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The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2012 Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier Wai Kit Wicky Tse University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Asian History Commons, Asian Studies Commons, and the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Tse, Wai Kit Wicky, "Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier" (2012). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 589. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/589 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/589 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25-220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier Abstract As a frontier region of the Qin-Han (221BCE-220CE) empire, the northwest was a new territory to the Chinese realm. Until the Later Han (25-220CE) times, some portions of the northwestern region had only been part of imperial soil for one hundred years. Its coalescence into the Chinese empire was a product of long-term expansion and conquest, which arguably defined the egionr 's military nature. Furthermore, in the harsh natural environment of the region, only tough people could survive, and unsurprisingly, the region fostered vigorous warriors. Mixed culture and multi-ethnicity featured prominently in this highly militarized frontier society, which contrasted sharply with the imperial center that promoted unified cultural values and stood in the way of a greater degree of transregional integration. As this project shows, it was the northwesterners who went through a process of political peripheralization during the Later Han times played a harbinger role of the disintegration of the empire and eventually led to the breakdown of the early imperial system in Chinese history. -
Shuai Yan (June 2021)
Shuai Yan (June 2021) Department of Marketing Cell phone: 515-715-3001 Ivy College of Business, Iowa State University E-mail: [email protected] 3122 Gerdin Business Building www.business.iastate.edu/directory/shuaiyan/ Ames, IA 50011-2027 Zoom/Webex: [email protected] EDUCATION Iowa State University, Debbie and Jerry Ivy College of Business, Ames, IA Ph.D., Marketing, expected May 2022 2017-Present Committee: Ju-Yeon Lee (Chair), Stephen Kim, Hui Feng, Wei Zhang, and Chenxin Cao Dissertation: “Performance Implications of Business-to-Government Relationships and Political Marketing Strategies” (Status: Proposal Defended) Minor: Statistics Quinnipiac University, Lender School of Business, Hamden, CT Master of Business Administration 2013-2014 Tianjin Foreign Studies University, Tianjin, China M.A., Business English 2012-2015 Tianjin University of Science and Technology, Tianjin, China B.A., Business English 2008-2012 RESEARCH Research Interests • Substantive: Role of business-to-government (B2G) relationships and political marketing strategies in achieving marketing and financial outcomes; additional interest in the sharing economy firm’s marketing strategy • Methodological: Empirical modeling using econometrics and event study Forthcoming and Under Review 1. Yan, Shuai, Ju-Yeon Lee, and Brett W. Josephson, “How Configurations of Customer and Product Growth Strategies Affect Acquisition Performance: Insights from Business-to-Government Markets,” (Dissertation Essay 1, revise and resubmit to Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science). Abstract: In business-to-government (B2G) markets, many firms rely on mergers and acquisitions (M&As) to fuel growth. As part of growth strategy, an acquirer might buy a target with assets that overlap with its existing assets, to penetrate the market further, or it could seek a target with assets that would expand its scope. -
The Ideology and Significance of the Legalists School and the School Of
Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research, volume 351 4th International Conference on Modern Management, Education Technology and Social Science (MMETSS 2019) The Ideology and Significance of the Legalists School and the School of Diplomacy in the Warring States Period Chen Xirui The Affiliated High School to Hangzhou Normal University [email protected] Keywords: Warring States Period; Legalists; Strategists; Modern Economic and Political Activities Abstract: In the Warring States Period, the legalist theory was popular, and the style of reforming the country was permeated in the land of China. The Seven Warring States known as Qin, Qi, Chu, Yan, Han, Wei and Zhao have successively changed their laws and set the foundation for the country. The national strength hovers between the valley and school’s doctrines have accelerated the historical process of the Great Unification. The legalists laid a political foundation for the big country, constructed a power framework and formulated a complete policy. On the rule of law, the strategist further opened the gap between the powers of the country. In other words, the rule of law has created conditions for the cross-border family to seek the country and the activity of the latter has intensified the pursuit of the former. This has sparked the civilization to have a depth and breadth thinking of that period, where the need of ideology and research are crucial and necessary. This article will specifically address the background of the legalists, the background of these two generations, their historical facts and major achievements as well as the research into the practical theory that was studies during that period. -
The Practice of Yan Shigu's Admonishment in Han
2018 International Conference on Education, Psychology, and Management Science (ICEPMS 2018) The Practice of Yan Shigu’s Admonishment in Han Shu Xiuli Wang Sichuan Agricultural University, Ya’an, Sichuan, 625014 Keywords: Yan Shigu, Han Shu Note, text, interpretation Abstract: "Han Shu" Yan Shigu Note is devoted to the deduction of the text, the original sound, and the original meaning. By explaining the construction of the word, correcting the shape of the font, and correcting the source of the font, the "Han" ancient characters are used; anti-cutting, rhyming, reading and a certain dialect, dialects and other phonetic readings, etc., mark difficult words; it adopts synonymous training, correcting by sound, evidence, interpretation of meaning, description of appearance, establishment of definition, comparing the original meaning, the extension meaning and the false meaning of the words in the form of comparisons, and reinterpreting the explanations of grammar, rhetoric and historical facts, and accomplishing the great works of the annotations of Han Shu. The training methods are flexible and diverse, and the content of the instructions is appropriate. There is not only the inheritance of the traditional methods of training, but also a flexible explanation on this basis, and a breakthrough. 1. Introduction Yan Shigu was a famous language linguist in the early Tang Dynasty of China. His family studies are profound, his history is coherent, and his primary school is profound. His "Han Shu Zhu" is a must-read for the study of the textual exegesis of scholars. In the "Han Shu Zhu", Yan Shigu clarified the fallacy, standardized the text, marked the meaning of the sound, clarified the grammar, supplemented the historical facts, and had an important influence and great contribution to the unified regulation of the language and writing of the Tang dynasty and the inheritance of culture and education. -
Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950
Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950 Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access China Studies published for the institute for chinese studies, university of oxford Edited by Micah Muscolino (University of Oxford) volume 39 The titles published in this series are listed at brill.com/chs Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access Daily Life for the Common People of China, 1850 to 1950 Understanding Chaoben Culture By Ronald Suleski leiden | boston Ronald Suleski - 978-90-04-36103-4 Downloaded from Brill.com04/05/2019 09:12:12AM via free access This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the prevailing cc-by-nc License at the time of publication, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited. An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of libraries working with Knowledge Unlatched. More information about the initiative can be found at www.knowledgeunlatched.org. Cover Image: Chaoben Covers. Photo by author. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Suleski, Ronald Stanley, author. Title: Daily life for the common people of China, 1850 to 1950 : understanding Chaoben culture / By Ronald Suleski. -
JIN Yan Ph.D., Professor, Changjiang Distinguished Professor Education Research Areas and Interests Teaching Professional Experi
JIN Yan Ph.D., Professor, Changjiang Distinguished Professor Email: [email protected] TEL: +86-10-89733799 Address of Office: Room 913, Zhongyou Building, College of Petroleum Engineering, 18 Fuxue Road, Changping District, Beijing 102249, China Education Ph.D., Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-Beijing (China), 2001 M.S., Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-East China (China), 1998 B.S., Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-East China (China), 1994 Research Areas and Interests Drilling and Completion Petroleum Related Rock Mechanics Wellbore Stability and Integrity Hydraulic Fracturing Simulation and Optimization Teaching Drilling Engineering; Computational Solid Mechanics; Case Analysis in Drilling and Completion; Rock Mechanics in Petroleum Engineering Professional Experiences 2008-present, Professor, College of Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-Beijing, China 2003-2008, Associate professor, College of Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-Beijing, China 2001-2003, Assistant professor, College of Petroleum Engineering, China University of Petroleum-Beijing, China Other Appointments Executive Vice Dean, Graduate School of China University of Petroleum-Beijing, China Director, Professional Committee of Deep Rock mechanics, Chinese Society for Rock Mechanics and Engineering, China Board member, Underground Engineering Institution, Chinese Society for Rock Mechanics and Engineering, China Other Professional Affiliations Member, Society of Petroleum Engineers -
Yang Obeys, but the Yin Ignores: Copyright Law and Speech Suppression in the People's Republic of China
UCLA UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal Title The Yang Obeys, but the Yin Ignores: Copyright Law and Speech Suppression in the People's Republic of China Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4j750316 Journal UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal, 29(1) Author McIntyre, Stephen Publication Date 2011 DOI 10.5070/P8291022233 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California THE YANG OBEYS, BUT THE YIN IGNORES: COPYRIGHT LAW AND SPEECH SUPPRESSION IN THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA Stephen McIntyret ABSTRACT Copyright law can either promote or restrict free speech: while copyright preserves economic incentives to create and pub- lish new expression, it also fences off expression from public use. For this reason, the effect of copyright law on speech in a given country depends on the particular manner in which it is under- stood, legislated, and enforced. This Article argues that copyright law in the People's Repub- lic of China (PRC) serves as a tool for speech suppression and censorship. Whereas China has engaged in official censorship for thousands of years, there has historically been little appreciation for proprietary rights in art and literature. Just as China's early twentieth century attempts to recognize copyright overlapped with strict publication controls, the PRC's modern copyright regime embodies the view that copyright is a mechanism for policing speech and media. The decade-long debate that preceded the PRC's first copy- right statute was shaped by misunderstanding,politics, ideology, and historicalforces. Scholars and lawmakers widely advocated that Chinese copyright law discriminate based on media content and carefully circumscribe authors' rights. -
The Warring States Period (453-221)
Indiana University, History G380 – class text readings – Spring 2010 – R. Eno 2.1 THE WARRING STATES PERIOD (453-221) Introduction The Warring States period resembles the Spring and Autumn period in many ways. The multi-state structure of the Chinese cultural sphere continued as before, and most of the major states of the earlier period continued to play key roles. Warfare, as the name of the period implies, continued to be endemic, and the historical chronicles continue to read as a bewildering list of armed conflicts and shifting alliances. In fact, however, the Warring States period was one of dramatic social and political changes. Perhaps the most basic of these changes concerned the ways in which wars were fought. During the Spring and Autumn years, battles were conducted by small groups of chariot-driven patricians. Managing a two-wheeled vehicle over the often uncharted terrain of a battlefield while wielding bow and arrow or sword to deadly effect required years of training, and the number of men who were qualified to lead armies in this way was very limited. Each chariot was accompanied by a group of infantrymen, by rule seventy-two, but usually far fewer, probably closer to ten. Thus a large army in the field, with over a thousand chariots, might consist in total of ten or twenty thousand soldiers. With the population of the major states numbering several millions at this time, such a force could be raised with relative ease by the lords of such states. During the Warring States period, the situation was very different. -
Levi Strauss & Co. Factory List
Levi Strauss & Co. Factory List Published : November 2019 Total Number of LS&Co. Parent Company Name Employees Country Factory name Alternative Name Address City State Product Type (TOE) Initiatives (Licensee factories are (Workers, Staff, (WWB) blank) Contract Staff) Argentina Accecuer SA Juan Zanella 4656 Caseros Accessories <1000 Capital Argentina Best Sox S.A. Charlone 1446 Federal Apparel <1000 Argentina Estex Argentina S.R.L. Superi, 3530 Caba Apparel <1000 Argentina Gitti SRL Italia 4043 Mar del Plata Apparel <1000 Argentina Manufactura Arrecifes S.A. Ruta Nacional 8, Kilometro 178 Arrecifes Apparel <1000 Argentina Procesadora Serviconf SRL Gobernardor Ramon Castro 4765 Vicente Lopez Apparel <1000 Capital Argentina Spring S.R.L. Darwin, 173 Federal Apparel <1000 Asamblea (101) #536, Villa Lynch Argentina TEXINTER S.A. Texinter S.A. B1672AIB, Buenos Aires Buenos Aires <1000 Argentina Underwear M&S, S.R.L Levalle 449 Avellaneda Apparel <1000 Argentina Vira Offis S.A. Virasoro, 3570 Rosario Apparel <1000 Plot # 246-249, Shiddirgonj, Bangladesh Ananta Apparels Ltd. Nazmul Hoque Narayangonj-1431 Narayangonj Apparel 1000-5000 WWB Ananta KASHPARA, NOYABARI, Bangladesh Ananta Denim Technology Ltd. Mr. Zakaria Habib Tanzil KANCHPUR Narayanganj Apparel 1000-5000 WWB Ananta Ayesha Clothing Company Ltd (Ayesha Bangobandhu Road, Tongabari, Clothing Company Ltd,Hamza Trims Ltd, Gazirchat Alia Madrasha, Ashulia, Bangladesh Hamza Clothing Ltd) Ayesha Clothing Company Ltd( Dhaka Dhaka Apparel 1000-5000 Jamgora, Post Office : Gazirchat Ayesha Clothing Company Ltd (Ayesha Ayesha Clothing Company Ltd(Unit-1)d Alia Madrasha, P.S : Savar, Bangladesh Washing Ltd.) (Ayesha Washing Ltd) Dhaka Dhaka Apparel 1000-5000 Khejur Bagan, Bara Ashulia, Bangladesh Cosmopolitan Industries PVT Ltd CIPL Savar Dhaka Apparel 1000-5000 WWB Epic Designers Ltd 1612, South Salna, Salna Bazar, Bangladesh Cutting Edge Industries Ltd. -
The Zhou Dynasty Around 1046 BC, King Wu, the Leader of the Zhou
The Zhou Dynasty Around 1046 BC, King Wu, the leader of the Zhou (Chou), a subject people living in the west of the Chinese kingdom, overthrew the last king of the Shang Dynasty. King Wu died shortly after this victory, but his family, the Ji, would rule China for the next few centuries. Their dynasty is known as the Zhou Dynasty. The Mandate of Heaven After overthrowing the Shang Dynasty, the Zhou propagated a new concept known as the Mandate of Heaven. The Mandate of Heaven became the ideological basis of Zhou rule, and an important part of Chinese political philosophy for many centuries. The Mandate of Heaven explained why the Zhou kings had authority to rule China and why they were justified in deposing the Shang dynasty. The Mandate held that there could only be one legitimate ruler of China at one time, and that such a king reigned with the approval of heaven. A king could, however, loose the approval of heaven, which would result in that king being overthrown. Since the Shang kings had become immoral—because of their excessive drinking, luxuriant living, and cruelty— they had lost heaven’s approval of their rule. Thus the Zhou rebellion, according to the idea, took place with the approval of heaven, because heaven had removed supreme power from the Shang and bestowed it upon the Zhou. Western Zhou After his death, King Wu was succeeded by his son Cheng, but power remained in the hands of a regent, the Duke of Zhou. The Duke of Zhou defeated rebellions and established the Zhou Dynasty firmly in power at their capital of Fenghao on the Wei River (near modern-day Xi’an) in western China. -
WEI, WEI Department of Psychology, the Pennsylvania State University
WEI, WEI Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University Email: [email protected] EDUCATION 2015.8 – present The Pennsylvania State University Doctoral program, Developmental Psychology Advisor: Dr. Dawn Witherspoon 2012.6 – 2015.6 Beijing Normal University, China Master of Education in Developmental and Educational Psychology Advisor: Dr. Liang Luo 2006.9 –2010.6 Sichuan University, China Bachelor of Science in Applied Chemistry AWARDS AND HONORS 2013.9 – 2014.9: First Prize Graduate Scholarship from Beijing Normal University 2013.4 – 2013.5: Excellence Award in Extracurricular Research and Technology from Jingshi Cup 2013.1 – 2013.4: First Prize in Field Research Competition from Beijing Normal University 2012.9 – 2014.1: Second Award for Outstanding Public Contribution from the National Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University 2012.9 – 2014.1: Award for Outstanding Research Contribution from the National Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University 2012.9 – 2013.9: Second Prize Graduate Scholarship from Beijing Normal University PUBLICATIONS PUBLISHED Wei, W., Wu, Y., Lv, B., Zhou, H., Han, X., Liu, Z., & Luo, L. (2016). The Relationship between Parental Involvement and Elementary Students' Academic Achievement in China: One-Only Children vs. Children with Siblings. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 47(4), 483-500 Wei, W., Wu, Y., & Luo, L. (2015) Predictors of parental involvement: family social economic status and parents’ psychological factors. Journal of Beijing Normal University (Social Sciences). (in Chinese). Luo, L., Wu, Y., & Wei, W. (2014). High-quality parental involvement in education. Journal of Beijing Normal University (Social Sciences), 2014, 1(241), 53-60. -
Research of 3D Irregular Fragment Reassembly Technique in Reverse Engineering
International Journal of Research in Engineering and Science (IJRES) ISSN (Online): 2320-9364, ISSN (Print): 2320-9356 www.ijres.org Volume 4 Issue 5 ǁ May. 2016 ǁ PP. 06-10 Research of 3D Irregular Fragment Reassembly Technique in Reverse Engineering NIE Bo-lin, ZHANG Xu, CHE Xuan-lin (School of Mechanical Engineering, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai, 201620) Abstract:- in order to achieve some pieces of important research value of restructuring, this paper aiming at the shortcomings of the current existing algorithm proposed a new spatial 3 d irregular fragments stitching method. First Uses the method to establish point cloud based on kd - tree search space the topology relationship, for k neighborhood search quickly, further realize the boundary extraction of point cloud fragments; Secondly using Nurbs curve interpolation method to deal with boundary feature points, complete boundary fit at the same time the curve interpolation points of curvature and torsion; Finally based on the calculation of curvature and torsion, according to the longest common subsequence complete curve matching, and then complete the point cloud fragments of stitching. Through examples show that the proposed algorithm good robustness, high matching precision. Keywords:- Reverse Engineering ;Curve fitting ;Curve matching ;The Longest Common uence (LCS) ; fragment reassembly I. INTRODUCTION So-called 3 d fragments split is some irregular space debris joining together into a complete model of the initial. In our country, ceramic relics buried in the ground, because of geographical or man-made reasons, the unearthed will be destroyed into large and small pieces. As a result of these pieces of cultural relics still has the very high archaeological value, therefore how to use modern technology to restore these cultural relics has important research significance.