Archive for November 29th, 2008

Chinese Culture – Tombs of Han at Shaogou

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

 

Tombs of Western and Eastern Han Dynasties (206BC-220AD)

 

Location: Luoyang, Henan Province

 

Period: the end of 2nd century BC – the beginning of 3rd century AD

 

Excavated from 1952 to 1953

 

Painted pottery jar: food container (height 39.6 cm)

Significance: It has established a generally reliable standard for dating tombs of the Han Dynasty found in the central plains of China.

 

 Introduction

 

Tombs of Han at Shaogou are graves of the Western and Eastern Han dynasties in large scale, among which 225 tombs have been excavated so far. Supported by researches on unearthed cultural relics like bronze coins, bronze mirrors, bronze wares, gold and silver wares, iron wares, pottery and silk which were buried with the dead, archaeologists formed the reliable reference to the timetable of the Han Dynasty.

Source: chinaculture.org

Chinese Conversation – lesson 275

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

直到上世纪初,慕尼黑才真正开始发展起来,许多最知名的慕城建筑都源自那个时期。尽管它曾以现代大都会之姿主办了1972年的奥运会,慕尼黑仍保有其静谧的魅力。当你在“英国花园”──欧陆最大的公园之中漫步,当然还有置身其中的中国高塔和一座啤酒园──你将浑然不觉还身处在大城市之中。

It was in the early years of the nineteenth century that Munich really began to grow, and many of the city’s best known buildings date from this time. Despite being the modern metropolis that hosted the 1972 Olympic Games, Munich has retained a quiet charm. It is easy to forget you are in a big city as you stroll through the English Gardens, one of Europe’s largest parks—complete with the Chinese Tower—and a beer garden of course.

(Source: wwenglish.com)

Chinese Pinyin – bei (褙)

Saturday, November 29th, 2008
褙   [bèi]
国标码:F1D8 部首:衤 笔画:14 笔顺:45234211352511
paper or cloth pasted together
 (Source: dict.cn)