Shibin chong ding ; Lang Bijin jiu e -- [v.3-4]. Yi ya : ba juan / Liu Xi zhuan ; Shi Jiuding chong ding -- [v.5-6]. Guang ya : shi juan / Zhang Yi zuan ji ; Cao Xian yin shi ; Ye Ziben chong ding ; Lang Kuijin jiu e -- [v.7-16]. Pi ya : er shi juan / Lu Dian zhuan ; Ye Ziben can yue ; Lang Kuijin jiu e.[郎奎金輯].綫裝, 1函.框21.4x14公分, 9行20字, 小字雙行同, 白口, 四周單邊, 無魚尾. 版心上鐫子目, 中鐫卷次, 下鐫葉次及"堂策檻".出版年據《五雅自序》.《爾雅》分上, 下卷.《逸雅》又題為《釋名》.鈐有"松柏林", "蕭崖"印.Xian zhuang, 1 han.Kuang 21.4 x 14 gong fen, 9 hang 20 zi, xiao zi shuang hang tong, bai kou, si zhou dan bian, wu yu wei. Ban xin shang juan zi mu, zhong juan juan ci, xia juan ye ci ji "Tang ce jian".Chu ban nian ju "Wu ya zi xu"."Er ya" fen shang, xia juan."Yi ya" you ti wei "Shi ming".[Lang Kuijin ji].Qian you"song bo lin", "xiao ya"yin
The tale of Lady Tan: negotiating place between Central and local in Song-Yuan-Ming China
This paper explores the story of Lady Tan across genres from biographical record to temple inscription and marvellous tale, highlighting different representations of ‘the local’ in these stories: the loss of local belonging for some, inscribing the morals of a local community for others. Focusing on this tale, this essay argues that locality and belonging were contested constructs, especially during the Song-Yuan-Ming transitional period. Ex-ploring how literati understood themselves in relation to their localities contributes to our understanding of literati identities and the meaning of ‘the local’, in a period with ‘weak central government’, or as a repeating pattern of centralisation and localisation. It reveals the complexities in-volved in giving meaning to locality and negotiating belonging. In Ji'an prefecture, the centralising policies of the Hongwu and Yongle emperors were felt locally and affected how literati positioned themselves between central government and local community. This focus on literati writings from a single prefecture suggests that a close reading of the negotiations that form part of constructing locality and belonging in Ji'an can reveal the potential for a complex interplay between central government and local communities throughout China
vegetable seedling feature extraction using stereo color imaging
vegetable seedling feature extraction using stereo color imaging. ta-te lin. jeng-ming chang. department of agricultural machinery engineering.. national taiwan university.. taipei. taiwan. roc. introductio
Ming-Hui Lin, flute and Ayako Yoda, piano and harpsichord, April 25, 2015
This is the concert program of the Ming-Hui Lin, flute and Ayako Yoda, piano and harpsichord performance on Saturday, April 25, 2015 at 8:30 p.m., at the Marshall Room, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were Sonata in C major for Flute and Basso Continuo, BWV 1033 by Johann Sebastian Bach, Sonata for Flute and Piano, No. 3 by Philippe Gaubert, Sonatina for Flute and Piano by Eldin Burton, Syrinx for Flute solo by Claude Debussy, and Introduction and Variations on "Trockne Blumen" in E minor for Flute and Piano, D802 by Franz Schubert. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Humanities Library Endowed Fund
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