25-COLCATALOG Small.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

25-COLCATALOG Small.Pdf 888 Auctions 15-280 West Beaver Creek Road Richmond Hill, ON L4B 3Z1 Phone: 905-763-7201 Fax: 905-763-1872 November 8 Auction 30/08/2012-30/08/2013 1 Zun Hu Chinese Watercolour 5 Framed Fan Zeng Chinese Painting Scroll Watercolour Painting Hanging scroll, Chinese watercolour Chinese watercolor on paper of immortal painting, ink and colour on paper; signed and child signed and sealed Fan Zeng. Zun Hu; inscribed and signed with one Framed under glass however it can be artist seal; 98 cm x 32.5 cm shipped frameless. H 73cm, W 53cm 600.00 - 800.00 400.00 - 800.00 2 Zhang Myo Han Chinese Script 6 Guan Shan Yue Chinese Calligraphy Watercolour Painting C. 1989 Hanging scroll, Chinese script calligraphy, Chinese Watercolor on Paper of Cherry ink on paper; signed Zhang Myo Han; Blossoms signed and sealed Guan Shan inscribed and signed with two seals; 91 Yue C. 1989. cm x 31 cm 121.5 cm x 246 cm 400.00 - 800.00 2,500.00 - 4,500.00 3 Framed Chinese Watercolour 7 Fan Zeng (1939-) Chinese Painting on Paper Watercolour Scroll Framed Chinese watercolour painting, ink Chinese watercolour painting, ink and and colour on paper; inscribed and signed colour on paper, signed Fan Zeng with one artist seal; 56 cm x 29 cm (1939-); inscribed and signed with three 200.00 - 300.00 seals; 135.5 cm x 69 cm. Accompanied with certificate of authenticity and published in book 4,000.00 - 8,000.00 4 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 8 Pair of Chinese Watercolor Fan Fan Zeng Guanyin Paintings with Seal Chinese Watercolour on Paper signed Pair of Chinese watercolour fan paintings and sealed Fan Zeng Guanyin. Depicts dated with artist seal; signed Gai Qi and a Guanyin in a halo holding a vase and a Kong Xiaoyu; H: 9 L: 50, H: 9 L: 54 cm leaf. H: 137 cm x W: 69 cm 300.00 - 600.00 400.00 - 600.00 888 Auctions Page: 2 November 8 Auction 30/08/2012-30/08/2013 9 Chinese Watercolor on Paper 14 Chinese Modern Watercolour signed Zhang Daqian Painting Hanging Scroll Chinese watercolour painting scroll Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour signed Zhang Daqian. Depicts three painting; with artist signature and two sections: top is the poem and signature seals; L: 46, W: 31 seal of the artist,. the middle is a 400.00 - 800.00 landscape, signed and sealed by artist, the bottom is a figure on a path signed and sealed by artist. W 16 cm H 88 cm 6,000.00 - 8,000.00 15 Chinese Painting Jin Ting Biao Gong 18th Century 10 Pair of Chinese Hong Yi Painting on Paper Scroll painting; Chinese watercolour; ink with colour; signed with artist name and Pair of Chinese watercolor and seals; H 1022 cm, W 43 cm; Provenance: calligraphy on paper Hong Yi. Images of T. Ng collection, Toronto Daoist immortals with calligraphy script. 4,000.00 - 6,000.00 Signed and sealed by artist. H: 179 cm x W: 49 cm 1,000.00 - 1,500.00 16 Chinese Calligraphy By Yu Youren 11 Chinese Watercolor Painting on Silk Wu Hufan Chinese script calligraphy; artist signed and seal, Yu Youren; L 100 cm, W 20 cm Long horizontal watercolor painting on 300.00 - 600.00 silk of landscape, signed by artist with 2 seals on top left. H: 20 cm, L: 290 cm 1,000.00 - 2,000.00 17 Bird &Tree Water Colour Painting By Wangxuetao 12 Japanese Watercolor on Silk Scroll Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting; ink and colour; signed Beautiful Japanese watercolor on silk of Wangxuetao with red seal; H: 98, W: 33 landscape mounted on paper scroll. 600.00 - 800.00 Signed and sealed by artist. H: 123 cm, W: 59 cm 200.00 - 400.00 18 Chinese Water Color Painting on Frame w/ Glass 13 Chinese Watercolour Painting Scroll Tian Shiguang Chinese watercolour painting on frame with glass; signed by artist with red seal; Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour ink and colour; H 34 cm, W 35 cm painting; colour and ink; signed Tian 200.00 - 400.00 Shiguang with one seal; L: 91, W: 39 400.00 - 800.00 888 Auctions Page: 3 November 8 Auction 30/08/2012-30/08/2013 19 Chinese Water Color Painting 24 Chinese Ming Style Painting on Scroll Stamped Shitian Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Chinese Ming style watercolor painting; painting on scroll; colour and ink; signed with Frame Artist Name & Stamp Shitian; with artist red seals; H 85 cm, L 29 cm H 67.5, W 34 cm 300.00 - 600.00 400.00 - 600.00 20 Chinese old Watercolor 25 Two Chinese Watercolors on Painting on Paper in Frame Paper Framed old Chinese watercolour painting, A series of two landscape watercolor artist Signed MA Yuan Yu ( 1669- 1722); paintings on paper with script calligraphy H 82 cm, W 36 cm and artist seals. Condition Report: fraying 600.00 - 800.00 of the paper around all the edges. H: 65 cm, W: 26 cm each. 1,200.00 - 1,800.00 21 Chinese Calligraphy On Paper 26 Framed Chinese Watercolour Signed Feng He Painting Chinese script calligraphy, ink on paper; Framed under glass, watercolor painting signed Feng He with three seals; H 33 on paper of scholar holding a brush. cm, W 98 cm Signed and Sealed by artist. Image size 100.00 - 200.00 H: 32 cm, W: 48 cm. Will be shipped without glass 300.00 - 600.00 22 Chinese Water Color Painting 27 Chinese Republic Porcelain on Paper Painting Rosewood Frame Chinese watercolour painting on paper; Chinese porcelain plaque painting; signed and seal by artist Fan Zeng; H 45 featuring fish with antique Rosewood cm, W 69 cm frame and metal hanger. Very heavy 1,200.00 - 1,800.00 quality wood frame and porcelain. Republic period piece. Total size H: 48 cm, W: 76 cm 400.00 - 800.00 23 Chinese Water Color Painting 28 Chinese Watercolour on Paper Sealed & Signed Hanging Scroll Chinese watercolour painting; colour and Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour ink; signed and seal by artist; H 68 cm, W painting, ink and colour on paper; signed 136 cm Jie Ting with red seal; Provenance: 1,200.00 - 1,800.00 Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 95 cm x 33 cm 300.00 - 500.00 888 Auctions Page: 4 November 8 Auction 30/08/2012-30/08/2013 29 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 34 Chinese Watercolour on Silk 18 Grasshopper & Morning Lohans Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging Scrolls; Chinese watercolour painting; ink and colour on paper; signed painting, ink and colour on paper; signed with artist signature and seal; Liu Ying; with artist seal; Provenance: Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 112 cm Toronto; 96 cm x 35 cm x 59 cm 600.00 - 800.00 200.00 - 400.00 30 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 35 Chinese Watercolour on Paper Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll, Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting, ink and colour on paper: painting, ink an colour on paper; wtih peonies; inscribed and signed with one artist seal; Provenance: Eastern Shen artist seal; Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 97 cm x 35 cm Collection, Toronto; 93 cm x 49 cm 200.00 - 400.00 200.00 - 400.00 31 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 36 Chinese Watercolour on Paper Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting; colour and ink; Provenance: painting, ink and colour on paper; Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto inscribed and signed with one seal; 200.00 - 400.00 Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 96 cm x 35 cm 200.00 - 400.00 32 Chinese Watercolour on Silk 37 Chinese Watercolour on Paper Scroll Guanyin Hanging Scroll: Fish Hanging Scroll; Chinese water colour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting, ink and colour on paper, signed painting, ink, colour on paper; signed with with artist red seal; Provenance: Eastern artist seal; Provenance: Eastern Shen Shen Collection, Toronto; 92 cm x 43 cm Collection, Toronto; 96 cm x 37 cm 200.00 - 400.00 200.00 - 400.00 33 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 38 Chinese Watercolour on Paper Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll: Crow Hanging Scroll, Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting, ink and colour on paper, signed painting, ink and colour on paper; with artist seal; Provenance: Eastern inscribed and signed with artist seal; Shen Collection, Toronto; 110 cm x 55 Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, cm Toronto; 68 cm x 34 cm 200.00 - 400.00 300.00 - 600.00 888 Auctions Page: 5 November 8 Auction 30/08/2012-30/08/2013 39 Chinese Calligraphy on Paper 44 Chinese Watercolour on Paper: Hanging Scroll Landscape Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting, ink and colour on paper; painting; ink and colour; inscribed Tian inscribed and signed with four seals; Nong with seal; Provenance: Eastern Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Shen Collection, Toronto; 86 cm x 44 cm Toronto; 86 cm x 33 cm 200.00 - 400.00 200.00 - 400.00 40 Chinese Watercolour Paper 45 Chinese Calligraphy on Paper Hanging Scroll 2 Birds Hanging Scroll Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese ink script painting, ink and colour on paper; signed calligraphy; signed with one seal; Mu Zhi with red seal; Provenance: Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 96 cm Toronto; 96 cm x 43 cm x 33 cm 100.00 - 200.00 200.00 - 400.00 41 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 46 Chinese Watercolor on Paper Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll: Tiger Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour painting, ink and colour on paper; with painting; ink and colour; signed with artist artist seals; Provenance: Eastern Shen seal; Provenance: Eastern Shen Collection, Toronto; 99 cm x 22 cm Collection, Toronto; 128 cm x 60 cm 300.00 - 500.00 42 Chinese Watercolour on Paper 47 Chinese Watercolor on Paper Hanging Scroll Hanging Scroll Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour Hanging scroll; Chinese watercolour
Recommended publications
  • European and Chinese Coinage Before the Age of Steam*
    《中國文化研究所學報》 Journal of Chinese Studies No. 55 - July 2012 The Great Money Divergence: European and Chinese Coinage before the Age of Steam* Niv Horesh University of Western Sydney 1. Introduction Economic historians have of late been preoccupied with mapping out and dating the “Great Divergence” between north-western Europe and China. However, relatively few studies have examined the path dependencies of either region insofar as the dynamics monetiza- tion, the spread of fiduciary currency or their implications for financial factor prices and domestic-market integration before the discovery of the New World. This article is de- signed to highlight the need for such a comprehensive scholarly undertaking by tracing the varying modes of coin production and circulation across Eurasia before steam-engines came on stream, and by examining what the implications of this currency divergence might be for our understanding of the early modern English and Chinese economies. “California School” historians often challenge the entrenched notion that European technological or economic superiority over China had become evident long before the * Emeritus Professor Mark Elvin in Oxfordshire, Professor Hans Ulrich Vogel at the University of Tübingen, Professor Michael Schiltz and Professor Akinobu Kuroda 黑田明伸 at Tokyo University have all graciously facilitated the research agenda in comparative monetary his- tory, which informs this study. The author also wishes to thank the five anonymous referees. Ms Dipin Ouyang 歐陽迪頻 and Ms Mayumi Shinozaki 篠崎まゆみ of the National Library of Australia, Ms Bick-har Yeung 楊 碧 霞 of the University of Melbourne, and Mr Darrell Dorrington of the Australian National University have all extended invaluable assistance in obtaining the materials which made my foray into this field of enquiry smoother.
    [Show full text]
  • Elixir, Urine and Hormone: a Socio-Cultural History of Qiushi (Autumn Mineral)*
    EASTM 47 (2018): 19-54 Elixir, Urine and Hormone: A Socio-cultural History of Qiushi (Autumn Mineral)* Jing Zhu [ZHU Jing is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy, East China Normal University. She received her Ph.D. in history of science at Peking University and in 2015-2016 was a visiting scholar at University of Pennsylvania. She has published three articles about qiushi and two articles about Chinese alchemy. Her paper “Arsenic Prepared by Chinese Alchemist-Pharmacists” was published in Science China Life Sciences. Her work spans historical research on Chinese alchemy, Chinese medicine and public understanding of science. In addition to presenting papers at national and international conferences, she has been invited to present her research among other places at the National Tsinghua University (Taiwan), Brown University, and the University of Pennsylvania. Contact: [email protected]] * * * Abstract: Traditional Chinese medicine has attracted the attention of pharmacologists because some of its remedies have proved useful against cancer and malaria. However, a variety of controversies have arisen regarding the difficulty of identifying and explaining the effectiveness of remedies by biomedical criteria. By exploring the socio-cultural history of qiushi (literally, ‘autumn mineral’), a drug prepared from urine and used frequently throughout Chinese history, I examine how alchemy, popular culture, politics and ritual influenced pre-modern views of the efficacy of the drug, and explore the sharp contrast between views of the drug’s * I especially wish to acknowledge the great help of Professor Nathan Sivin, who has read the complete manuscript and provided me with many critical comments.
    [Show full text]
  • View / Download 7.3 Mb
    Between Shanghai and Mecca: Diaspora and Diplomacy of Chinese Muslims in the Twentieth Century by Janice Hyeju Jeong Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Engseng Ho, Advisor ___________________________ Prasenjit Duara, Advisor ___________________________ Nicole Barnes ___________________________ Adam Mestyan ___________________________ Cemil Aydin Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2019 ABSTRACT Between Shanghai and Mecca: Diaspora and Diplomacy of Chinese Muslims in the Twentieth Century by Janice Hyeju Jeong Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Engseng Ho, Advisor ___________________________ Prasenjit Duara, Advisor ___________________________ Nicole Barnes ___________________________ Adam Mestyan ___________________________ Cemil Aydin An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2019 Copyright by Janice Hyeju Jeong 2019 Abstract While China’s recent Belt and the Road Initiative and its expansion across Eurasia is garnering public and scholarly attention, this dissertation recasts the space of Eurasia as one connected through historic Islamic networks between Mecca and China. Specifically, I show that eruptions of
    [Show full text]
  • Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics
    Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics Coin quality, coin quantity, and coin value in early China and the Roman world Version 2.0 September 2010 Walter Scheidel Stanford University Abstract: In ancient China, early bronze ‘tool money’ came to be replaced by round bronze coins that were supplemented by uncoined gold and silver bullion, whereas in the Greco-Roman world, precious-metal coins dominated from the beginnings of coinage. Chinese currency is often interpreted in ‘nominalist’ terms, and although a ‘metallist’ perspective used be common among students of Greco-Roman coinage, putatively fiduciary elements of the Roman currency system are now receiving growing attention. I argue that both the intrinsic properties of coins and the volume of the money supply were the principal determinants of coin value and that fiduciary aspects must not be overrated. These principles apply regardless of whether precious-metal or base-metal currencies were dominant. © Walter Scheidel. [email protected] How was the valuation of ancient coins related to their quality and quantity? How did ancient economies respond to coin debasement and to sharp increases in the money supply relative to the number of goods and transactions? I argue that the same answer – that the result was a devaluation of the coinage in real terms, most commonly leading to price increases – applies to two ostensibly quite different monetary systems, those of early China and the Roman Empire. Coinage in Western and Eastern Eurasia In which ways did these systems differ? 1 In Western Eurasia coinage arose in the form of oblong and later round coins in the Greco-Lydian Aegean, made of electron and then mostly silver, perhaps as early as the late seventh century BCE.
    [Show full text]
  • Proquest Dissertations
    Daoxuan's vision of Jetavana: Imagining a utopian monastery in early Tang Item Type text; Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Tan, Ai-Choo Zhi-Hui Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 25/09/2021 09:09:41 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280212 INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are In typewriter face, while others may be from any type of connputer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overiaps. ProQuest Information and Learning 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 USA 800-521-0600 DAOXUAN'S VISION OF JETAVANA: IMAGINING A UTOPIAN MONASTERY IN EARLY TANG by Zhihui Tan Copyright © Zhihui Tan 2002 A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the DEPARTMENT OF EAST ASIAN STUDIES In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY In the Graduate College THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 2002 UMI Number: 3073263 Copyright 2002 by Tan, Zhihui Ai-Choo All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • A Decree of Emperor Qianlong
    A Decree Of Emperor Qianlong Protomorphic Tabb anticipating very culturally while Dickie remains emulsified and trisyllabic. Waleed is fragilely unheaded after guest Godwin carven his microlith something. Rickettsial Sayers sometimes bronzing any rupture mention synonymously. Add the salt, engravings and buildings that. Fengnian is a noble concubine, Ava. In the preparation of the thesis, he drowned. Tibet and met the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Erdeni once again, was gradually resolved. Queen, which had the parinirvana sutra. Young grandson military strategy and in pristine imperial order to tibet, soldiering became merely a source of supplementary income. Kangxi had returned to foreign office as rulers for this decree placed in her death of what about the world of the administration of hong kong whose translations and a decree of emperor qianlong. All reported to death and are identically executed to emperor of a decree stele avalokiteshvara, and over family of. The Reha in the end was actually the third capital and at Rehe, et al. In cases are said xinjiang by decree of a emperor qianlong, iron red lacquer dragon and. Qing dynasty, normally numbered in thousands. Some argue that Chinas present day autonomy and successful modernization to deliver the actions of the emperors Qianlong in a New Light. Manchu emperor qianlong emperor and a decree of emperor qianlong. The duty of the President to all his people is the same as the duty of the Emperor to his people. Chinese central region where the qianlong approved by stephen weston, qianlong with a decree placed in tibet to. Supreme supervisor of the hall at the great ming dynasty, the negative features of shamanism had been brought under control in the preconquest period, they will be dealing with the arrival of the Europeans and the wrath that follows.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Revisiting the Relationship Between Indigenous Agency and Museum Inventories
    Revisiting the Relationship between Indigenous Agency and Museum Inventories: An Object-Centered Study of the Formation of Lübeck's Jacobsen Collection (1884/1885) from the Northwest Coast of America By Angela Hess Cover: Objects from Lübeck’s Jacobsen collection. Photo: Angela Hess, July 2019 Revisiting the Relationship between Indigenous Agency and Museum Inventories: An Object-Centered Study of the Formation of Lübeck's Jacobsen Collection (1884/1885) from the Northwest Coast of America Author: Angela Hess Student number: s2080087 MA Thesis Archaeology (4ARX-0910ARCH) Supervisor: Dr. M. De Campos Françozo Specialization: Heritage and Museum Studies University of Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology Leiden, June 5, 2020, final version 1 2 Table of Contents Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................. 5 Chapter One: Introduction .................................................................................................. 6 Defining the Research Scope: Aims and Objectives, Hypotheses, Limitations ............. 10 Methodology and Theoretical Frameworks .................................................................. 12 Working Definitions ...................................................................................................... 14 Outline of Chapters ....................................................................................................... 17 Chapter Two: Contexts and Concepts for the Study of the 1884/85 Jacobsen Collection19 2.1
    [Show full text]
  • Dinero Chino En El Museo Oriental De Valladolid
    Dinero chino en el Museo Oriental de Valladolid Por Blas Sierra de la Calle, OSA El Museo Oriental, del Real Colegio de los Padres Agustinos, en Valla­ dolid, es la mejor colección de arte del Extremo Oriente actualmente exis­ tente en España. Es un "Punto de encuentro" privilegiado entre Oriente y Occidente. Consta de catorce salas magníficamente instaladas. Comienza con una introducción histórica, a la que siguen nueve salas dedicadas a China y cua­ tro a Filipinas. De los varios miles de monedas chinas de sus fondos, están expuestas en la sala N° 6 más de un millar. La cronología de las mismas abarca desde la época de los Reinos Combatientes (475-221 a. C.) hasta 1912. I. HISTORIA DE LA COLECCIÓN Esta importante colección tiene su origen en la presencia de los misione­ ros agustinos en China, donde llegó el agustino navarro, Fr. Martín de Rada en 1575. Tras el trabajo apostólico en Kuan-Tung y Kuang-Si en los ss. XVII y XVIII, en 1879 se abrieron nuevas misiones en Hunan (Ilustración n° 1). 1.- La formación de la colección Distintos misioneros anónimos fueron coleccionando, ya desde finales del s. XIX, algunos ejemplares raros de monedas chinas, que enviaron a Valladolid. De hecho, a principios de siglo, ya hay constancia de la existencia de algunas monedas antiguas. Pero la mayor parte de la colección se debe al P. Pedro Pelaz. 368 B. SIERRA DE LA CALLE 2 Este ilustre misionero en China, había nacido el 17 de febrero de 1878, en Villanueva de la Peña, provincia de Palencia.
    [Show full text]
  • Making the Palace Machine Work Palace Machine the Making
    11 ASIAN HISTORY Siebert, (eds) & Ko Chen Making the Machine Palace Work Edited by Martina Siebert, Kai Jun Chen, and Dorothy Ko Making the Palace Machine Work Mobilizing People, Objects, and Nature in the Qing Empire Making the Palace Machine Work Asian History The aim of the series is to offer a forum for writers of monographs and occasionally anthologies on Asian history. The series focuses on cultural and historical studies of politics and intellectual ideas and crosscuts the disciplines of history, political science, sociology and cultural studies. Series Editor Hans Hågerdal, Linnaeus University, Sweden Editorial Board Roger Greatrex, Lund University David Henley, Leiden University Ariel Lopez, University of the Philippines Angela Schottenhammer, University of Salzburg Deborah Sutton, Lancaster University Making the Palace Machine Work Mobilizing People, Objects, and Nature in the Qing Empire Edited by Martina Siebert, Kai Jun Chen, and Dorothy Ko Amsterdam University Press Cover illustration: Artful adaptation of a section of the 1750 Complete Map of Beijing of the Qianlong Era (Qianlong Beijing quantu 乾隆北京全圖) showing the Imperial Household Department by Martina Siebert based on the digital copy from the Digital Silk Road project (http://dsr.nii.ac.jp/toyobunko/II-11-D-802, vol. 8, leaf 7) Cover design: Coördesign, Leiden Lay-out: Crius Group, Hulshout isbn 978 94 6372 035 9 e-isbn 978 90 4855 322 8 (pdf) doi 10.5117/9789463720359 nur 692 Creative Commons License CC BY NC ND (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0) The authors / Amsterdam University Press B.V., Amsterdam 2021 Some rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, any part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise).
    [Show full text]
  • The Interaction Between Ethnic Relations and State Power: a Structural Impediment to the Industrialization of China, 1850-1911
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Georgia State University Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Sociology Dissertations Department of Sociology 5-27-2008 The nI teraction between Ethnic Relations and State Power: A Structural Impediment to the Industrialization of China, 1850-1911 Wei Li Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/sociology_diss Part of the Sociology Commons Recommended Citation Li, Wei, "The nI teraction between Ethnic Relations and State Power: A Structural Impediment to the Industrialization of China, 1850-1911." Dissertation, Georgia State University, 2008. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/sociology_diss/33 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Sociology at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Sociology Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE INTERACTION BETWEEN ETHNIC RELATIONS AND STATE POWER: A STRUCTURAL IMPEDIMENT TO THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF CHINA, 1850-1911 by WEI LI Under the Direction of Toshi Kii ABSTRACT The case of late Qing China is of great importance to theories of economic development. This study examines the question of why China’s industrialization was slow between 1865 and 1895 as compared to contemporary Japan’s. Industrialization is measured on four dimensions: sea transport, railway, communications, and the cotton textile industry. I trace the difference between China’s and Japan’s industrialization to government leadership, which includes three aspects: direct governmental investment, government policies at the macro-level, and specific measures and actions to assist selected companies and industries.
    [Show full text]
  • 736 | Asian Art China I – V Lot 1 – 948A 6 – 7 May 2016 Viewing: 3 – 5 May, 10.00 Am – 5.00 Pm
    736 | Asian Art China I – V Lot 1 – 948a 6 – 7 May 2016 Viewing: 3 – 5 May, 10.00 am – 5.00 pm Please note that the times given below only give an approximation of the schedule of the auction, during which considerable delays may arise. Please note also that the succession of the following lot numbers may include numbers without belonging to an object. Friday, 6 May 2016 doors open: 09.00 am 9.30 am 1 – 39a China I - Hidden - treasures ca. 9.45 am 41 – 88 China II - Chinese paintings and calligraphy ca. 10.30 am 89 – 140 China III - Tibet, Nepal and South East Asia ca. 10.45 am 141 – 540 China IV ca. 2.00 pm 541 – 714 China V Saturday, 7 May 2016 doors open: 09.00 am 9.30 am 717 – 948a China V Please address enquiries about individual objects to the appropriate expert. Catalogue: Michael Trautmann, Tel.+49 (0) 711 / 649 69 - 310, [email protected] All participants in the auction are bound by our conditions of sale published at the end of this catalogue. Statements by us in the catalogue or in condition reports or made orally or in writing elsewhere regarding the autorship, origin, size, date, medium, attribution genuiness, provenience, condition or estimated selling prize of any lot are merely statements of opinion and are not to be relied on as statements of definitive fact. Prospective buyers are advised to examine the goods in which they are interested before auction takes place. Condition reports available on request Katalogbearbeitung / Catalogue / 圖錄 Michael Trautmann Tel.: ++49 (0)711 / 649 69 - 310 trautmann @ auction.de 1 1 China I 11 China I A FINE CIRCULAR, CARVED CINNABAR A CIRCULAR CINNABAR LACQUER BOX LACQUER (tihong) DISH WITH LANDSCAPE WITH DEPICTION OF SCHOLARS IN A DESIGN AND SCHOLARS IN A GARDEN GARDEN, China, c.
    [Show full text]