22,922 research outputs found
Xu zeng ri shi cai wu
[汪昂註輯]. 醫方集解 : 六卷 / 汪昂著輯 ; 汪桓參閱 ; 汪端, 汪惟寵仝校.綫裝.框25x14公分, 二截板. 上欄刻《增訂本草備要》, 10行16字, 小字雙行同. 下欄刻《醫方集解》, 10行22字, 小字雙行同. 白口, 四周單邊, 無魚尾. 版心鐫題名及小題.第六冊版心下鐫"三味堂"書名頁刻"重鐫本草醫方合編, 休寧汪訒庵著輯, 内附經絡歌訣" ; 書名背頁牌記刻"光緖庚子[1900]歲夏月新化三味堂校刊"《增訂本草備要》卷次據目錄.《中國中醫古籍總目》(13146)著錄.《增訂本草備要》附: 經絡歌訣 / 汪昂註輯 -- 續增日食菜物.鈐"廣東新會林延琦藏本", "林家珍藏", "林延琦印", "莊兆祥印", "莊兆祥"Xian zhuang.Kuang 25 x 14 gong fen, er jie ban. Shang lan ke "Zeng ding ben cao bei yao", 10 hang 16 zi, xiao zi shuang hang tong. Xia lan ke "Yi fang ji jie", 10 hang 22 zi, xiao zi shuang hang tong. Bai kou, si zhou dan bian, wu yu wei. Ban xin juan ti ming ji xiao ti.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.Detailed notes in vernacular field only.[Wang Ang zhu ji]. Yi fang ji jie : liu juan / Wang Ang zhu ji ; Wang Huan can yue ; Wang Duan, Wang Weichong tong jiao."Zeng ding ben cao bei yao" fu: Jing luo ge jue / Wang Ang zhu ji -- Xu zeng ri shi cai wu.Qian "Guangdong Xinhui Lin Yanqi cang ben", "Lin Jiazhen cang", "Lin Yanqi yin", "Zhuang Zhaoxiang yin", "Zhuang Zhaoxiang
[Zeng Zhongxiang gong quan ji /
Each work has special t.p.Issued without general title? Title from case. Cf. Zhongguo cong shu zong lu.[1-32] Zou yi 32 juan -- [33-34] Wen ji 2 juan -- [35-38] Pi du 5 juan -- [39-60] Shu zha 22 juan -- [61-62] Nian pu 4 juan / Wang Ding'an zhuan ; Xiao Rongjue zeng ding -- [63-64] Rong ai lu 2 juan.Mode of access: Internet
Zeng Guofan mi chuan Li Hongzhang 72 xin fa
Ben shu bian zhu zhe sou luo le jin dai yi bai duo zhong bi ji, zhui xun chu qi zhong de xuan miao zhi chu, jie he zeng guo fan li hong zhang er ren de shu bai feng mi xin, yi ji bi jiao ta men de chu shi mou lue, jin xing le jing xin de tan jiu, zong jie chu le 72 ge cheng gong xin fa, yi hui wei li shi, xi qu ren sheng zhi hu
Zeng Guofan mi chuan Li Hongzhang 72 xin fa
Ben shu bian zhu zhe sou luo le jin dai yi bai duo zhong bi ji, zhui xun chu qi zhong de xuan miao zhi chu, jie he zeng guo fan li hong zhang er ren de shu bai feng mi xin, yi ji bi jiao ta men de chu shi mou lue, jin xing le jing xin de tan jiu, zong jie chu le 72 ge cheng gong xin fa, yi hui wei li shi, xi qu ren sheng zhi hu
Oldest Old Mortality in China
We find that the Kannisto model, a two-parameter logistic formula, fits Han Chinese death rates at oldest-old ages better than the Gompertz and four other models. Chinese death rates appear to be roughly similar to Swedish and Japanese rates after age 97 for both males and females. Because reports of age seem to be serviceably reliable up to age 100 and perhaps age 105 in China, we think that this convergence may be mainly due to mortality selection in the heterogeneous Chinese population. We show that in China, as in developed countries, the rate of increase in mortality with age decelerates at very old ages.age, China, models, mortality
Tylopilus yangzhuliangii N. K. Zeng, Yi Wang, Xu Zhang & Zhui Li 2022, sp. nov.
Tylopilus yangzhuliangii N.K. Zeng, Yi Wang, Xu Zhang & Zhui Li, sp. nov. (Figs. 2, 3) MycoBank: MB842386 Etymology:—Latin, ‘ yangzhuliangii ’ is named after the Chinese mycologist, Zhu L. Yang, in honor of his great contribution to mycology. Diagnosis:—Characterized by very small basidiomes, a peacock blue to deep turquoise pileus, the hymenophore bruising reddish brown when injured, and a slightly interwoven trichodermium composed of uninflated hyphae forming the pileipellis. Holotype:— CHINA. Hainan Provice: Yinggeling of Hainan Tropical Rainforest National Park, elev. 850 m, 7 May 2018, N. K. Zeng 3358 (FHMU2930). GenBank accession number: 28 S = MW 826997, ITS = MW 830253, TEF1 = MW 925820. Description:— Basidiomes very small. Pileus 0.8–2 cm in diam, subhemispherical at first, then convex to applanate; margin curved downwards; surface dry, nearly glabrous, peacock blue (24D6–7) to deep turquoise (24F8); context about 0.7 cm thick in the center of the pileus, white, unchanging in color when injured. Hymenophore poroid, adnate or slightly depressed around apex of stipe; tubes about 0.6 cm in length, white (1A1), bruising reddish brown (7E8) slowly when injured; pores angular to almost round, about 0.3 cm in diam, white (1A1), turning reddish brown (7E8) slowly when injured. Stipe 3–3.6 × 0.3–0.6 cm, central, sub-cylindrical, solid, usually flexuous; surface white (1A1), bruising brownish (7E8) when injured; context white (1A1), unchanging in color when injured; basal mycelium white (1A1). Basidia 14–37 × 8–10 μm, clavate, thin- to slightly thick-walled (up to 1 μm), 4-spored, colorless in KOH; sterigmata 2–4 μm in length. Basidiospores [120/6/2]8–10.5(–11) × 4.5–5.5(–6) μm, Q=1.58–2.00 (–2.10) μm, Qm=1.88 ± 0.12, subfusiform to ellipsoid, slightly thick-walled (up to 0.5 μm), pale yellowish brown to yellowish brown in KOH, smooth. Cheilocystidia 35–50 × 10–15 μm, subfusiform or fusiform, thin-walled, usually containing yellow to brownish yellow pigments. Pleurocystidia 40–60 × 13–17 μm, subfusiform or fusiform, usually containing yellow to brownish yellow pigments. Pileipellis a slightly interwoven trichoderm 50–160 μm thick, composed of hyphae yellowish in KOH, 2–7 μm wide, thin-walled; terminal cells 17–47 × 4–8 μm, sub-cylindrical. Pileal trama made up of hyphae 3–6 μm in diam, yellowish in KOH. Stipitipellis a hymeniderm 160–280 μm thick, composed of thin-walled, emergent hyphae with clavate, subclavate or subfusiform terminal cells (25–44 × 5–14 μm), yellow to yellowish brown in KOH. Stipe trama composed of 2–11 μm wide, cylindrical, thin-walled, yellow in KOH, parallel hyphae. Clamp connections absent in all tissues. Habitat:—Gregarious on the ground in mixed forests of Castanopsis fissa (Champion ex Bentham) Rehder & E.H. Wilson and Pinus fenzeliana Hand. -Mzt. Known distribution:—Southern China (Hainan Province). Additional materials examined:— CHINA. Hainan Province: Yinggeling of Hainan Tropical Rainforest National Park, elev. 850 m, 7 May 2018, N. K . Zeng 3359 (FHMU2921).Published as part of Li, Zhui, Zhang, Xu, Jiang, Shuai, Ji, You-Dong, Wang, Yi & Zeng, Nian-Kai, 2022, Tylopilus yangzhuliangii (Boletaceae, Boletales), a new bolete from tropical China, pp. 135-149 in Phytotaxa 543 (2) on pages 141-145, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.543.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/645076
Coffin Soul Portals of the Female Xunren in Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng
There is a significant void in scholarship concerning the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng’s (Zeng Hou Yi), Leigudun M1, Suizhou, Hubei Province, dated to 433 BCE during the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770-256 BCE) of Bronze Age China, specifically on the lacquer coffins of the female xunren. There is extensive research dedicated to its well-preserved ritual bronze vessels, lacquer wares, and musical instruments, but this tomb is not known for the lacquer designs of portals present on twelve of the twenty-one female companion’s coffins. In this paper, I argue the xunren coffin designs in tomb Leigudun M1 of Zeng Hou Yi are fundamental to uncovering the tomb’s social hierarchy and its function in the afterlife through the presence of portal designs. To begin, I consider archaeological data on the lacquer coffins of the xunren, such as placement and grave goods, and correlate this to lacquer design complexity and portal design on the women’s coffins. I identified parallels between Leigudun M1 and comparable tombs containing burials for the xunren in large quantities that indicate an organized afterlife based on social status. Lastly, I address cosmology and contemporary literature on the afterlife because it illustrates the tradition of hierarchy, movement, and value of souls in the afterlife. By carefully examining the lacquer coffin designs, this study sheds new light on the meaning and value of these coffin soul portals and their relationship to the women and Marquis Yi in the afterlife
Coffin Soul Portals of the Female Xunren in Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng
There is a significant void in scholarship concerning the Tomb of Marquis Yi of Zeng’s (Zeng Hou Yi), Leigudun M1, Suizhou, Hubei Province, dated to 433 BCE during the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770-256 BCE) of Bronze Age China, specifically on the lacquer coffins of the female xunren. There is extensive research dedicated to its well-preserved ritual bronze vessels, lacquer wares, and musical instruments, but this tomb is not known for the lacquer designs of portals present on twelve of the twenty-one female companion’s coffins. In this paper, I argue the xunren coffin designs in tomb Leigudun M1 of Zeng Hou Yi are fundamental to uncovering the tomb’s social hierarchy and its function in the afterlife through the presence of portal designs. To begin, I consider archaeological data on the lacquer coffins of the xunren, such as placement and grave goods, and correlate this to lacquer design complexity and portal design on the women’s coffins. I identified parallels between Leigudun M1 and comparable tombs containing burials for the xunren in large quantities that indicate an organized afterlife based on social status. Lastly, I address cosmology and contemporary literature on the afterlife because it illustrates the tradition of hierarchy, movement, and value of souls in the afterlife. By carefully examining the lacquer coffin designs, this study sheds new light on the meaning and value of these coffin soul portals and their relationship to the women and Marquis Yi in the afterlife
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