Wheeled Vehicles in the Chinese Bronze Age (C
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Inscriptional Records of the Western Zhou
INSCRIPTIONAL RECORDS OF THE WESTERN ZHOU Robert Eno Fall 2012 Note to Readers The translations in these pages cannot be considered scholarly. They were originally prepared in early 1988, under stringent time pressures, specifically for teaching use that term. Although I modified them sporadically between that time and 2012, my final year of teaching, their purpose as course materials, used in a week-long classroom exercise for undergraduate students in an early China history survey, did not warrant the type of robust academic apparatus that a scholarly edition would have required. Since no broad anthology of translations of bronze inscriptions was generally available, I have, since the late 1990s, made updated versions of this resource available online for use by teachers and students generally. As freely available materials, they may still be of use. However, as specialists have been aware all along, there are many imperfections in these translations, and I want to make sure that readers are aware that there is now a scholarly alternative, published last month: A Source Book of Ancient Chinese Bronze Inscriptions, edited by Constance Cook and Paul Goldin (Berkeley: Society for the Study of Early China, 2016). The “Source Book” includes translations of over one hundred inscriptions, prepared by ten contributors. I have chosen not to revise the materials here in light of this new resource, even in the case of a few items in the “Source Book” that were contributed by me, because a piecemeal revision seemed unhelpful, and I am now too distant from research on Western Zhou bronzes to undertake a more extensive one. -
Maria Khayutina • [email protected] the Tombs
Maria Khayutina [email protected] The Tombs of Peng State and Related Questions Paper for the Chicago Bronze Workshop, November 3-7, 2010 (, 1.1.) () The discovery of the Western Zhou period’s Peng State in Heng River Valley in the south of Shanxi Province represents one of the most fascinating archaeological events of the last decade. Ruled by a lineage of Kui (Gui ) surname, Peng, supposedly, was founded by descendants of a group that, to a certain degree, retained autonomy from the Huaxia cultural and political community, dominated by lineages of Zi , Ji and Jiang surnames. Considering Peng’s location right to the south of one of the major Ji states, Jin , and quite close to the eastern residence of Zhou kings, Chengzhou , its case can be very instructive with regard to the construction of the geo-political and cultural space in Early China during the Western Zhou period. Although the publication of the full excavations’ report may take years, some preliminary observations can be made already now based on simplified archaeological reports about the tombs of Peng ruler Cheng and his spouse née Ji of Bi . In the present paper, I briefly introduce the tombs inventory and the inscriptions on the bronzes, and then proceed to discuss the following questions: - How the tombs M1 and M2 at Hengbei can be dated? - What does the equipment of the Hengbei tombs suggest about the cultural roots of Peng? - What can be observed about Peng’s relations to the Gui people and to other Kui/Gui- surnamed lineages? 1. General Information The cemetery of Peng state has been discovered near Hengbei village (Hengshui town, Jiang County, Shanxi ). -
The Milwaukee Public Museum's Leopardi Collection
University of Wisconsin Milwaukee UWM Digital Commons Theses and Dissertations May 2017 Melita in Milwaukee: the Milwaukee Public Museum’s Leopardi Collection Stephan Noureddine Hassam University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.uwm.edu/etd Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, and the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation Hassam, Stephan Noureddine, "Melita in Milwaukee: the Milwaukee Public Museum’s Leopardi Collection" (2017). Theses and Dissertations. 1483. https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/1483 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by UWM Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UWM Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MELITA IN MILWAUKEE: THE MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM’S LEOPARDI COLLECTION by Stephan Noureddine Hassam A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Anthropology at The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee May 2017 ABSTRACT MELITA IN MILWAUKEE: THE MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM’S LEOPARDI COLLECTION by Stephan Noureddine Hassam The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2017 Under the Supervision of Professor Bettina Arnold The Phoenician/Punic occupation of Malta is an important period in the nation’s history. The Phoenicians first settled the Maltese islands sometime in the early to late seventh century B.C., and their material culture left a lasting influence on the island for nearly a millennium. Beginning in the early 1600s, Phoenician material culture began to be recognized as such. Following wider trends in the Enlightenment era in Europe, Maltese nobility and clergy began collecting antiquities. -
Artist's Proposal
Gabbert Artist’s Proposal 14th Street Roundabout Page 434 of 1673 Gabbert Sarasota Roundabout 41&14th James Gabbert Sculptor Ladies and Gentlemen, Thank you for this opportunity. For your consideration I propose a work tentatively titled “Flame”. I believe it to be simple-yet- compelling, symbolic, and appropriate to this setting. Dimensions will be 20 feet high by 14.5 feet wide by 14.5 feet deep. It sits on a 3.5 feet high by 9 feet in diameter base. (not accurately dimensioned in the 3D graphics) The composition. The design has substance, and yet, there is practically no impediment to drivers’ visibility. After review of the design by a structural engineer the flame flicks may need to be pierced with openings to meet the 150 mph wind velocity requirement. I see no problem in adjusting the design to accommodate any change like this. Fire can represent our passions, zeal, creativity, and motivation. The “flame” can suggest the light held by the Statue of Liberty, the fire from Prometheus, the spirit of the city, and the hearth-fire of 612.207.8895 | jgsculpture.webs.com | [email protected] 14th Street Roundabout Page 435 of 1673 Gabbert Sarasota Roundabout 41&14th James Gabbert Sculptor home. It would be lit at night with a soft glow from within. A flame creates a sense of place because everyone is drawn to a fire. A flame sheds light and warmth. Reference my “Hopes and Dreams” in my work example to get a sense of what this would look like. The four circles suggest unity and wholeness, or, the circle of life, or, the earth/universe. -
Annual Report
2018 ANNUAL REPORT TABLE OF CONTENTS 4 BOARD OF DIRECTORS 4 HEADQUARTERS STAFF 5 VOLUNTEERS 6 LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT 8 LETTER FROM THE CEO 10 14 20 62 68 72 About usa Membership Competition Program Marketing Financial ultimate growth & COmmuni- Review 16 LEAGUE 24 YOUTH cations 11 MISSION AFFILIATES 32 COLLEGE 66 COACHING 11 VISION 18 GROWTH 36 CLUB 67 OBSERVER 11 CORE VALUES 19 MEMBER 46 MASTERS PROGRAM 13 STRATEGIC PLAN BENEFITS 50 BEACH 13 GOALS 54 INTERNATIONAL 2018 Annual Report 3 BOARD OF DIRECTORS HEADQUARTERS STAFF ROBYN FENNIG DR. TOM CRAWFORD COMPETITION & NATIONAL MEMBER SERVICES & President Chief Executive Officer Elite Athlete Representative [email protected] TEAM PROGRAMS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT WILL DEAVER JOSH MURPHY TYLER KINLEY Managing Director, Competition Director, Member Services Vice President FINANCE & National Team Programs & Community Development At-Large Representative & DEVELOPMENT [email protected] [email protected] HEATHER ANN BRAUER JULIA LEE JOY FERENBAUGH TEAL DABNEY Secretary Director, Finance & Development Manager, Competition & National Manager, Event Sanctioning Elite Athlete Representative [email protected] Team Programs (Youth) [email protected] [email protected] JOSH SEAMON KAYLEIGH HUDSON LEAH DOLAN-KELLEY Treasurer Manager, Finance CAROLINA GONZALEZ-LLANOS Manager, Community Development & HR At-Large Representative & Administration Manager, Competition & National [email protected] [email protected] Team Programs (Club) DEANNA BALL [email protected] -
Adventures in the National Palace Museum
Digital Technology Facilitated MLA (Museums, Libraries, and Archives) Service Innovation James Quo-Ping Lin Director General, Dept. of Cultural Creativity and Marketing National Palace Museum, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C. National Palace Museum The National Palace Museum houses the finest Chinese artifacts collected from the Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing Dynasties Collection: 682,000 items Exhibition Space: Northern Branch: 9,613.91 m² Southern Branch: 5,913 m² Museum Collection Painting and Rare Books and Calligraphy Antiquities Historical Documents Digital Data Retrieval System Antiquities Painting & Calligraphy Historical Documents Rare Books NPM Artifact Integrated Search System Collection Management System 3D Virtual Collection Collaborated with Academia Sinica, National Taiwan University and Industrial Technology Research Institute to build 3D models of five selected objects 3D Laser Scanning 360 Virtual Exhibition 3D Tools • Maya • 3D Max • Laser Scanner National Palace Museum Website Languages: •Chinese •Simplified Chinese •English •Japanese •Korean •German •French •Spanish •Russian •Arabic •Portuguese Virtual Museum Website • Audiences from around the world can access the museum through the virtual museum website. • Comprehensive on-line visitor guide provides an informative and enjoyable digital experience. Exhibition Theme Sites LANG SHINING The Calligraphic World of Mifu’s Art 49th Annual Worldfest Houston (2016) MUSE Gold Award (2007) Age of the Great Khan MUSE Honorable Mention Award (2004) Promotional Films 1. Behind the Palace, Beyond the Horizon 2004 2. The Passage 2004 3. In the Golden Age of Chinese Craftsmanship 2006 4. Adventures in the NPM 2007 5. Inside: The Emperor’s Treasure 2007 6. The Museum without Walls 2008 In the Golden Age of Chinese Craftsmanship In the Golden Age of Chinese Craftsmanship, directed by Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien, shows the extraordinary precision and quality of Ming and Ch’ing dynasty crafts in the National Palace Museum collection. -
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On the Periphery of a Great “Empire”: Secondary Formation of States and Their Material Basis in the Shandong Peninsula during the Late Bronze Age, ca. 1000-500 B.C.E Minna Wu Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMIBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 @2013 Minna Wu All rights reserved ABSTRACT On the Periphery of a Great “Empire”: Secondary Formation of States and Their Material Basis in the Shandong Peninsula during the Late Bronze-Age, ca. 1000-500 B.C.E. Minna Wu The Shandong region has been of considerable interest to the study of ancient China due to its location in the eastern periphery of the central culture. For the Western Zhou state, Shandong was the “Far East” and it was a vast region of diverse landscape and complex cultural traditions during the Late Bronze-Age (1000-500 BCE). In this research, the developmental trajectories of three different types of secondary states are examined. The first type is the regional states established by the Zhou court; the second type is the indigenous Non-Zhou states with Dong Yi origins; the third type is the states that may have been formerly Shang polities and accepted Zhou rule after the Zhou conquest of Shang. On the one hand, this dissertation examines the dynamic social and cultural process in the eastern periphery in relation to the expansion and colonization of the Western Zhou state; on the other hand, it emphasizes the agency of the periphery during the formation of secondary states by examining how the polities in the periphery responded to the advances of the Western Zhou state and how local traditions impacted the composition of the local material assemblage which lay the foundation for the future prosperity of the regional culture. -
An Empirical Account of Defamation Litigation in China
Columbia Law School Scholarship Archive Faculty Scholarship Faculty Publications 2006 Innovation through Intimidation: An Empirical Account of Defamation Litigation in China Benjamin L. Liebman Columbia Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship Part of the Torts Commons Recommended Citation Benjamin L. Liebman, Innovation through Intimidation: An Empirical Account of Defamation Litigation in China, 47 HARV. INT'L L. J. 33 (2006). Available at: https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/554 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Publications at Scholarship Archive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Scholarship Archive. For more information, please contact [email protected]. VOLUME 47, NUMBER 1, WINTER 2006 Innovation Through Intimidation: An Empirical Account of Defamation Litigation in China Benjamin L. Liebman* INTRODUCTION Consider two recent defamation cases in Chinese courts. In 2004, Zhang Xide, a former county-level Communist Party boss, sued the authors of a best selling book, An Investigation into China's Peasants. The book exposed official malfeasance on Zhang's watch and the resultant peasant hardships. Zhang demanded an apology from the book's authors and publisher, excision of the offending chapter, 200,000 yuan (approximately U.S.$25,000)' for emotional damages, and a share of profits from sales of the book. Zhang sued 2 in a local court on which, not coincidentally, his son sat as a judge. * Associate Professor of Law and Director, Center for Chinese Legal Studies, Columbia Law School. -
Summary Life in the Shang Dynasty Shang Rulers and Gods Top 10
Summary Life in the Shang Dynasty Map showing the expanse of the Shang Dynasty Shang society was divided into different classes. At the top Did you know? were the royal family, and then priests and administrative Warriors were able to join The Shang Dynasty, also known as the Yin between 1523 and 1028 BCE. THE UPPER classes. Members of the aristocracy were well-respected, and the upper classes. The CLASSES more successful they were Dynasty, ruled the Yellow River Valley in the had clothes made from the finest materials. They were often in battle, the higher they second millenium BCE (approx 1675-1046BCE). given the responsibility of governing small areas. could rise! Life was very different for peasants, who were at the bottom Did you know? The Shang Dynasty succeeded the Xia Dynasty of the social ladder. The majority of the population was in this THE LOWER Peasants were governed and was followed by the Zhou Dynasty. bracket were limited to farming crops and selling handmade by local aristocrats, and CLASSES had little hope of leaving items for a profit. Some lower classes were buried with their masters, leading archaeologists to believe they were slaves. their life of peasantry. It was the first Chinese Dynasty for which there is Shang people ate a varied diet! The basic food was millet, a Did you know? written and archaeological evidence. type of grain, but barley and wheat were also grown. Shang The people of the Shang FOOD farmers were also skilled, growing vegetables and beans. Fish Dynasty also kept domesticated animals, The Dynasty expanded its territory and moved were caught in the rivers, and some animals (for example deer such as pigs, dogs, goats its capital city on several occasions. -
Prehistoric Britain
Prehistoric Britain Plated disc brooch Kent, England Late 6th or early 7th century AD Bronze boars from the Hounslow Hoard 1st century BC-1st century AD Hounslow, Middlesex, England Visit resource for teachers Key Stage 2 Prehistoric Britain Contents Before your visit Background information Resources Gallery information Preliminary activities During your visit Gallery activities: introduction for teachers Gallery activities: briefings for adult helpers Gallery activity: Neolithic mystery objects Gallery activity: Looking good in the Neolithic Gallery activity: Neolithic farmers Gallery activity: Bronze Age pot Gallery activity: Iron Age design Gallery activity: An Iron Age hoard After your visit Follow-up activities Prehistoric Britain Before your visit Prehistoric Britain Before your visit Background information Prehistoric Britain Archaeologists and historians use the term ‘Prehistory’ to refer to a time in a people’s history before they used a written language. In Britain the term Prehistory refers to the period before Britain became part of the Roman empire in AD 43. The prehistoric period in Britain lasted for hundreds of thousands of years and this long period of time is usually divided into: Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic (sometimes these three periods are combined and called the Stone Age), Bronze Age and Iron Age. Each of these periods might also be sub-divided into early, middle and late. The Palaeolithic is often divided into lower, middle and upper. Early Britain British Isles: Humans probably first arrived in Britain around 800,000 BC. These early inhabitants had to cope with extreme environmental changes and they left Britain at least seven times when conditions became too bad. -
The Relationship Between the Shang and the Ethnic Groups on the Northern Frontiers As Reflected in the Northern-Style Bronzes Unearthed in Yinxu Site
Chinese Archaeology 14 (2014): 155-169 © 2014F. Zhu: by Walter The relationship de Gruyter, between Inc. · Boston the Shang · Berlin. and DOI the 10.1515/char-2014-0017 ethnic groups on the Northern Frontiers 155 The relationship between the Shang and the ethnic groups on the Northern Frontiers as reflected in the northern-style bronzes unearthed in Yinxu Site and they are usually rather complete in composition, most * Fenghan Zhu of them consisting of the four parts of preface (qianci 前 辞 ), charge (mingci 命辞 ), prognostication (zhanci 占 * Center for Research on Ancient Chinese History, Peking 辞 ) and verification (yanci 验辞 ). This kind of oracle University, Beijing 100871. bone inscriptions belongs to the Bin group (binzu 宾组 ) Email: zhufenghanbd@126. com. and thus dates to the middle of the reign of King Wu Ding (1250–1192 BCE). Abstract In a first step, I am choosing 11 oracle bone inscriptions from Yinxu whose dates are undisputed (Figure 1). They Through an analysis of oracle bone inscriptions relating all describe events taking place between guiwei ( 癸 to attacks on the northern and western borders of the 未 , i.e., the 20th) and jisi ( 己巳 , i.e., the 6th day of the Shang Kingdom by various ethnic groups living in the sexagenary cycle), a period comprising 47 days and thus Northern Frontier Zone, this paper suggests that the stretching over two months. These two months during members of northern chiefdoms such as the Qiong Fang, which the prognostications were performed comprise the Tu Fang, or Fang Fang mainly lived in the mountainous fifth and the sixth months. -
Booklet & Abstracts
THE PREHISTORIC SOCIETY Since 1935 The Prehistoric Society Europa Conference 2021 People and Society in Late Prehistoric Europe 18–19 June 2021 A virtual conference celebrating the achievements of Prof Colin Haselgrove, University of Leicester, in the field of European prehistory Timetable and Abstract Booklet Aerial view of Burrough Hill hillfort, showing excavations in 2013. A hoard was found in the far corner of the site (produced by Aerial Cam) © UoL. Timetable at-a-glance Friday 18 June 2021 09:45 Conference opens online 10:00–10:15 Welcome and introduction: Prof Clive Gamble 10:15–10:35 The Iron Age hoards from Snettisham in context, Dr Julia Farley, British Museum & Dr Jody Joy, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge 10:35–10:55 Ethnogenesis in Late Iron Age Britain: The case of the Silures, Dr Oliver Davis, Cardiff University 10:55–11:15 The origins of British oppida: Understanding transformation in Iron Age practice & society, Dr Nicky Garland, Durham University 11:15–11:30 Questions and discussion 11:30–11:50 Break 11:50–12:10 Facial recognition in Early Celtic Art: Perspectives from neuro-atypical experiences, Dr Tanja Romankiewicz, University of Edinburgh 12:10–12:30 From meanings to effects: A multi-scalar approach to anthropomorphic imagery in Middle–Late Iron Age Europe and beyond, Dr Helen Chittock, AOC Archaeology Group 12:30–12:50 Aspects of design in Iron Age and early Roman Europe, Christina Unwin, Durham University 12:50–13:05 Questions and discussion 13:05–14:05 Lunch break 14:05–14:25 Who