Current Location: Home » Full Text Search
Your search : [ author:TANG HSIA] Total 179 Search Results,Processed in 0.066 second(s)
-
1. WUSIH - Scenic Lake City
COMING to Wusih is like stepping into a traditional Chinese painting of water scenery and low mountains. Wusih in Kiangsu province is the most famous of the many scenic small and medium-sized cities
Author: TANG HSIA Year 1978 Issue 2 PDF HTML
-
2. LOYANG, A City Both Ancient and Young
LOYANG, one of China's two most important pre-tenth-century capitals, is a veritable underground museum. From things excavated in Loyang alone - a small portion of her total underground treasure - on
Author: TANG HSIA Year 1978 Issue 5 PDF HTML
-
3. NEW ARCHAEOLOGICAL DISCOVERIES
THE aims and methods of Chinese archaeology have changed sharply since the formation of the People's Republic of China. Actual field work too has expanded greatly. Most excavations are planned by the
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1952 Issue 4 PDF HTML
-
4. ARTS AND CRAFTS OF 2300 YEARS AGO
THE latter part of the period of the Warring States (circa 403-221 B. C.) was one of the high points of Chinese history. It produced remarkable philosophers, statesmen, military strategists and
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1954 Issue 1 PDF HTML
-
5. OUR NEOLITHIC ANCESTORS
THE PRACTICE of keeping in close contact with the constantly increasing number of industrial construction sites, now standard among China's archaeological organizations, has yielded new and important
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1956 Issue 5 PDF HTML
-
6. LU HSUN
LU HSUN ...was not only a great man of letters, but also a great thinker and a great revolutionary . . . an unprecedented hero on the cultural front, the most correct, the bravest, the firmest, most
Author: HSIA YEN Year 1956 Issue 10 PDF HTML
-
7. Workshop of China's Oldest Civilization
EXCAVATIONS at an ancient town-site discovered in 1950 at Chengchow, capital of Honan province, have provided archaeologists with some new and very important evidence about the dawn of historical
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1957 Issue 12 PDF HTML
-
8. Opening an Imperial Tomb
FOR the first time since the fall of the Ming dynasty in 1644, the quiet valley in which thirteen of its emperors lie buried became a scene of bustling labour again early in 1958 when over 400,000
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1959 Issue 3 PDF HTML
-
9. Grave Statues Reveal Ancient Life
TOMB-FIGURES, usually of pottery, wood, stone or metal, have been found in great numbers 'in our excavations of ancient graves. They appeared first in the period of the Warring States (5th to 3rd
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1959 Issue 8 PDF HTML
-
10. Tracing the Thread of the Past
NEVER have Chinese archae-ologists been able to do so much as in the past decade. Our work has been conducted as a regular part of the scientific research programme of the People's Government.
Author: HSIA NAI Year 1959 Issue 10 PDF HTML