Archive for July 14th, 2008

Children Chinese – Oracle Bones Pictures

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Brief Description of the Oracle Bone Collection of United College Library
In May 1969, Mr. C. Y. Tang, a student of the Science Faculty of United College, according to the instruction of his mother, donated his father’s collection of 56 pieces of rare oracle bones to the College. The collection is now kept in the Wu Chung Library, and this is the largest collection of its kinds in Hong Kong. Followed are the photographs of 45 pieces of oracle bones which show readable characters.

羛   皘 瓜  繻 狥 拆 綡 ん 侣 旅 ヒ 癌 虏 ざ
  せ   き る 丁  セ  瞶 厩 皘 綡  ト  厩  ダ ㏑   ㄤ  焊 懂  ネ 框  纓 ヒ  勉      脋 癌  勉      摧 癌      璸 き  せ   磏 秘 セ   さ 耴 瓜  繻 Μ 旅  瞷    羛   皘 瓜  繻  沮  侔  ネ σ ぇ   き  せ  ヒ 癌  边  猌  材  戳  の  ┌   ヒ 材  戳 ぇ     セ 翠 瞷 旅 ヒ 癌 い 程 伦 碔    碞 ゅ   弄    き        侔  ネ 匡 魁 ㄤ い   ヒ 癌 ぇ 睦 弧 篕   羛   皘 瓜  繻 穝 莉 狥 拆 綡 ん 侣 旅 ヒ 癌 虏 ざ    羛   皘 厩 厨     せ   〓 せ    材  戳  183 – 198  

Click to show photograph of each piece of oracle bones as numbered:
饼 琩   ヒ 癌 瓜   叫 翴  絪 腹

(Source: ancienthistory.mrdonn.org)

Beijing Olympic – N. China co-host city pledges to clear sky for Olympics

Monday, July 14th, 2008

SHIJIAZHUANG, Feb. 29 (Xinhua) — Qinhuangdao, a port city in north China’s Hebei Province, is going all out to help ensure blue skies as a co-host of this summer’s Olympic Games, the local environmental protection bureau said on Friday.

Qinhuangdao, 280 kilometers east of Beijing, has invested 20 billion yuan (about 2.78 billion U.S. dollars) in a major environmental protection drive with aim to improve air quality for the August Olympiad.

The drive included 2,00 projects featuring air pollution control, industrial sewage recycling, city garbage treatment, development of environmentally-friendly tourism, water sources protection and afforestation, according to the bureau.

The government ordered all desulfurization projects at major coal-fired power plants to be completed before July 1.

Local chemical plants and iron mines are now required to cut pollutants that might darken the Olympic skies and water. In addition, the city has set up an air-quality monitoring network focused on heavily-polluting businesses.

Hebei, the province that surrounds Beijing and Tianjin, has also pledged to spend about 21 billion yuan on anti-pollution projects and environmental monitoring stations, said Ji Zhenhai, the provincial environmental protection bureau director.

Businesses in heavily-polluting industries — power, iron and steel, chemicals and concrete — will have to cut production or even close if they fail to meet the emission standard during the Games.

The projects could reduce Hebei’s annual emissions of about 550,000 tons of sulphur dioxide, he said.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Culture – Simuwu Rectangle Ding

Monday, July 14th, 2008

In 1939, a bronze ding which is an ancient cooking vessel with two loop handles and three or four legs, was unearthed in Anyang, Henan Province. This four-legged ding known as the Simuwu Rectangle Ding was so big and heavy that it could not be moved after it was unearthed, although the Japanese invaders tried several times to plunder it. To protect this rare cultural relic, the local people reburied it and then unearthed it again after China won the Anti-Japanese War in 1945. The Simuwu Rectangle Ding is now in the National Museum of Chinese History.

 

 

The opening of the Simuwu Rectangle Ding is 110 cm long and 78cm wide, its sides are 6cm thick and the loop handles are 133cm high. The whole ding weighs 75 kilograms and is the heaviest bronzeware in the world. The casting of this huge bronze vessel used over 1,000 kilograms of metal and needed 70 to 80 craftsmen to work on it. It is the biggest bronzeware unearthed in China and is a treasure in the world’s bronzeware collection. Though the ding is big and heavy, its workmanship is exquisite. Relief of Kui (a one-legged mythical animal) was carved on the four sides of the body of the ding. The animal figures are portrayed with artistic exaggeration and create a ferocious, mysterious and dignified mood.

 

Dings were used in Chinese Primitive Society as cooking utensils. At first they were made of pottery clay. Then, as metallurgy emerged and developed, the material was changed to bronze at the end of the Shang Dynasty about 3,000 years ago. By that time, dings had changed function to become sacrificial vessels and the symbol of their owners’ power and wealth.

 

The Simuwu Rectangle Ding reveals a high level of casting technique and artistry. It represents the highest casting achievement of the Shang Dynasty. According to archeologists, the King of the Shang Dynasty had the Simuwu Rectangle Ding made to commemorate his mother.

Source: chinaculture.org