5 research outputs found

    Morphostenophanes birmanicus

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    Morphostenophanes birmanicus (Kaszab, 1980) ṀḦẎȐAEƤ (Figs. 27 A–E; 31C, H, M, R; 32C, M–O; 33C, I) Promorphostenophanes atavus birmanicus Kaszab, 1980: 219 (type locality: Shan states, Myammar); synonymized by Masumoto & Bečvář 2008: 210; Gao & Ren, 2009: 307 (in introduction). Promorphostenophanes koyamai Masumoto, 1990: 228, fig. 1–3; Gao & Ren, 2009: 307 (in introduction); synonymized by Masumoto & Bečvář 2008: 210. Morphostenophanes birmanicus (Kaszab, 1980): Masumoto & Bečvář 2008: 210, fig. 6; Gao & Ren, 2009: 308 (in introduc- tion). Type material examined. Paratype of Promorphostenophanes koyamai labelled: THAILAND CHiang Mai Fang, 24.VIII.1989 leg. K. Masumoto [handwritten in white label] // Paratype Promorphostenophanes komiyai [sic!] MA- SUMOTO [handwritten in pink label with underlines] (male, HNHM, examined through five photographs taken by Tamás Németh, sent by Ottó Merkl, Fig. 27D). Additional material examined. CHINA: Yunnan: 1♂ (MYNU), Pu’er City, Lancang County, Zhutang Coun- try, Cizhuhe Village, Xiaolushan, 22°45’31.78” N, 99°42’23.72” E, 2180 m, 2017.i.30, Hao Xu & Jian-Yue Qiu; 1♂ (MYNU, a sample of muscle tissue was preserved in 99.7% ethanol at –18 °C in CZDY), Pu’er City, Lancang County, Zhutang Country, Cizhuhe Village, Xiaolushan, 22°45’31.78” N, 99°42’23.72” E, 2180 m, larva 2017.i.30, adult emerged 2017.v, Hao Xu & Jian-Yue Qiu. Comparative notes. M or phostenophanes birmanicus is closely related to M. lincangensis, M. bannaensis and M. vietnamicus, but can be easily distinguished from the related species by its unmodified pro- and mesotibiae, elytra with bronze metallic luster, elytral intervals evenly convex, elytral apex distinctly furcate. Comments. This species was originally treated as a subspecies of Promorphostenophanes atavus by Kaszab (1980) with a very brief description. Later, it was elevated to species rank (Masumoto & Bečvář 2008). In 1990, Ma- sumoto described a new species from north Thailand named P. koyamai, which was later placed as a junior synonym of M. birmanicus by Masumoto & Bečvář (2008). Thanks to this little ‘episode’, M. birmanicus was redescribed in detail, and compared with M. atavus. In the present study, the author examined one male paratype of M. koyamai through photos taken from dorsal, lateral and ventral views. M. birmanicus is herewith recorded from China as a northernmost part of distribution. It was observed by the author that specimens from China and Thailand are almost identical. Distribution. (Map 1) CHINA: Yunnan (new country record), MYANMAR, THAILAND.Published as part of Zhou, De-Yao, 2020, A revision of the genus Morphostenophanes Pic, 1925 (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae, Stenochiinae, Cnodalonini), pp. 1-81 in Zootaxa 4769 (1) on pages 46-47, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4769.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/379707

    元幕臣の英語教師 : 川路寛堂のこと

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    Taro Kawaji was born on 21 December of the first year of Koka (i.e. 28 January,1845) as the eldest son of Akitsune Kawaji, who died at the early age of twenty-one.As a child Taro was brought up by his uncle, Kionao Inoue (1809-1867), the Gaikoku-bugyo, or chief of the Foreign Affairs Agency, till he was eight.Then he returned to the Kawajis, where his grandfather, Toshiakira Kawaji (1801-1868), the Machi-bugyo(Governor) of Osaka and Nara city and later the Kanjo-bugyo or Chief of the Treasury Bureau, took care of him.Taro, when young, studied under the Confucian scholars, Isaji Kusakabe and Gonsai Asaka, and later entered the Shoheiko, the educational institution of the Bakufu.He first studied Dutch at the Bansho-shirabe-dokoro (the place for the study of Barbarian's books), and then learned English under Manjiro Nakahama (also known as John Mung) and Takichiro Moriyama, a famous Dutch interpreter.Taro also, was a student of the Yokohama Gogaku Denshujo (Ecole Franco-japonais in Yokohama). At the age of thirteen, Taro celebrated his coming of age and waited on Iyemochi Tokugawa (1846-1866), the fourteenth Shogun.In the first month of the third year of Bunkyu (1863), he was promoted to Konando-shu, young samurai that served in the Shogun's palace (Edo Castle) and became Yoriai, a high official beloging to the Council of the Shogun, in the 6th month of the first year of Genji (i.e. July l864).In the 8th month of the second year of Keio (i.e. September l866), Taro became Hoheigashira-nami (commanding officer of the Bakufu's infantry or lieutenant colonel) and in the October of this year, he was ordered to study in Great Britain with thirteen other students.The students, however, were forced to return home after staying in England only about a year and a half because of the Meiji revolution.They finally arrived in Yokohama on the 25th of the 6th month of the fourth year of Keio (i.e. 13 August, 1868). The sudden collapse of the Tokugawa government threw the vassals of the Shogun into great misery, each having to seek a new livelihood in different ways.Taro assumed the new name of Kanda after the Meiji Restoration and moved to Yokohama where he sought to make his fortune by being a raw-silk merchant.But he failed in this speculation and incurred many debts.In the 11th month of the fourth year of Meiji (i.e. December 1871), when the Iwakura mission started on their tour of inspection in America and Europe, Kando was, on the recommendation of Eiichi Shibusawa and Yasukazu Tanabe, requested to go along with the mission as their secretary.Among the party he found many of his old acquaintances from the Shogunate era.It was in the September of the sixth year of Meiji (1873) that the Iwakura mission returned home after touring through various countries in Europe and America for about two years. Kanda, returning home, entered the service of the Finance Ministry as a lower grade officer of the new government but there was no bope of his promotion for many years.In the first month of the tenth year of Meiji (i.e. January l877) he left the official world and bore a part in establishing the Rice Exchange and also acted as a legal advisor for the English and the Americans for a while.He was in the meantime recommended for a post as director of the Yokohama Customhouse, however, this was a remote possibility.In the eighteenth year of Meiji (1885) Kanda was forty one years old of age.He abandoned everything and established a private institute called "the Tsukiyama Gakusha" for the study of English at Mita in Tokyo.He taught English here till the summer of the twenty-sixth year of Meiji (1893) for about nine years, when he was invited to teach English at "Seishikan" (Fukuyama Junjo Chugaku), a middle school in Fukuyama, Hiroshima prefecture.He taught English from the summer of l893 till July l899 (the thirty-second year of Meiji) at the school, but he retired at his own request soon afterward. Shortly after his retirement Kanda proceeded to Sumoto in Awaji-shima island to be a teacher of English at Sumoto middle school, bringing his wife and a son with him.It is said that the symptoms of tuberculosis in his wife, Hanako, who was a daughter of Nagayoshi Asano, a direct high vassal of the Shogun, made Kando decide to move to Awaji-shima island for a change of air for her health.The change of air, however, was ineffectual for her incurable disease.She died on 22 May l903 (the thirty-sixth year of Meiji) in Sumoto at the age of fifty four.She lies in her tomb erected by Kanda at Anryu-in (temple), Yanaka, Tokyo. In January l903 (the thirty-sixth year of Meiji) Kando was appointed the first headmaster of the newly-established girls' high school called "Tsuna Miharagun Kumiairitsu Awaji Koto Jogakko".He was fifty-nine years old then.Kando served in this school for about ten years but in April l914 (the third year of Taisho) he resigned and was welcomed as a deputy principal of the "Shoin girls' highschool run by the Anglican Church in Kobe city.He taught ethics and history till l922 (the eleventh year of Taisho) when he resighed on the ground of advanced age.He was seventy years old then.On 5 February l927 (the Second year of Showa) he ended his days at the age of eighty-four and his ashes were laid in the grave of Kawajis in the Tamabochi cemetery.Kanda, in his closing years, wrote a voluminous book titled "A life of Toshiakira Kawaji" (Kawaji Toshiakira no shogai) which had a high reputation. The author of this article has tried to describe his life in detail and to convey his personality as a school teacher on the basis of a newly-discovered personal history written by him as well as a firsthand account by his former student at Shoin girls' highschool.This paper is dedicated to Kawaji Kanda sensei who lived in obscurity all his life as an unknown but learned secondary school teacher

    The Life of Kando Kawaji

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    Taro Kawaji was born on 21 December of the first year of Koka (i.e. 28 January,1845) as the eldest son of Akitsune Kawaji, who died at the early age of twenty-one.As a child Taro was brought up by his uncle, Kionao Inoue (1809-1867), the Gaikoku-bugyo, or chief of the Foreign Affairs Agency, till he was eight.Then he returned to the Kawajis, where his grandfather, Toshiakira Kawaji (1801-1868), the Machi-bugyo(Governor) of Osaka and Nara city and later the Kanjo-bugyo or Chief of the Treasury Bureau, took care of him.Taro, when young, studied under the Confucian scholars, Isaji Kusakabe and Gonsai Asaka, and later entered the Shoheiko, the educational institution of the Bakufu.He first studied Dutch at the Bansho-shirabe-dokoro (the place for the study of Barbarian\u27s books), and then learned English under Manjiro Nakahama (also known as John Mung) and Takichiro Moriyama, a famous Dutch interpreter.Taro also, was a student of the Yokohama Gogaku Denshujo (Ecole Franco-japonais in Yokohama). At the age of thirteen, Taro celebrated his coming of age and waited on Iyemochi Tokugawa (1846-1866), the fourteenth Shogun.In the first month of the third year of Bunkyu (1863), he was promoted to Konando-shu, young samurai that served in the Shogun\u27s palace (Edo Castle) and became Yoriai, a high official beloging to the Council of the Shogun, in the 6th month of the first year of Genji (i.e. July l864).In the 8th month of the second year of Keio (i.e. September l866), Taro became Hoheigashira-nami (commanding officer of the Bakufu\u27s infantry or lieutenant colonel) and in the October of this year, he was ordered to study in Great Britain with thirteen other students.The students, however, were forced to return home after staying in England only about a year and a half because of the Meiji revolution.They finally arrived in Yokohama on the 25th of the 6th month of the fourth year of Keio (i.e. 13 August, 1868). The sudden collapse of the Tokugawa government threw the vassals of the Shogun into great misery, each having to seek a new livelihood in different ways.Taro assumed the new name of Kanda after the Meiji Restoration and moved to Yokohama where he sought to make his fortune by being a raw-silk merchant.But he failed in this speculation and incurred many debts.In the 11th month of the fourth year of Meiji (i.e. December 1871), when the Iwakura mission started on their tour of inspection in America and Europe, Kando was, on the recommendation of Eiichi Shibusawa and Yasukazu Tanabe, requested to go along with the mission as their secretary.Among the party he found many of his old acquaintances from the Shogunate era.It was in the September of the sixth year of Meiji (1873) that the Iwakura mission returned home after touring through various countries in Europe and America for about two years. Kanda, returning home, entered the service of the Finance Ministry as a lower grade officer of the new government but there was no bope of his promotion for many years.In the first month of the tenth year of Meiji (i.e. January l877) he left the official world and bore a part in establishing the Rice Exchange and also acted as a legal advisor for the English and the Americans for a while.He was in the meantime recommended for a post as director of the Yokohama Customhouse, however, this was a remote possibility.In the eighteenth year of Meiji (1885) Kanda was forty one years old of age.He abandoned everything and established a private institute called "the Tsukiyama Gakusha" for the study of English at Mita in Tokyo.He taught English here till the summer of the twenty-sixth year of Meiji (1893) for about nine years, when he was invited to teach English at "Seishikan" (Fukuyama Junjo Chugaku), a middle school in Fukuyama, Hiroshima prefecture.He taught English from the summer of l893 till July l899 (the thirty-second year of Meiji) at the school, but he retired at his own request soon afterward. Shortly after his retirement Kanda proceeded to Sumoto in Awaji-shima island to be a teacher of English at Sumoto middle school, bringing his wife and a son with him.It is said that the symptoms of tuberculosis in his wife, Hanako, who was a daughter of Nagayoshi Asano, a direct high vassal of the Shogun, made Kando decide to move to Awaji-shima island for a change of air for her health.The change of air, however, was ineffectual for her incurable disease.She died on 22 May l903 (the thirty-sixth year of Meiji) in Sumoto at the age of fifty four.She lies in her tomb erected by Kanda at Anryu-in (temple), Yanaka, Tokyo. In January l903 (the thirty-sixth year of Meiji) Kando was appointed the first headmaster of the newly-established girls\u27 high school called "Tsuna Miharagun Kumiairitsu Awaji Koto Jogakko".He was fifty-nine years old then.Kando served in this school for about ten years but in April l914 (the third year of Taisho) he resigned and was welcomed as a deputy principal of the "Shoin girls\u27 highschool run by the Anglican Church in Kobe city.He taught ethics and history till l922 (the eleventh year of Taisho) when he resighed on the ground of advanced age.He was seventy years old then.On 5 February l927 (the Second year of Showa) he ended his days at the age of eighty-four and his ashes were laid in the grave of Kawajis in the Tamabochi cemetery.Kanda, in his closing years, wrote a voluminous book titled "A life of Toshiakira Kawaji" (Kawaji Toshiakira no shogai) which had a high reputation. The author of this article has tried to describe his life in detail and to convey his personality as a school teacher on the basis of a newly-discovered personal history written by him as well as a firsthand account by his former student at Shoin girls\u27 highschool.This paper is dedicated to Kawaji Kanda sensei who lived in obscurity all his life as an unknown but learned secondary school teacher

    World Congress Integrative Medicine & Health 2017: part two

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