40,950 research outputs found
2001年02月09日Tom Tang致Paula Sun Youngdahl信(附信)
[[abstract]]2001年02月09日Tom Tang致Paula Sun Youngdahl(波拉)信,附2001年02月08日Paula Sun Youngdahl(波拉)致Tom. Tang信
General Li Jen Sun exhibit, April 2016
Dr. Sydney Chu of the Republic of China Military Academy, visiting professor in VMI’s international studies department, stands with retired Col. Mowton L. Waring Jr. ‘56 and his son, retired Col. Jim M. Waring '81, before the Gen. Li Jen Sun ’27 exhibit in the VMI Museum, April 26, 2016. Mowton Waring Sr. ’27 was a classmate of Sun
Sun shi ci tang shu mu ji qi ta er zhong.
Chong kan ben.Sun shi ci tang shu mu nei, wai bian, qi juan / Sun Xingyan zhuan ; Ping jin guan jiao cang shu ji ji san juan bu yi, xu bian / Sun Xingyan zhuan ; Lian shi ju cang shu ji nei, wai bian, er juan / Sun Xingyan zhuan ; Chen Zongyi bian ci.Mode of access: Internet
Tang Jiyao and Sun Yat-sen: Reform, revolution and the struggle for southern China.
The purpose of this study is to re-evaluate the career, reform programs, and national and regional policies of the militarist, Tang Jiyao. An attempt is made to understand his decisions and actions in relation to the concrete circumstances and specific problems which confronted him. The conclusion that Tang, for all his faults, was a nationalistic modernizer challenges the commonly accepted evaluation of Tang as a representative of feudal reaction against Sun Yat-sen, the Guomindang and the Communist Party. The conditions which shaped Tang's reforms were significantly influenced by his competition with Sun Yat-sen for control of southern China. Both Tang and Sun were committed to transforming China into a modern state, but they differed on the best way to accomplish this end. Their conflict focussed on questions such as the degree of centralization and extrabureaucratic political power necessary to facilitate economic development. These disagreements, which were intermittently relieved by periods of superficial cooperation, resulted in direct rivalry for power in Sichuan, Guangzhou, Guangxi and Yunnan. The struggle with Sun influenced every aspect of Tang's military, political and economic planning, and the formation of his political values and the fate of his reforms cannot be understood without direct reference to these differences with Sun. The events of these years have most often been told from Sun's point of view, with the perspective of his opponents, such as Tang, either ignored or belittled. It is another primary purpose of this paper to recount the events of this period from an alternative standpoint. This approach will help reconstruct the dynamics which influenced the behavior of the principal actors, and will also serve to clarify the continuities between that time and today. It is assumed that an accurate appraisal of Tang Jiyao's career and reform policies is more important for an understanding of Dengist programs today than the avowedly revolutionary stance of Sun Yat-sen.PhDAsian historyModern historySocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/129020/2/9308405.pd
Pelliot chinois 2638
Contient : Comptes de monastère ; Introduction d'un ouvrage de phonétique, probablement le Tang yun 唐 韻 ; Préface au Qie yun 切 韻 de Lu Ci 陸 詞 ; Préface de Chang Sun] Na yan [長 孫] 訥 言, à son commentaire du Qie yun ; Préface au] Tang yun 唐 韻 de Sun Mian 孫 愐 ; Texte pouvant être considéré aussi bien comme une introduction au Qie yun ou au Tang yun que comme une conclusionNumérisation effectuée à partir d'un document original
Sun Protection Factor Analysis of Sunscreens Containing Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles
The effect of micronization on sun protection factor SPF were tested on two types of titanium dioxide TiO2 with primary particle sizes of 20 nm and 170 nm. Oil/water creams with 5%, 10%, and 20% concentrations of each type of TiO2 were prepared, and SPF was measured using both in vitro and in vivo methods. In vitro analysis demonstrated that submicron-sized TiO2 cream had a lower SPF value than nanosized TiO2 formulations of the same concentration. In vivo experiments confirmed this result, and a strong correlation between in vitro and in vivo measurements was observed. Furthermore, the SPF values of nanosized TiO2 sunscreen were concentration -dependent in the range of 5% to 20%. Scanning electron microscopy results indicate that the higher SPF of nanosized TiO2 formulations may be due to the formation of multilayer agglomerates by small particles at nano- scales, leading to a reduced void space between particles and a more efficient barrier to protect skin from sunlight
Gen. Li Jen Sun and other VMI Alumni at Taipei, 1953
Group photograph, "VMI Day at Taipei, Taiwan, China", including Col. Orlando W. Lyle VMI Class of 1932 and Gen. Li Jen Sun, Class of 1927.Accompanied by letter fragment (page 1 only) from Lyle, in which he describes circumstances that led to photo
Tang Guoyan, Zhang Shiquan, Sun Zhongwen et Liu Wenlin, Yuenan lishi huobi (« Monnaies historiques du Vietnam ».
Thierry François. Tang Guoyan, Zhang Shiquan, Sun Zhongwen et Liu Wenlin, Yuenan lishi huobi (« Monnaies historiques du Vietnam ».. In: Revue numismatique, 6e série - Tome 151, année 1996 pp. 376-380
The Manual of Calligraphy by Sun Guoting of the Tang. A Comprehensive Study on the Manuscript and its Author
The Manual of Calligraphy (Shu pu 書譜) by Sun Guoting 孫過庭 (ca. 647-ca. 690) is one of the great masterpieces of Chinese calligraphy. A 369 columns long horizontal scroll written in a beautiful cursive hand, the manuscript provides some of the finest explanations of calligraphic technique and aesthetics and has long since occupied a preeminent role in the history of calligraphy. Now kept at the National Palace Museum, Taipei, the scroll is still used as a model for the practice of the cursive script. Many are the studies on the Shu pu published in China and Japan and several English, German, and French translations already exist. However, the present book provides a new interpretation of some key questions related with the core meaning of the work. At the same time, it outlines the basic features of Sun Guoting’s life and its influence on his choice of the literary genre (pu), hitherto never used in calligraphy and painting treatises. By surveying the history of the word pu in Chinese pre-Tang literature and the differences among the literary genres of pre-Tang treatises on calligraphy, the present study on the one hand challenges the widely accepted theory of the Shu pu being a “treatise” on calligraphy; on the other, it shows how deep-rooted was Sun Guoting’s intention of writing a “manual” for teaching purposes.
A critical edition conducted on the original manuscript column by column provides a comprehensive record of the entire text, including corrections and repetitions. An annotated English translation offers an almost word-to-word philologically-based interpretation of Sun Guoting’s ideas
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