Archive for November 19th, 2008

Beijing Olympic – Shanghai’s elevators are best

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

The country’s elevators are generally satisfactory but after-sales service still has room for improvement, according to a survey by the Shanghai Quality Association.

Thirteen brands of elevator from all over the country were involved in the survey, and the products of three local companies, Mitsubishi Shanghai, Toshiba Shanghai and Yongda-Hitachi, took the top three places for customer satisfaction while Fuji Dongguan, Schindler China and ThyssenKrupp were bottom.

The survey involved 2,777 customers from all over the country, and included installation, maintenance and emergency repairs.

The survey showed that the reputation of the brand was what determined customer choice rather than function, after-sales service and price. More than 40 percent of the consumers said they would choose brands which enjoyed a good reputation. Mitsubishi Shanghai, Xizi Otis Hangzhou and Toshiba Shanghai led the field as top brands.

Most complaints from cutomers were about emergency repairs with poor communication blamed for delays.

 (Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

China Travel – Tianyi Pavilion

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

The Tianyi Pavilion is located in the west of Yuehu Lake in Ningbo City, Zhejiang Province.

First built by Fan Qin, a high-ranking official equivalent to today’s national defense minister, during Emperor Jia Jing’s reign in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). The Tianyi Pavilion Library is the oldest well-preserved private library in China today. It is a combination of culture, social studies, history and art.

Fan Qin loved collecting ancient books all his life, and his collection of books reached 70,000. To protect the books, Fan Qin made strict family rules that all the posterity should abide by the teachings of the deceased, Never discard the books, and never take the books away. However, many books disappeared as the years passed by. In the thirteenth year (1808) of the Jiaqing reign of the Qing Dynasty, books in the pavilion totaled to 4,049 in more than 53,000 volumes. During the Opium War, British aggressors plundered many books and sold them to French missionaries and paper mills. After many accidentals, books in the pavilion merely totaled 1,591 in 13,038 volumes in 1940. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China, special management departments were set up to protect the Tianyi Pavilion. More than 3,000 volumes of missing books were found.

Now, the Tianyi Pavilion keeps a large collection of about 300,000 ancient books, among which 80,000 are rare copies including the woodcut copies and handwritten copies of the Song and Ming Dynasties. They are rich sources of local chronicles and imperial examinations and are precious materials for the study of history, people, social customs and habits. The Tianyi Pavilion Library is called the “Book City of South China”. The Tianyi Pavilion is not only world famous for its wide collection of books, but also for its unique architecture and elegant landscape.

The Tianyi Pavilion has a flush gable roof, and is six bays wide and deep, with a corridor extending from the front to the back. In front of the pavilion is a pond that stores water for fireproof. Fan Wenguang, Fan Qin’s great-grandson, rebuilt the pavilion by laying rockery around the lake, building kiosks and bridges, planting flowers and grass in the fourth year (1665) of the Kangxi reign in the Qing Dynasty. The whole pavilion and the milieu feature the style of private gardens south of the lower reaches of the Yangtze River. During its rebuilding in 1933, the Zunjing Pavilion of Confucian Temple in Ningbo was moved to the backyard. Steles from the Song (960-1279) to Qing Dynasties in Ningbo City were also put there. These steles and the Zunjing Pavilion are called the Stele Forest in Mingzhou.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Mausoleum of Marquis Yi of State of Zeng

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

 

Mausoleum of the Prince of State of Zeng, early Warring States Period (475-221BC)

 

Location: Suizhou, Hubei Province

 

Period: Around 433 BC

 

Excavated in 1978

 

Significance: It has demonstrated the history of State of Zeng, which had not been recorded in ancient documents.

 

 Introduction 

Gold zhan (small cup): food container (up, height 11 cm); Chime of bells made of bronze: musical instrument (mid, the stand of bells is 265-273 cm in height); Bronze zun inside a bronze tray: wine vessel (bottom, height 23.5 cm)

 

 

In 1977, excavators in Hubei Province found a remarkably rich and undisturbed tomb. Inscriptions on some of the bronzes indicated that it belonged to Yi, marquis of the State of Zeng (Zenghou Yi in Chinese) and dated to about 433 BC in the Warring States Period. The existence of the State of Zeng was unknown until 1977, and it remains somewhat enigmatic. The tomb is 21 meters from west to east and 16.5 meters from north to south, covering about 220 square meters. About 15,404 articles were unearthed, mainly including bronze ritual vessels, musical instruments, weapons, chariots, jade, lacquer wares, and bamboo articles, etc.

 

Originally sunk to a depth of 13 meters, the tomb was packed with charcoal, and the shaft filled with clay, stone slabs, and earth. The durability of these materials, and the fact that the tomb became waterlogged, left it in a remarkable state of preservation, enabling archaeologists to determine precisely how goods were distributed in the four chambers. These chambers mirrored the arrangement of the marquis’ palace during his life.

 

The eastern chamber, representing his private quarters, contained his own lacquered double coffin, the coffins of eight young women (ages thirteen to twenty-four) who were probably concubines or musicians to entertain Yi in the afterlife, and a dog buried in its own coffin. The chamber also contained weapons, a chariot, and many personal items, including furniture, a zither, silk, and vessels — though not bronze vessels. The central chamber seems to have corresponded to the ceremonial hall of Yi’s palace. Inside, was a large set of bronze bells and other instruments, together with bronze ritual vessels. The northern chamber served as an armory and storeroom, the western chamber, where thirteen more young women were buried, as servants’ quarters.

 

The marquis’ tomb illustrates a transition from tomb traditions that replicated the ritual environment of ancestral temples to a new conception of the tomb as a recreation of the deceased’s earthly existence.

 

 Zeng Houyi Bells

 

It is the largest set of bronze bells excavated in the world. It comprises 65 bells in various sizes, with each bell producing two different tones when struck. There are three levels, with the smallest bells suspended on the highest level and the largest ones on the bottom section. The bells cover roughly 5 octaves and the middle 3 octaves produces 12 semitones each. There is an inscription on each bell that records events, musical theories and the sound the particular bell products. From historical records and other materials, it is concluded that there are probably five performers involved in the playing of the bells, with two standing in front of the set playing the larger bells with long poles and three behind playing the smaller bells with smaller sticks.

 

The bell right in the centre of the lowest level and not suspended at an oblique angle was a gift from king Hui of Chu to Yi, the Marquis of Zeng State, as recorded in the inscription on it. The inscription also states that the bell was cast in the 56th year of the reign of King Hui (433BC), the year of the burial of Marquis Yi. The State of Zeng was a vassal state of Chu and was under the same cultural sphere.

 

Length of longer side 748cm, Height 265cm         

Length of shorter side 335cm, Height 273cm

Total weight 5 tons

Unearthed in 1978 from the Tomb of Yi, Marquis of Zeng State, Suizhou, Hubei Province

 

 Stone Chimes

 

Made of 32 pieces of marble slabs suspended on a 2-tier support, the stone chimes were often played together with the bronze bells. They produce clearer and higher tones when struck. There are 3 Octaves complete with 12 semitones each. The supporting columns are formed of bronze carvings of strange looking mythical animals. Serial numbers, the names of the musical notes and various other inscriptions are found on the set.

 

Height 109cm, Beam length 215cm        

Unearthed in 1978 from the Tomb of Yi, Marquis of Zeng State, Suizhou, Hubei Province

Source: chinaculture.org