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The Textiles of the Han Dynasty & Their Relationship with Society
The Textiles of the Han Dynasty & Their Relationship with Society Heather Langford Theses submitted for the degree of Master of Arts Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Centre of Asian Studies University of Adelaide May 2009 ii Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the research requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Centre of Asian Studies School of Humanities and Social Sciences Adelaide University 2009 iii Table of Contents 1. Introduction.........................................................................................1 1.1. Literature Review..............................................................................13 1.2. Chapter summary ..............................................................................17 1.3. Conclusion ........................................................................................19 2. Background .......................................................................................20 2.1. Pre Han History.................................................................................20 2.2. Qin Dynasty ......................................................................................24 2.3. The Han Dynasty...............................................................................25 2.3.1. Trade with the West............................................................................. 30 2.4. Conclusion ........................................................................................32 3. Textiles and Technology....................................................................33 -
Realizing Constant Current and Constant Voltage Outputs and Input Zero Phase Angle of Wireless Power Transfer Systems with Minimum Component Counts
600 IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS, VOL. 22, NO. 1, JANUARY 2021 Realizing Constant Current and Constant Voltage Outputs and Input Zero Phase Angle of Wireless Power Transfer Systems With Minimum Component Counts Jianghua Lu , Student Member, IEEE, Guorong Zhu , Senior Member, IEEE,DeyanLin,Member, IEEE, Yiming Zhang , Member, IEEE, Haoran Wang , Member, IEEE, and Chunting Chris Mi , Fellow, IEEE Abstract— In both normal and fast wireless electric vehicle advantages of its high specific energy, energy density, and high charging systems, constant current/constant voltage (CC/CV) cycle lifetime. The wireless power transfer (WPT) technology charging profile, regardless of the variation of the battery [1], [2] using magnetic or electric field coupling, namely the state of charge, is one of the most essential characteristics to ensure the battery performance and reliability. The input zero inductive power transfer (IPT) or capacitive power transfer phase angle (ZPA) is able to minimize the system volt-ampere (CPT), provides a promising solution for both normal and fast rating, enhance the power transfer capability, and make it charging [3], [4] of EV Li-ion batteries. Over the full range easy to achieve soft-switching operation over the full range of of the Li-on battery charge, the battery pack equivalent load battery charging profile. Therefore, the load-independent CC and resistance, which defined as the ratio of the charging voltage CV output characteristics with ZPA conditions are necessary for wireless charging systems. However, the existing methods to the charging current, may be roughly from a few ohms to that can achieve these functions either add power switches or several hundred ohms [5]. -
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. -
Accepted Manuscript
A Tool to Early Predict Severe Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) : A Multicenter Study using the Risk Nomogram in Wuhan and Guangdong, China Jiao Gong1*, Jingyi Ou2*, Xueping Qiu3*, Yusheng Jie4,5, Yaqiong Chen1, Lianxiong Yuan6, Jing Cao4, Mingkai Tan2, Wenxiong Xu4, Fang Zheng3+, Yaling Shi2+, Bo Hu1+. 1Department of Laboratory Medicine, Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, P.R. China 2Department of Laboratory Medicine, Guangzhou Eighth People's Hospital, Guangzhou, P.R. China 3Center for Gene Diagnosis, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, P.R. China 4Department of Infectious Diseases, Key Laboratory of Liver Disease of Guangdong Province, Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, P.R. China 5Department of Infectious Diseases, The Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University Yuedong Hospital, Meizhou, P.R. China 6DepartmentAccepted of Science and Research, Third Manuscript Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, P.R. China *These authors contributed equally to this work. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: [email protected]. Correspondence: Bo Hu: Department of Laboratory Medicine, Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Tianhe Road 600#, Guangzhou, 510630, P.R. China. Phone: +86-20-82179254; Fax: +86-20-85252250. E-mail: [email protected] Summary: Older age, higher LDH, CRP, RDW, DBIL, BUN, and lower ALB on admission correlated with higher odds of severe COVID-19. An effective prognostic nomogram composed of 7 features could allow early identification of patients at risk of exacerbation to severe COVID-19. -
CONNECTION the Official Newsletter of Zhejiang University Issue 16 Feb.2020
CONNECTION The Official Newsletter of Zhejiang University Issue 16 Feb.2020 COVID-19 Special Issue Stand Strong Message from Editor-in-Chief CONNECTION Welcome to the special COVID-19 issue of Issue 16 CONNECTION, which highlights the efforts and contributions of ZJU community in face of the epidemic. As a group, they are heroes in harm's way, givers and doers who respond swiftly to the need of our city, our country and the world. When you read their stories, you'll recognize the strength and solidarity that define all ZJUers. ZJU community has demonstrated its courage and resilience in the battle against the novel coronavirus. At this time, let us all come together to protect ourselves and our loved ones, keep all those who are at the front lines in our prayers and pass on our gratitude to those who have joined and contributed to the fight against the virus. Together, we will weather this crisis. LI Min, Editor-in-Chief Director, Office of Global Engagement Editorial office : Global Communications Office of Global Engagement, Zhejiang University 866 Yuhangtang Road, Hangzhou, P.R. China 310058 Phone: +86 571 88981259 Fax: +86 571 87951315 Email: [email protected] Edited by : CHEN Weiying, AI Ni Designed by : HUANG Zhaoyi Material from Connection may be reproduced accompanied with appropriate acknowledgement. CONTENTS Faculty One of the heroes in harm’s way: LI Lanjuan 03 ZJU medics answered the call from Wuhan 04 Insights from ZJU experts 05 Alumni Fund for Prevention and Control of Viral Infectious Diseases set up 10 Alumni community mobilized in the battle against COVID-19 11 Education Classes start online during the epidemic 15 What ZJUers feel about online learning 15 Efforts to address concerns, avoid misinformation 17 International World standing with us 18 International students lending a hand against the epidemic 20 What our fans say 21 FacultyFaculty ZJU community has taken on the responsibility to join the concertedZJU community efforts has takenagainst on thethe responsibility spreadto join the of concerted the virus. -
The Old Master
INTRODUCTION Four main characteristics distinguish this book from other translations of Laozi. First, the base of my translation is the oldest existing edition of Laozi. It was excavated in 1973 from a tomb located in Mawangdui, the city of Changsha, Hunan Province of China, and is usually referred to as Text A of the Mawangdui Laozi because it is the older of the two texts of Laozi unearthed from it.1 Two facts prove that the text was written before 202 bce, when the first emperor of the Han dynasty began to rule over the entire China: it does not follow the naming taboo of the Han dynasty;2 its handwriting style is close to the seal script that was prevalent in the Qin dynasty (221–206 bce). Second, I have incorporated the recent archaeological discovery of Laozi-related documents, disentombed in 1993 in Jishan District’s tomb complex in the village of Guodian, near the city of Jingmen, Hubei Province of China. These documents include three bundles of bamboo slips written in the Chu script and contain passages related to the extant Laozi.3 Third, I have made extensive use of old commentaries on Laozi to provide the most comprehensive interpretations possible of each passage. Finally, I have examined myriad Chinese classic texts that are closely associated with the formation of Laozi, such as Zhuangzi, Lüshi Chunqiu (Spring and Autumn Annals of Mr. Lü), Han Feizi, and Huainanzi, to understand the intellectual and historical context of Laozi’s ideas. In addition to these characteristics, this book introduces several new interpretations of Laozi. -
7070 the E-Pang Palace
7070 The E-pang Palace E-pang Palace was built in Qin dynasty by Emperor Qin Shihuang in Xianyang, Shanxi Province. It was the largest palace ever built by human. It was so large and so magnificent that after many years of construction, it still was not completed. Building the great wall, E-pang Palace and Qin Shihuang’s tomb cost so much labor and human lives that people rose to fight against Qin Shihuang’s regime. Xiang Yu and Liu Bang were two rebel leaders at that time. Liu Bang captured Xianyang — the capital of Qin. Xiang Yu was very angry about this, and he commanded his army to march to Xianyang. Xiang Yu was the bravest and the strongest warrior at that time, and his army was much more than Liu Bang’s. So Liu Bang was frighten and retreated from Xianyang, leaving all treasures in the grand E-pang Palace untouched. When Xiang Yu took Xianyang, he burned E-pang Palce. The fire lasted for more than three months, renouncing the end of Qin dynasty. Several years later, Liu Bang defeated Xiangyu and became the first emperor of Han dynasty. He went back to E-pang Palace but saw only some pillars left. Zhang Liang and Xiao He were Liu Bang’s two most important ministers, so Liu Bang wanted to give them some awards. Liu Bang told them: “You guys can make two rectangular fences in E-pang Palace, then the land inside the fences will belongs to you. But the corners of the rectangles must be the pillars left on the ground, and two fences can’t cross or touch each other.” To simplify the problem, E-pang Palace can be consider as a plane, and pillars can be considered as points on the plane. -
International Security 24:1 66
China’s Search for a John Wilson Lewis Modern Air Force and Xue Litai For more than forty- eight years, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has sought to build a combat-ready air force.1 First in the Korean War (1950–53) and then again in 1979, Beijing’s leaders gave precedence to this quest, but it was the Gulf War in 1991 coupled with growing concern over Taiwan that most alerted them to the global revolution in air warfare and prompted an accelerated buildup. This study brieºy reviews the history of China’s recurrent efforts to create a modern air force and addresses two principal questions. Why did those efforts, which repeatedly enjoyed a high priority, fail? What have the Chinese learned from these failures and how do they deªne and justify their current air force programs? The answers to the ªrst question highlight changing defense con- cerns in China’s national planning. Those to the second provide a more nu- anced understanding of current security goals, interservice relations, and the evolution of national defense strategies. With respect to the ªrst question, newly available Chinese military writings and interviews with People’s Liberation Army (PLA) ofªcers on the history of the air force suggest that the reasons for the recurrent failure varied markedly from period to period. That variation itself has prevented the military and political leaderships from forming a consensus about the lessons of the past and the policies that could work. In seeking to answer the second question, the article examines emerging air force and national defense policies and doctrines and sets forth Beijing’s ra- tionale for the air force programs in light of new security challenges, particu- larly those in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea. -
Research Article Suan Zao Ren Tang in Combination with Zhi Zi Chi Tang As a Treatment Protocol for Insomniacs with Anxiety
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Crossref Hindawi Publishing Corporation Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine Volume 2015, Article ID 913252, 7 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/913252 Research Article Suan Zao Ren Tang in Combination with ZhiZiChiTangas a Treatment Protocol for Insomniacs with Anxiety: A Randomized Parallel-Controlled Trial Lin-lin Hu,1 Xin Zhang,2 Wen-juan Liu,3 Mei Li,4 and Yong-hua Zhang3 1 School of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Zhejiang Chinese Medicine University, Zhejiang 310053, China 2School of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine, Heilongjiang 150040, China 3Department of Medicine, The Seventh Hospital of Hangzhou, Mental Health Care of Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310013, China 4School of Medicine, Anhui Medical University, Anhui 230032, China Correspondence should be addressed to Yong-hua Zhang; [email protected] Received 26 October 2014; Revised 19 January 2015; Accepted 21 January 2015 Academic Editor: Martin Offenbaecher Copyright © 2015 Lin-lin Hu et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Insomnia is a serious worldwide health problem that is often comorbid with anxiety. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the efficacy of a Chinese formula containing Suan Zao Ren Tang (SZRT) and Zhi Zi Chi Tang (ZZCT; SZR-ZZC) for improving sleep quality and anxiety states with four indices of Polysomnography (PSG), the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), and the Self Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS). -
Team Singapore at the Xix Commonwealth Games Delhi, India
Annex B TEAM SINGAPORE AT THE XIX COMMONWEALTH GAMES DELHI, INDIA Contingent List No. Sport Name Chinese 21 Debutant M/F Event Discipline years & below 1. Archery Vanessa Loh Tze Rong 罗梓榕 √ √ F Recurve Team (W) 2. Wendy Tan Liu Jie 陈柳洁 √ √ F 3. Elizabeth Cheok Khang 石康宁 √ √ F Leng 4. Athletics Mohd Elif Mustapap NA √ M Men’s 4x100m Relay, 100m Individual 5. Muhd Amirudin Jamal NA √ M 6. Lee Cheng Wei 李成伟 √ M 7. Gary Yeo Foo Er 杨富益 √ M 8. Calvin Kang Li Loong 江利龙 √ √ M 9. U K Shyam NA √ M 10. Athletics - Adam Kamis NA √ M 100m T4G Parasports 11. Aquatics - Richard Chng Lijie 庄立杰 √ √ M 50/100m Free, Swimming 50/100m Back, 50m Breast, 4x100m Free Relay (M) 12. Jeremy Kevin Matthews NA √ √ M 200/400/1500m Free, 100/200m Back, 200m Ind. Medley, 4x200m Free Relay (M) 13. Dzuhaili Mohd Kamal NA √ √ M 100m Free, 50/100m Back, 50/100m Fly, 4x100m Free Relay (M) 14. Mattias Ng Jia Hui 黄家辉 √ √ M 400/1500m Free, 4x200m Free Relay (M) 15. Arren Quek Xin Hui 郭信辉 √ √ M 50/100/200m Free, 50/100m Fly, 4x100m Free, 4x200m Free Relay (M) 16. Teo Zhen Ren 张帧任 √ √ M 200/400/1500m Free, 4x200m Free Relay (M) 17. Aaron Yeo Xian Ying 杨弦颖 √ √ M 50/100m Free, 50m Fly, 4x100m Free Relay (M) 18. Tao Li 陶李 √ F 50m Fly (W) 19. Aquatics – Gayle Esther Lee Renyi 李仁义 √ F Solo (W) Synchronised No. Sport Name Chinese 21 Debutant M/F Event Discipline years & below Swimming 20. Aquatics – Leow Chen Hai James 梁 振 海 F 50m Free (S8, 9), Swimming 100m Free (S9,10) (Parasports) 21. -
P020110307527551165137.Pdf
CONTENT 1.MESSAGE FROM DIRECTOR …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 03 2.ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 05 3.HIGHLIGHTS OF ACHIEVEMENTS …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 Coexistence of Conserve and Research----“The Germplasm Bank of Wild Species ” services biodiversity protection and socio-economic development ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 The Structure, Activity and New Drug Pre-Clinical Research of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids ………………………………………… 09 Anti-Cancer Constituents in the Herb Medicine-Shengma (Cimicifuga L) ……………………………………………………………………………… 10 Floristic Study on the Seed Plants of Yaoshan Mountain in Northeast Yunnan …………………………………………………………………… 11 Higher Fungi Resources and Chemical Composition in Alpine and Sub-alpine Regions in Southwest China ……………………… 12 Research Progress on Natural Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) Inhibitors…………………………………………………………………………………… 13 Predicting Global Change through Reconstruction Research of Paleoclimate………………………………………………………………………… 14 Chemical Composition of a traditional Chinese medicine-Swertia mileensis……………………………………………………………………………… 15 Mountain Ecosystem Research has Made New Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16 Plant Cyclic Peptide has Made Important Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 17 Progresses in Computational Chemistry Research ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 18 New Progress in the Total Synthesis of Natural Products ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… -
Towards a Psychobiographical Study of Lin Yutang
What Maketh the Man? Towards a Psychobiographical Study of Lin Yutang Roslyn Joy Ricci School of Social Science/Centre for Asian Studies University of Adelaide November 2013 Abstract Dr Lin Yutang, philologist, philosopher, novelist and inventor was America’s most influential native informant on Chinese culture from the mid-1930s to the mid-1950s. Theoretical analysis of Lin’s accomplishments is an ongoing focus of research on both sides of the North Pacific: this study suggests why he made particular choices and reacted in specific ways during his lifetime. Psychobiographical theory forms the framework for this research because it provides a structure for searching within texts to understand why Lin made choices that led to his lasting contribution to transcultural literature. It looks at foundational beliefs established in his childhood and youth, at why significant events in adulthood either reinforced or altered these and why some circumstances initiated new beliefs. Lin’s life is viewed through thematic lenses: foundational factors; scholarship and vocation; the influence of women; peer input; and religion, philosophy and humour. Most of his empirical life journey is already documented: this thesis suggests why he felt compelled to act and write as he did. In doing so, it offers possible scenarios of why Lin’s talents developed and why his life journey evolved in a particular manner, place and time. For example, it shows the way in which basic beliefs—formed during Lin’s childhood and youth and later specific events in adulthood—affected his life’s journey. It analyses how his exposure to the theories of Taoism, Confucianism and Buddhism affected his early childhood basic belief—Christianity—and argues that he accommodated traditional Chinese beliefs within Christianity.