the tang dynasty
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T oung Pao ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 107 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 633-687
Author(s):  
Lucas Rambo Bender

Abstract In recent decades, a significant amount of Western scholarship on traditional Chinese poetry and poetics has either proposed or assumed a vision of the art underwritten by the supposed “monism,” “nonduality,” and “immanence” of traditional Chinese worldviews. This essay argues that although these were important ideas in certain periods and contexts, they cannot be taken as unproblematically defining the world of thought in which poetry operated during the Tang dynasty. Instead, Tang writers more routinely drew in their discussions of art upon the epistemological tensions and discontinuities posited by medieval intellectual and religious traditions. For this reason, they often outlined models of poetry very different from those most common in contemporary criticism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 65-70
Author(s):  
Zhang Zhentao Zhentao

This short review is dedicated to the long-awaited event ‘Beijing Symposium of Sinicised Catholic Theology – The Chinese Face of Jesus Christ’ and deals with the historical background of some its events. It is also a personal document filled with statements derived from the given observations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 891-911
Author(s):  
Zeng-Hui Hwang ◽  
Tsung-Yi Lin ◽  
Hong-Sen Yan

Abstract. During the 8th century, ancient China began to use a steelyard clepsydra to control the waterwheel, giving it a time-keeping function for use in hydromechanical astronomical clocks. In the Tang Dynasty, the monk I-Hsing (683–723 CE) and Liang Lingzan jointly built a water-powered celestial globe (shuiyun huntian), which, according to historical records, was China's first hydromechanical astronomical clock with a waterwheel steelyard clepsydra. However, the original device has since been lost. The objective of this study is to use the design methodology for the reconstruction of lost ancient machinery to systematically reconstruct this lost clock. The methodology included the study of ancient literature to formulate reconstruction design specifications. Through the process of generalization and specialization, the target device was analyzed to determine its function, and different mechanical configurations that achieved the same function were developed. Thereafter, an atlas of possible mechanical sketches that were consistent with the technological level of ancient times was built. A computer 3D reconstruction of the waterwheel steelyard clepsydra, time-reporting device, and astronomical device was carried out, and 50 possible configurations were developed. One was selected to build a physical model.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Ma

The Tang Dynasty was a period of highly developed ancient musical instrument art in my country. This article takes wind instruments in the Tang Dynasty as the research object, and tries to explore wind instruments in the Tang Dynasty from the following research directions: looking for the basic form of the instruments at that time from images and historical relics; looking for the classification and social functions of wind instruments in the Tang Dynasty from the literature.


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