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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: Brand New. 190 pages. 6.85x0.47x9.53 inches. In Stock.
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Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag Dez 2024, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
Librería: BuchWeltWeit Ludwig Meier e.K., Bergisch Gladbach, Alemania
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware -Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was alatifundiuminhabited by 'barbarians,' since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to 'becoming Chinese.' Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions.The volume is the result of a conference on 'Culture and Cultural Diversity in Early Medieval China (4th to 7th Century) held in January 2017 in München. Twenty papers presented during the workshop represent the latest research on the people(s) in Pingcheng written by outstanding scholars in both Chinese and English. 184 pp. Englisch.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag Dez 2024, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
Librería: Rheinberg-Buch Andreas Meier eK, Bergisch Gladbach, Alemania
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware -Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was alatifundiuminhabited by 'barbarians,' since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to 'becoming Chinese.' Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions.The volume is the result of a conference on 'Culture and Cultural Diversity in Early Medieval China (4th to 7th Century) held in January 2017 in München. Twenty papers presented during the workshop represent the latest research on the people(s) in Pingcheng written by outstanding scholars in both Chinese and English. 184 pp. Englisch.
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Añadir al carritoPaperback. Condición: new. Paperback. Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was a latifundium inhabited by "barbarians," since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to "becoming Chinese." Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions. The volume is the result of a conference on "Culture and Cultural Diversity in Early Medieval China (4th to 7th Century) held in January 2017 in Munchen. Twenty papers presented during the workshop represent the latest research on the people(s) in Pingcheng written by outstanding scholars in both Chinese and English. The volume is the result of a conference on "Culture and Cultural Diversity in Early Medieval China (4th to 7th Century) held in January 2017 in Munchen. Twenty papers presented during the workshop represent the latest research on the people(s) in Pingcheng written by outstanding scholars in both Chinese and English. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag Dez 2024, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
Librería: Wegmann1855, Zwiesel, Alemania
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware -Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was alatifundiuminhabited by 'barbarians,' since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to 'becoming Chinese.' Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions.The authors focus on the people(s) in Pingcheng. Zhang's epigraphic study is devoted to a Xianbei family that arose during the Pingcheng period and remained closely intertwined with the imperial court in the following centuries. Using burial finds, Müller explores the diversity and foreignness of funerary customs and artifacts, the ways in which different ethnic groups communicated and interacted, and the emergence of a new collective identity that was anything but Chinese.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag GmbH & Co.KG, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. 2024. paperback. . . . . .
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: new. Hardcover. This book contains eleven articles in English and German which were presented to an international symposium in 2003. The papers discuss various aspects of the early history of the area now called Guangdong. They deal with material and textual evidence collected from Chinese sources. It is shown that Guangdong maintained strong relations with both the North and the maritime world and that, at the same time, it also maintained distinct cultural features of its own.From the table of contents (11 contributions): F. Allard, Linggnan and Chu during the First Millennium B.C.: A Reassessment of the Core-Periphery ModelS. Muller, Graber in Guangdong wahrend der Zhanguo-ZeitM. Loewe, Guangzhou: the Evidence of the Standard Histories from the Shi ji to the Chen shu, a Preliminary SurveyT.O. Hollmann, Ruinen der Zuversicht: Bemerkungen zur Architektur in Guangzhou wahrend der Han-Dynastie (206 v. Chr. bis 220 n. Chr.)A. Kieser, "Nur Guangzhou ist ruhig und friedlich" Grabkult und Migration wahrend der Sechs Dynastien im heutigen GuangdongG. Wade, Lady Sinn and the Southward Expansion of China in the Sixth CenturyC. Schulten, Tang-zeitliche Grabkultur im Gebiet der heutigen Provinz Guangdong Papers from an international conference held at the Institute of Sinology, Munich University in March 2003. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Peoples of Pingcheng (398-494): | Cultural Diversity and Interaction | Thomas O. Höllmann (u. a.) | Taschenbuch | Asiatische Forschungen | VI | Englisch | 2024 | Harrassowitz Verlag | EAN 9783447123082 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Harrassowitz Verlag GmbH & [.], Steffen Schickling, Kreuzberger Ring 7C-D, 65205 Wiesbaden, produktsicherheit[dot]verlag[at]harrassowitz[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag Dez 2024, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
Librería: buchversandmimpf2000, Emtmannsberg, BAYE, Alemania
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware -Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was a latifundium inhabited by 'barbarians,' since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to 'becoming Chinese.' Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions.The authors focus on the people(s) in Pingcheng. Zhang's epigraphic study is devoted to a Xianbei family that arose during the Pingcheng period and remained closely intertwined with the imperial court in the following centuries. Using burial finds, Müller explores the diversity and foreignness of funerary customs and artifacts, the ways in which different ethnic groups communicated and interacted, and the emergence of a new collective identity that was anything but Chinese.Harrassowitz Verlag, Kreuzberger Ring 7 b-d, 65205 Wiesbaden 184 pp. Englisch.
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. 2024. paperback. . . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por Harrassowitz Verlag Dez 2024, 2024
ISBN 10: 3447123087 ISBN 13: 9783447123082
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Añadir al carritoTaschenbuch. Condición: Neu. Neuware - Compared to the later capital of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Luoyang (494-534), Pingcheng on the northern border of the Chinese world has received less scholarly attention despite its far longer capital status (398-494). The main reason is the lack of written sources. In addition, there is the derogatory idea that Pingcheng was a latifundium inhabited by 'barbarians,' since the rulers of the Northern Wei were the Tuoba Xianbei from the eastern steppe, who established the first long-term foreign control over northern China. Traditionally, Luoyang is the epitome of the sinicized Tuoba Xianbei, while Pingcheng represents the state of the Tuoba Xianbei who were on the way to 'becoming Chinese.' Excavations show that Pingcheng, which was built on the ruins of a garrison from the Han-Dynasty, arose from nothing and the inhabitants came from outside. Burial finds indicate a steadily growing population, which is said to have reached one million in its prime. At first, tombs were erected to indicate their steppe origins. New rites and artifacts emerged in spurts. This corresponds to written records, according to which the city was mainly populated by steppe warriors, followed by forcibly relocated peoples from all conquered northern Chinese regions. The authors focus on the people(s) in Pingcheng. Zhang's epigraphic study is devoted to a Xianbei family that arose during the Pingcheng period and remained closely intertwined with the imperial court in the following centuries. Using burial finds, Müller explores the diversity and foreignness of funerary customs and artifacts, the ways in which different ethnic groups communicated and interacted, and the emergence of a new collective identity that was anything but Chinese.
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. KlappentextrnrnThis book contains eleven articles in English and German which were presented to an international symposium in 2003. The papers discuss various aspects of the early history of the area now called Guangdong. They deal with material.