Archive for July 15th, 2008

Children Chinese – Confucius & Confucianism

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Confucius was born around 551 BCE in Lu province in Chou(Zhou) times. His parents were nobility, but had become poor when the empire disintegrated into feudal states. 

When Confucius was about 15 years old, he became quite interested in learning. In those days, only the nobility and royals were allowed education. All the teachers were government officials. It was hard for Confucius to find a way to learn. He couldn’t go to the public library or go to public school. These things did not yet exist in ancient China. To solve this, he went to work for a nobleman. This gave him the opportunity to learn and to travel to the imperial capital.

Confucius studied and learned until he probably was the most learned man of his day. People heard of his knowledge and sent their sons to study with him. He was the first private teacher in China. Confucius taught anyone who was eager to learn. His ideas, called Confucianism, stress the need to develop responsibility and moral character through rigid rules of behavior.

Confucianism is not, properly speaking, a religion; it’s a way of behaving, so you’ll do the right things.

 

Excerpt from The Analects of Confucius, c.400 BCE

Do not do unto others, 
what you would not want others to do to you

If you make a mistake and do not correct it,
 this is called a mistake


Confucianism, in T’ang times, was a social code of behavior, a very set and rigid code of behavior, that honored ancestors and ancient rituals. 

Everything had to be done a certain way. One of his rules, for example, was that gentlemen could only display their skill as archers on three hunts a year, in the spring, autumn, and winter. 

There’s a saying about Confucius: “If the mat was not straight, the Master would not sit.” You might think to yourself: “Wow. What a fussy.” But think about it. In English, if you write a sentence, the first word must start with a capital letter and the last word must end with a period, an exclamation point, or a question mark. Otherwise, it’s not a sentence. “If the mat was not straight, the Master would not sit.”

Today, the Chinese celebrate Confucius Birthday (Teacher’s Day), in honor of their ancestor, the teacher, Confucius.

(Source: ancienthistory.mrdonn.org)

Beijing Olympic – Olympic project in Qinhuangdao near completion

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

(BEIJING, March 3) — The project for the renovation of training facilities of the Olympic venue in Qinghuangdao entered its last phase, as their main structures have been completed, according to chinanews.com.

As arranged by the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG), the Qinghuangdao Olympic Sports Center Stadium will hold 12 football preliminaries starting from August 6, 2008. During the Olympic Games, the stadium will host 12 men’s teams and 10 women’s teams.

The co-host city has engaged in a project to refurbish auxiliary facilities such as turf, lighting, and athletes’ lounges at three back-up training and competition stadiums at the Qinghuangdao Branch of the Northeast University, the forest park in the development zone, and the Qinghuangdao Foreign Language Vocational School, in addition to the Qinghuangdao Olympic Sports Center Stadium. The project is expected to be completed by the end of May.

Progress has also been made in volunteer recruitment, with an estimated 2,000 volunteers expected for Games-time services.

On the other hand, over 100 medical staff members from the city’s hospitals have been assigned to medical services for Olympic events. In addition, a specifically designated hospital and 14 ambulances have also been assigned for Games-time use.

In a recent visit to the Qinghuangdao venue, FIFA vice-president Chung Mong-Joon praised its good location, novel design and advanced equipment, saying that there would be no problem there for the holding of Olympic football competitions.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Culture – Square Bronze Kettle with a Lotus and Crane Motif

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

 

The finest bronze ware of China — A Square Bronze Kettle with a Lotus and Crane Motif — was unearthed in Lijialou Village, Xinzheng County of Henan Province in 1923. The kettle was a burial article in a tomb of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770BC-256BC). With its unique artistic characteristics, the kettle reflects the new direction of development in decorative crafts at that time and is regarded as an artistic treasure. The cultural relic is now kept in the Beijing Palace Museum.

 

 

The kettle, with a height of 118 cm and a diameter of 30.5 cm in its kettle mouth, is especially unique and fine in its style as well as its exquisite decorations. The surface of the kettle was carved wriggled veins. In each of its four corners decorates a dragon and its bottom is also engraved two powerful huge dragons to support the body.

 

More wonderfully, the kettle mouth is decorated with blooming lotus petals, and with a crane standing in its middle, which constitutes a beautiful modeling. They demonstrated the delicate, pretty and living artistic conception, and broke away the solemn, stiff style of the previous dynasties, marking a new start of Chinese decoration techniques.

 

Another kettle of the same kind made in the same period was also discovered and is now in display in the Henan Provincial Museum. The two kettles are regarded as the finest bronze wares of their kind in China.

Source: chinaculture.org