Study on the Fusion Characteristics of Wine Set in Banquet Wine Culture of Ancient China-Take "Figure Painting" in the Five Dynasties and Song Dynasty as an Example

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 181-192
Author(s):  
ZhiGang Wei ◽  
Mi Sun Chung
2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 753-764 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Du ◽  
X. Zheng

This paper gives an overview of the evolution of city drainage in ancient China, and analyzes the achievement of drainage of such cities as Pingliangtai in Henan province, Xibo of Shang Dynasty, Linzi, the capital of the State of Qi, Chang'an, the capital of Han and Tang Dynasties, Kaifeng, the Eastern Capital of Northern Song Dynasty, Ganzhou, Dadu, the capital of Yuan Dynasty; and Beijing, the capital of Ming and Qing Dynasties. This paper also sums up the characteristics and the management experiences of the drainage facilities of ancient Chinese cities, including drainage system management methods, rules and laws about drainage in different eras, and overall principles of ancient city water systems. At present, most major cities in China are facing issues relating to drainage systems and city water systems. These cities are often bothered by floods and other water-related problems. Learning from the ancestors' experience would be important and necessary for modern planners and decision makers. Therefore this paper may be used for reference in modern city planning and construction.


2020 ◽  
Vol 71 (03) ◽  
pp. 282-284
Author(s):  
LI BIN ◽  
ZHAO HONGYAN ◽  
LI YIXIAO ◽  
JIANG XUEWEI ◽  
HONG YU ◽  
...  

The origin and spread of the Chinese batik have always been a controversial issue in the field of Chinese dyeing and waving historiography. The systemic analysis was carried out by the methods of textile archaeology and literature research in this paper. Conclusions have been made as follows: there were two models in the origin of Chinese batik. One, such as the Central Plains area, was the type of external afference. Another model, such as the south-western ethnic areas, was the type of generating from the inside of the area. The transmutation of batik in Central Plain areas have passed through three stages: introduction from the Eastern Han Dynasty to the Northern and Southern Dynasties, mass acceptance during the Sui Dynasty, Tang Dynasty and Five Dynasties, obsolescence during the Two Song Dynasties. From the perspectives of the reason, the rapid disappearance of batik in the Central Plains areas were caused by the special internal and external environment and the development trend of dyeing technology of the Song Dynasty.


2012 ◽  
Vol 443-444 ◽  
pp. 1091-1095
Author(s):  
Lu Wei

. The southeast of Shanxi province was famous for Lu silk in Ming and Qing dynasties, which mainly includes Ze and Lu regions. This thesis discuses the existing spinning wheels and looms in this region, and try to explore the historical development of textile machinery from Song dynasty to 1980s.It will contribute to the research on development of wooden looms in ancient China.


Author(s):  
Jeffrey L. Broughton

An extensive printed Chan literature came into wide circulation during the Song dynasty (960–1279). This Song corpus included more-or-less intact texts from the Tang (618–907) and Five Dynasties (907–960), Tang and Five-Dynasties texts heavily reworked by Song editors, and a vast newly created set of Song Chan texts. This printed Chan literature spread among the educated elite during the Song period. In total, several hundred woodblock-printed texts from the Song and Yuan (1271–1368) periods, the classic age of Chan textual production, still exist, but many editions from the Ming (1368–1644) and later have also been preserved. In addition, Chan texts can be found within the Dunhuang-manuscript corpus. There are eight major Chan genres (omitting “rules of purity” or qinggui as too technical): yulu (collections of sayings of individual masters); flame-of-the-lamp records (biographical material and sayings of masters arranged as a series of inheritors of the flame of the lamp); poetry (both prosaic religious verse and highly allusive classical shi poetry); “standards” with attached poetry/prose comments (often called by Western scholars “gong’an/kōan collections”); compendia; collections of letters by Chan masters to scholar-officials, students, and peers; pretend dialogues; and glossary material. The language of the Chan records is a hybrid, a mixture of the written elegant language (wenyan) and a type of written Chinese based on spoken language. In time, the language of the Chan records became a sacerdotal language for Chan insiders, not only in China but in Korea and Japan as well. The language patterns of Chan literature—for instance, its proclivity for using everyday words and phrases as stand-ins for more imposing Buddhist-sounding equivalents—account for a great deal of its power and beauty. However, those language patterns also constitute serious obstacles for the modern reader. In short, the texts are very difficult to read because they are not simply “classical Chinese” nor are they modern vernacular. A stylistic convergence of the Chan records and classical Chinese poetry can be seen, particularly in the context of jueju quatrains of seven or five syllables. The sayings of the records often embody aesthetic ideals of Chinese poetry: lexical economy, emphasis on the imagistic, and minimal use of nonimagistic or abstract words.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1048 ◽  
pp. 236-239
Author(s):  
Rong Tan

There are extremely little records of clothes in the ancient times materially or documentarily, yet the series images of Song Dynasty provide the costume researchers with precious image data. In the past, some researchers believed that children’s clothes in the ancient times just acted as the scaled-down version of the adults’; however, the analysis conducted on the images has demonstrated that it is not the case. This paper tries to take the images of children of Song Dynasty as its research object, to conduct an analysis on the styles, materials and patterns of the trousers dressed by children in the early China, aiming at having a clearer understanding of children’s apparel back in the ancient China.


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