Report Title 13. Jahrhundert
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UNIVERSITY COURT 21 September 2015 Minute Present: Mr Steve
UNIVERSITY COURT A1 21 September 2015 Minute Present: Mr Steve Morrison, Rector (in chair) The Principal, Professor Sir Timothy O’Shea Sheriff Principal Edward Bowen Dr Anne Richards, Vice-Convener Ms Doreen Davidson Dr Alan Brown Mr Ritchie Walker Dr Marialuisa Aliotta Professor Sarah Cooper Professor Jake Ansell Dr Claire Phillips Mr David Bentley Dr Robert Black Lady Susan Rice Ms Alison Grant Mr Jonny Ross-Tatam, President, Students' Representative Council Ms Urte Macikene, Vice-President Students' Representative Council In attendance: Mr Sandy Ross, Rector’s Assessor University Secretary, Ms Sarah Smith Mr Hugh Edmiston, Director of Corporate Services Ms Leigh Chalmers, Director of Legal Services Mr Gavin Douglas, Deputy Secretary, Student Experience Mr Gavin McLachlan, Chief Information Officer & Librarian to the University Dr Ian Conn, Director of Communications & Marketing Mr Gary Jebb, Director of Estates & Buildings Ms Leigh Chalmers, Director of Legal Services Ms Zoe Lewandowski, Director of Human Resources Ms Kirstie Graham, Deputy Head of Court Services Dr Lewis Allan, Head of Court Services Vice-Principal Professor Dorothy Miell, Head of the College of Humanities and Social Science (for Item 5) Professor David Argyle, Head of The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies (for Item 5) Professor Graeme Reid, Dean of Learning & Teaching, College of Science & Engineering (for Item 5) Mr Luke Reeve, Partner, Ernst & Young (for Item 7) Mr Dave Gorman, Director of Social Responsibility (for Item 10) Apologies: The Rt Hon Donald Wilson, Lord Provost of the City of Edinburgh Mr Peter Budd Dr Chris Masters Ms Angi Lamb Mr Alan Johnston 1 Minute Paper A The Minute of the previous meeting held on 22 June 2015 was approved. -
“Heal the Sick”
"HEAL THE SICK" THE STORY OF THE MEDICAL MISSION AUXILIARY OF THE BAPTIST MISSIONARY SOCIETY By R. FLETCHER MOORSHEAD, M.B., F.R.C.S. Medical Secretary of the Society LONDON: THE CAREY PRESS 19 FURNIVAL STREET TO MY WIFE AUTHOR'S PREFACE Two years ago, upon the occasion of the celebration of the semi-jubilee of the Medical Mission Auxiliary, the desire was expressed that some permanent record of the twenty-five years should be compiled. The following pages, written as and when they could be in the scant leisure that it was possible to snatch from the demands of other work, are offered in the hope that their perusal may deepen interest in the work of B.M.S. Medical Missions. The very fact that the Auxiliary no longer exists as a specific branch of the Society may be held to constitute one reason why its inspiring story should be recorded ere the ceaseless march of events has caused it to be forgotten. A greater reason may be found in the character of the service which here stands revealed. No finer heroism is to be found anywhere than that exhibited by the lives of mission ary doctors and nurses, and for the sake of the younger generation in particular, it deserves to be told. A still further reason may be traced in the need, increasingly apparent, to safeguard the dis tinctive work of Medical Missions from being lost sight of in the more general presentation of the missionary enterprise which has become customary of recent years. In a very real sense the place and power of Medical Missions require to be defined afresh in vii viii PREFACE the days in which we live. -
Christian History & Biography
Issue 98: Christianity in China As for Me and My House The house-church movement survived persecution and created a surge of Christian growth across China. Tony Lambert On the eve of the Communist victory in 1949, there were around one million Protestants (of all denominations) in China. In 2007, even the most conservative official polls reported 40 million, and these do not take into account the millions of secret Christians in the Communist Party and the government. What accounts for this astounding growth? Many observers point to the role of Chinese house churches. The house-church movement began in the pre-1949 missionary era. New converts—especially in evangelical missions like the China Inland Mission and the Christian & Missionary Alliance—would often meet in homes. Also, the rapidly growing independent churches, such as the True Jesus Church, the Little Flock, and the Jesus Family, stressed lay ministry and evangelism. The Little Flock had no pastors, relying on every "brother" to lead ministry, and attracted many educated city people and students who were dissatisfied with the traditional foreign missions and denominations. The Jesus Family practiced communal living and attracted the rural poor. These independent churches were uniquely placed to survive, and eventually flourish, in the new, strictly-controlled environment. In the early 1950s, the Three-Self Patriotic Movement eliminated denominations and created a stifling political control over the dwindling churches. Many believers quietly began to pull out of this system. -
Extrait Ma Junwu
Avertissement : Ce texte n’est pas définitivement achevé. Il s’agit d’un fragment de ma thèse en cours de rédaction sur le darwinisme en Chine. Néanmoins, il m’a paru utile pour la poursuite de mon travail de le publier en l’état pour permettre à un lectorat intéressé par le sujet et/ou aux universitaires d’en prendre connaissance, devant la difficulté d’avoir un retour sur mon travail, notamment chez les sinologues. Ma Junwu, premier traducteur de Darwin Ingénieur, éducateur, poète et homme politique, Ma Junwu (son vrai prénom est Daoning) est le premier et le plus influent traducteur de Darwin en chinois de la première moitié du XXe siècle. Par l’impact incontestable et durable de ses traductions d’œuvres occidentales (à part Darwin, il faut citer notamment Rousseau, J. S. Mill, Spencer et Haeckel), c’est certainement la personnalité la plus typique de la philosophie évolutionniste chinoise, bien que son rôle soit encore sous-estimé par les commentateurs contemporains dans ce domaine1. Il est né le 17 juillet 1881 à Gongcheng, aujourd’hui un district de la région de Guilin (province de Guangxi), d’un parent fonctionnaire2. Durant son enfance, Ma suit une éducation classique privée mais dès l’âge de 16 ans (en 1897), il s’intéresse au programme de réformes constitutionnelles de Kang Youwei. Il suit de près les événements des 100 jours de réformes, l’année suivante. En 1899, il entre à l’école Tiyong (Tiyong daxue) à Guilin, l’une des nouvelles écoles qui s’ouvrent au « savoir occidental ». Dans le cadre de ses études secondaires, Ma y étudie notamment les mathématiques (sa spécialité de l’époque), l’anglais et l’histoire3. -
Christian Women and the Making of a Modern Chinese Family: an Exploration of Nü Duo 女鐸, 1912–1951
Christian Women and the Making of a Modern Chinese Family: an Exploration of Nü duo 女鐸, 1912–1951 Zhou Yun A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The Australian National University February 2019 © Copyright by Zhou Yun 2019 All Rights Reserved Except where otherwise acknowledged, this thesis is my own original work. Acknowledgements I would like to express my deep gratitude to my supervisor Dr. Benjamin Penny for his valuable suggestions and constant patience throughout my five years at The Australian National University (ANU). His invitation to study for a Doctorate at Australian Centre on China in the World (CIW) not only made this project possible but also kindled my academic pursuit of the history of Christianity. Coming from a research background of contemporary Christian movements among diaspora Chinese, I realise that an appreciation of the present cannot be fully achieved without a thorough study of the past. I was very grateful to be given the opportunity to research the Republican era and in particular the development of Christianity among Chinese women. I wish to thank my two co-advisers—Dr. Wei Shuge and Dr. Zhu Yujie—for their time and guidance. Shuge’s advice has been especially helpful in the development of my thesis. Her honest critiques and insightful suggestions demonstrated how to conduct conscientious scholarship. I would also like to extend my thanks to friends and colleagues who helped me with my research in various ways. Special thanks to Dr. Caroline Stevenson for her great proof reading skills and Dr. Paul Farrelly for his time in checking the revised parts of my thesis. -
Theory Attached to Practice Chinese Debates Over Basic Research from Thought Remolding to the Bomb, 1949–1966
David Kaldewey and Désirée Schauz (eds.), Basic and Applied Research: The Language of Science Policy in the Twentieth Century (New York: Berghahn Books, 2018), 228-247. C hapter 8 Theory Attached to Practice Chinese Debates over Basic Research from Thought Remolding to the Bomb, 1949–1966 Zuoyue Wang ላሌ In 1963, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), which had come under re- peated political attacks in the past for pursuing impractical “theory in detach- ment from practice,” sought to take advantage of an interlude of ideological liberalization by codifying the optimum proportions of its various programs. The Academy formulated a set of “work regulations” governing four types of research, which it would engage in during the coming decade: “15–20 percent basic research, 35–45 percent applied basic research, 30–40 percent applied research, and 5–10 percent extension research.”1 Both the contents of the above policy pronouncement and the fact that it was made at all refl ected the central position of the debate over basic and applied research—in its various semantic guises—in the politics of science and technology policy of the People’s Republic of China (P.R.C.) under Communist leader Mao Zedong both before and after 1963.The objective of this chapter is to use the basic/applied debate to explore the interactions of historical forces at work in shaping Chinese science and technology policy during the Mao era, which started with the founding of the P.R.C. in 1949 and ended with his death and the termination of the Cultural Revolution in 1976. -
Introduction
Notes Introduction 1. Hobsbawm 1990, 66. 2. Diamond 1998, 322–33. 3. Fairbank 1992, 44–45. 4. Fei Xiaotong 1989, 1–2. 5. Diamond 1998, 323, original emphasis. 6. Crossley 1999; Di Cosmo 1998; Purdue 2005a; Lavely and Wong 1998, 717. 7. Richards 2003, 112–47; Lattimore 1937; Pan Chia-lin and Taeuber 1952. 8. My usage of the term “geo-body” follows Thongchai 1994. 9. B. Anderson 1991, 86. 10. Purdue 2001, 304. 11. Dreyer 2006, 279–80; Fei Xiaotong 1981, 23–25. 12. Jiang Ping 1994, 16. 13. Morris-Suzuki 1998, 4; Duara 2003; Handler 1988, 6–9. 14. Duara 1995; Duara 2003. 15. Turner 1962, 3. 16. Adelman and Aron 1999, 816. 17. M. Anderson 1996, 4, Anderson’s italics. 18. Fitzgerald 1996a: 136. 19. Ibid., 107. 20. Tsu Jing 2005. 21. R. Wong 2006, 95. 22. Chatterjee (1986) was the first to theorize colonial nationalism as a “derivative discourse” of Western Orientalism. 23. Gladney 1994, 92–95; Harrell 1995a; Schein 2000. 24. Fei Xiaotong 1989, 1. 25. Cohen 1991, 114–25; Schwarcz 1986; Tu Wei-ming 1994. 26. Harrison 2000, 240–43, 83–85; Harrison 2001. 27. Harrison 2000, 83–85; Cohen 1991, 126. 186 • Notes 28. Duara 2003, 9–40. 29. See, for example, Lattimore 1940 and 1962; Forbes 1986; Goldstein 1989; Benson 1990; Lipman 1998; Millward 1998; Purdue 2005a; Mitter 2000; Atwood 2002; Tighe 2005; Reardon-Anderson 2005; Giersch 2006; Crossley, Siu, and Sutton 2006; Gladney 1991, 1994, and 1996; Harrell 1995a and 2001; Brown 1996 and 2004; Cheung Siu-woo 1995 and 2003; Schein 2000; Kulp 2000; Bulag 2002 and 2006; Rossabi 2004. -
Politiker, Parteivorsitzender Communist Party of Australia Biographie 1955-1956 Ein Australisches Studienteam Unter Laurence Aarons Reist in China
Report Title - p. 1 of 104 Report Title Aarons, Laurence = Aarons, Laurie (Sydney 1917-2005 Sydney) : Politiker, Parteivorsitzender Communist Party of Australia Biographie 1955-1956 Ein australisches Studienteam unter Laurence Aarons reist in China. [StraL2:S. 201] 1958 Laurence Aarons besucht Beijing. [StraL2:S. 227] Albinski, Henry = Albinski, Henry Stephen (1931-2003 Sydney) : Professor University of Sydney, University of Melbourne, Curtin University Bibliographie : Autor Albinski, Henry S. Australian policies and attitudes towards China. (Princeton : Princeton University Press, 1965). [WC] Allgrove, John (um 1966) : Australischer Diplomat Biographie 1966 John Allgrove ist australischer Handelskommissar in Hong Kong. [ChiAus3] Alston, Richard = Alston, Richard Kenneth Robert (Perth 1941-) : Politiker, Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts Biographie 2000 Sun Jiazheng besucht Canberra und trifft Richard Alston. [Tho2] 2000 Richard Alston besucht Shanghai um über ein online Handels-System zu diskutieren, Xi’an und Beijing. Er trifft Wu Bangguo in Beijing. [Tho2] 2000 Eine chinesische kulturelle Regierungs-Delegation unter Sun Jiazheng besucht Australien. Er trifft Richard Alston, Peter McGauran und Zhou Wenchong. [ChiAus] Ambrose, David (um 1988) : Australischer Diplomat Biographie 1985-1988 David Ambrose ist Botschafter der australischen Botschaft in Beijing. [Int] 1997-2000 David Ambrose ist Generalkonsul des australischen Generalkonsulats in Shanghai. [ChiAus4] Anderson, John Duncan = Anderson, John (Sydney -
David Duncan Main's Correspondence, 1914
Dedicated to a Medical Career in the “Heaven Below”: David Duncan Main’s Correspondence, 1914-1926 By Xiaoping Fang Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore Bukit Timah 469 A, Tower Block Singapore [email protected] © 2009 by Xiaoping Fang Figure: Dr. David Duncan Main (1856-1934). Source: http://www.hzsct.org/sct/sct/info/listinfo.jsp?infoid=248 Editor's Note: This research report is presented here with the author’s permission but should not be cited or quoted without the author’s consent. Rockefeller Archive Center Research Reports Online is a periodic publication of the Rockefeller Archive Center. Edited by Ken Rose and Erwin Levold. Research Reports Online is intended to foster the network of scholarship in the history of philanthropy and to highlight the diverse range of materials and subjects covered in the collections at the Rockefeller Archive Center. The reports are drawn from essays submitted by researchers who have visited the Archive Center, many of whom have received grants from the Archive Center to support their research. The ideas and opinions expressed in this report are those of the author and are not intended to represent the Rockefeller Archive Center. David Duncan Main was one of the most famous missionaries in China in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, at a time when China was experiencing tremendous social turmoil. He dedicated forty-five years of his life to medical service in China. He grew up in Scotland, where he was born at Kirkmichael in 1856, and where he studied medicine and 1 business at Glasgow and Edinburgh. -
Jade Huang and Chinese Culture Identity: Focus on the Myth of “Huang of Xiahoushi”
Journal of Literature and Art Studies, June 2016, Vol. 6, No. 6, 603-618 doi: 10.17265/2159-5836/2016.06.003 D DAVID PUBLISHING Jade Huang and Chinese Culture Identity: Focus on the Myth of “Huang of Xiahoushi” TANG Qi-cui, WU Yu-wei Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China This paper focus on the myth of “Huang of Xiahoushi” (夏后氏之璜), focusing on the distribution of Jade Huang (玉璜) since the early neolithic and its process of pluralistic integration. The paper explores the story of ethnic group, cultural identification and the significance of Jade Huang in the discourse construction of etiquette civilization behind the mythic narrative based on multi-evidence method and the local meaning of literature in ancient Chinese context. Keywords: Jade Huang, Huang of Xiahoushi, unified diversity, Chinese identity, etiquette civilization, multi-evidence method Introduction Modern archeological relics including potteries, jades and bronzes bring back the lost history; the process of how Chinese unified diversity took shape in general and the great tradition of jade culture in eight thousand in particular. The handed-down documents echo each other at a distance provide solid evidences for the origin of civilization of rite and music and the core values based on jade belief. Jade Huang is an important one of it. It is illuminated by numerous records about Jade Huang in ancient literature, as well as a large number of archaeology findings past 7,000 years. The paper seeks to focus on the following questions: what is the function of Jade Huang in historic and prehistoric period? Moreover, what is the function of “Huang of Xiahoushi”, which belonged to emperor and symbolized special power in historic documents and myths and legends in ancient china? Jade Huang: Etiquette and Literature Jade Huang (Yu Huang, Semi-circular/annular Jade Pendant) is a type of jade artifact which is seemed to be remotely related to etiquette and literature. -
Number 3, Spring 1998 Director’S Letter
Planning and planting for a better world Friends of the JC Raulston Arboretum Newsletter Number 3, Spring 1998 Director’s Letter Spring greetings from the JC Raulston Arboretum! This garden- ing season is in full swing, and the Arboretum is the place to be. Emergence is the word! Flowers and foliage are emerging every- where. We had a magnificent late winter and early spring. The Cornus mas ‘Spring Glow’ located in the paradise garden was exquisite this year. The bright yellow flowers are bright and persistent, and the Students from a Wake Tech Community College Photography Class find exfoliating bark and attractive habit plenty to photograph on a February day in the Arboretum. make it a winner. It’s no wonder that JC was so excited about this done soon. Make sure you check of themselves than is expected to seedling selection from the field out many of the special gardens in keep things moving forward. I, for nursery. We are looking to propa- the Arboretum. Our volunteer one, am thankful for each and every gate numerous plants this spring in curators are busy planting and one of them. hopes of getting it into the trade. preparing those gardens for The magnolias were looking another season. Many thanks to all Lastly, when you visit the garden I fantastic until we had three days in our volunteers who work so very would challenge you to find the a row of temperatures in the low hard in the garden. It shows! Euscaphis japonicus. We had a twenties. There was plenty of Another reminder — from April to beautiful seven-foot specimen tree damage to open flowers, but the October, on Sunday’s at 2:00 p.m. -
China in Deutschen Und Deutschland in Chinesischen Reiseberichten Vom Opiumkrieg Bis Zum Ersten Weltkrieg
Wahrnehmung des Fremden: China in deutschen und Deutschland in chinesischen Reiseberichten Vom Opiumkrieg bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde der Philosophischen Fakultät der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität zu Freiburg/Brsg. vorgelegt von Liu Jing aus Qinglong V. R. China WS 2000 / 2001 Gutacher: Herr Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Reinhard Gutacher: Herr Prof. Dr. Bernd Martin Tag der Prüfung: 12.07.2001 Danksagung Die Arbeit, die im Wintersemester 2000/01 von der Philosophischen Fakultät der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität zu Freiburg i. Br. als Dissertation angenommen wurde, haben Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Reinhard und Prof. Dr. Bernd Martin betreut. Ihnen bin ich zu bleibendem Dank verpflichtet. Ich möchte an dieser Stelle Prof. Leatitia Böhm und PD Dr. Helmut Zedelmaier, die mich ursprünglich ermutigt, meine Aufmerksamkeit der Geschichte der deutsch-chinesischen Beziehungen zuzuwenden, den wärmsten Dank sagen. Für die Förderung der Allgemeinen Stiftung Freiburg und hier besonders des Stiftungsdirektors Lothar Böhler, Prof. Dr. Hellgard Rauh und Edith Wäger sei für ihre finanziellen Unterstützungen gedankt, was mir die Möglichkeit gab, ohne materielle Sorgen die Arbeit fertigzustellen und zu publizieren. Ein besonderes Wort des Dankes gilt einigen Freunden, Ursula Seidler, Günter Sokol, Sabine Schmidt und Margit Florl-Mahmoudi, die mir beim Korrekturlesen geholfen haben. Mein innigster Dank gilt jedoch meinem verstorbenen Bruder, ohne dessen Anteilnahme und Unterstützung, insbesondere bei der Beschaffung von chinesischem Material, ich meine Arbeit nicht hätte abschließen können. Freiburg, Oktober 2003 Liu Jing II Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Fragestellung und Methode 2 2. Deutschland und China: Ein historischer Überblick 14 2.1. Von den ersten Kontakten bis zum Zeitalter des Kolonialismus: Deutschland und seine Beziehung zu China 14 2.1.1.