45,145 research outputs found
Entretien avec Tu Cheng-sheng, le coordinateur du manuel sur la société taiwanaise
Cheng-sheng Tu, Lespade Gilles. Entretien avec Tu Cheng-sheng, le coordinateur du manuel sur la société taiwanaise. In: Perspectives chinoises, n°44, 1997. pp. 57-59
Shang han ming li lun
張仲景述 ; 王叔和撰次 ; 成無己注解.綫裝.框17.6x12.8公分, 10行20字, 小字雙行同. 白口, 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"傷寒論, 張仲景先生著, 成無己先生註解, 光緖庚辰重鐫, 附明理論, 埽葉山房藏板"《中國中醫古籍總目》(00671)著錄.附: 傷寒明理論 : 四卷 / 成無己撰 ; 卷前附"論圖"鈐"莊兆祥印", "莊兆祥"Xian zhuang.Kuang 17.6 x 12.8 gong fen, 10 hang 20 zi, xiao zi shuang hang tong. Bai kou, 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.Fu: Shang han ming li lun : si juan / Cheng Wuji zhuan ; juan qian fu "Lun tu"Qian "Zhuang Zhaoxiang yin", "Zhuang Zhaoxiang
Xin ce Beijing nei wai cheng quan tu [cartographic material] .
7503141263 : (ISBN). 880-03 Di 1 ban. Reprint, at 1.15 times the size of the original, which was published in 1921.; Map of Beijing in 1921 showing railways, main roads, public buildings, temples, water features, rivers, parks and city walls.; Series title from dust jacket.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-vn3822855
Beiping Shi cheng jiao ti tu [cartographic material] /
7503141255 : (ISBN). 880-03 Di 1 ban. Reprint. Original published in 1947. Its size is 0.88 times of original map.; Map of Beijing and nearby suburbs in 1947 showing boundaries, railways, main roads, water features and city walls. Relief shown by countours.; Series title from dust jacket.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-vn3822872
Aureobasidium aerium (Saccotheciaceae, Dothideales), a new yeast-like fungus from the air in Beijing, China
Wang, Cheng-Bin, Jiang, Ning, Tu, Yan, Zhu, Ya-Quan, Xue, Han, Li, Yong (2022): Aureobasidium aerium (Saccotheciaceae, Dothideales), a new yeast-like fungus from the air in Beijing, China. Phytotaxa 544 (2): 185-192, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.544.2.
DIETARY CONDITIONS AND DIFFERENTIAL ACCESS TO FOOD RESOURCES AMONG THE VARIOUS CLASSES DURING THE HAN PERIOD
In this thesis, I study how food resources and dietary conditions were determined by social and economic status during the Han period in China, B.C. 206~A.D.220. Even though earlier scholars have published research concerning the Chinese food culture of this period, these studies were limited in that they only illustrated the dietary culture of the upper class or the available food resources in one geographic area. Also, without any persuasive data, it has been assumed by these earlier scholars that there were big differences in food resources and food consumption between the upper and lower classes. In this thesis, for comparison among the classes, I divide the social and economic classes into five stratified groups: nobles, officials, peasants, soldiers and convicts. After a brief introduction of the nature of each social class, I examine the food resources and nutritional condition of each group using information such as the wealth and income of each group, the market price of food resources, the agricultural products of peasants, and the amount of food distribution to soldiers and convicts. I found these data from archaeological remains, received historical records and pictorial data, and excavated texts. This research shows a broader view of Chinese dietary condition focusing not only on the variety of food resources of nobles, but also on the different food accessibilities among the officials, and the food deficiencies of peasants. It also deals with the situations of food supply for soldiers and convicts in an effort to reveal the true dietary consumption and nutritional conditions for all Chinese. This research proves that the various classes during the Han period in China had different food resources and dietary conditions
Incorporating generalized quantifiers into description logic for representing data source contents
Title from cover. "January 1998."Includes bibliographical references (p. 19-21).Steven Yi-cheng Tu and Stuart E. Madnick
A Study on Luo Zhi Cheng\ue2s Historical narrative poems
Luo Zhi Cheng is an important poet in the field of Taiwanese modern poetry, who is known for distinctive linguistic style and intense creative consciousness that are respected. Based on his powerful imagination and flourishing creativity as two primary advantages, through the mediation of poetry, prose, remarks, and commentaries, he maximally amplifies the implication of literature, and thereby composes himself and enriches the character. Distinguished from the majority of researchers focusing on Luo\ue2s lyric works, this study particularly found a writing context of \ue2avoidance of lyric sensibility\ue2 in Luo\ue2s poems, that is, his series of works historical themes in the form of long poems utilizing narrative skills to exhibit the remarkable consistency between the internality and the externality of the author.
\ue3\ue3This study conducted a comparative investigation of Luo\ue2s poetry work (The Book of Zhuzi) and prose works (Austral Court\ue2s Notandum and The Initiation of Civilization) to build a relatively more multi-faceted \ue2author\ue2s image of Luo Zhi Cheng\ue2 according to the writing of works of historical themes. Using the methodology of narratology, I departed from the internality of the text (the collection of poems) to identify how Luo forms the ideal spectrum of character by shaping historical persons; and meanwhile, I equally departed from the collections of prose to grasp the external information of the texts, and thereby clarified that Luo may treat \ue2writing, individual, and society\ue2 as a process of self-fulfillment. It is the two corresponding identities \ue2poet\ue2 and \ue2the intellectual\ue2 that are the mechanism of his constructing self-justification. Such investigation of the internality and the externality of text confirmed the complex relationships of the sustained \ue2opposition,\ue2 \ue2coexistence,\ue2 and \ue2conflict\ue2 between Luo and his works of historical themes
- …
