This article examines the shifting geo-political significance of Hangzhou as presented in two local gazetteers dating from the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1276). Focusing on literary works quoted in both of these ga...This article examines the shifting geo-political significance of Hangzhou as presented in two local gazetteers dating from the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1276). Focusing on literary works quoted in both of these gazetteers that describe two of Hangzhou's famous halls on West Lake, I argue that geographic discourses on these halls manifest a tension between two conflicting presentations of Hangzhou's geo-political significance as understood by literati elite of the Southern Song. In writings concerning the Hall of Possessing Beauty (Youmei tang 有美堂), Hangzhou was viewed as a city of rising economic and cultural importance during the Northern Song. Writings on the Hall of Centrality and Harmony (Zhonghe tang 中和堂), in contrast, depict Hangzhou as an imperial refuge for a court in flight and associate it with the motif of territorial loss during the Southern Song when the city became the dynastic capital. By examining how these two views of Hangzhou are contrasted, this essay concludes that gazetteers functioned to grade and rank different kinds of landscapes in order to make geo-political arguments about the proper reconstitution of the empire during the Southern Song.展开更多
Perhaps no region on earth presents such a confusing array of place names as does the area made up of the former provinces of Kham and Amdo in historic Tibet (Xizang). Within these areas, cities, towns, villages, moun...Perhaps no region on earth presents such a confusing array of place names as does the area made up of the former provinces of Kham and Amdo in historic Tibet (Xizang). Within these areas, cities, towns, villages, mountains, lakes and other geographic features have at least two names applied to them, one Tibetan, the other Chinese. Overlying this indigenous nomenclature are the names applied by outsiders, mostly Europeans, each of whom used their native language to transliterate the names they heard or read from Tibetan or Chinese script, and names in the languages of other ethnic minorities who live within the area. Adding to the confusion are the conflicting “standards” for transliterating Tibetan and Chinese names. To resolve the inconsistencies and uncertainties of place names in this region, a multilingual gazetteer and thesaurus was prepared. The gazetteer-thesaurus was compiled to be used as a tool for correlating the often radically different names assigned to a single place or feature and to provide the geographic coordinates for each. The impetus for this project was the need to assign geographic coordinates to plant specimens collected in the area since the latter part of the 19th century up until the advent and widespread use of Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers in the 1990s. Georeferencing specimens is necessary for plotting the historical distribution of species and for more completely understanding the information contained on specimen labels. Knowing the distribution of plants is important for answering phylogenetic questions, determining local and widespread biogeographical patterns, identifying areas of unusually high diversity or endemism, and determining areas in need of special protection. The value of such a gazetteer, however, extends well beyond the field of botany. It is intended to be of use to anyone with a desire to know the nomenclatural history of places in the area and for pinpointing with a fair degree of accuracy the location of each of those places.展开更多
Peking Gazette (京報), the information of which was derived according to Di Bao (邸報), or Di Chao (邸抄), wasa sort of Chinese official papers and a main form to spread court information in Ming and Qing dynast...Peking Gazette (京報), the information of which was derived according to Di Bao (邸報), or Di Chao (邸抄), wasa sort of Chinese official papers and a main form to spread court information in Ming and Qing dynasty. Westernersrepresented by Britons who came to China had paid great attention to the Peking Gazette in the 19th Century. Andtheir interests in the Peking Gazette endued these traditional papers a new mission. British missionaries anddiplomats coming to China kept a tradition of translating and introducing the Peking Gazette in the 19th Century.Thomas Francis Wade is the key man in promoting the formation of the tradition. During the period of the SecondOpium War, Wade's interests in the Peking Gazette had promoted the role of the Peking Gazette to be transformedfrom the "information source" to the "negotiation method", and also greatly influenced the Sino-British powerrelationship in "Information Space" in the second part of the 19th Century.展开更多
The publication of the translation of Peking Gazette by North-China Herald Office began in 1850 when “TheNorth-China Herald” was first published and finally ended at the end of the 19th century. Peking Gazette is al...The publication of the translation of Peking Gazette by North-China Herald Office began in 1850 when “TheNorth-China Herald” was first published and finally ended at the end of the 19th century. Peking Gazette is alsoknown and used by more Western readers through the great influence of English newspapers under the jurisdictionof North-China Herald Office. These translations provided western readers with rich knowledge about China in thelate Qing Dynasty, enhanced their understanding and understanding of the events from the court to the socialcustoms in the late Qing Dynasty, and on this basis, exerted an important influence on the historical process ofSino-Western relations in the middle and late 19th century.展开更多
Many detailed data on past geological hazard events are buried in geological hazard reports and have not been fully utilized. The growing developments in geographic information retrieval and temporal information retri...Many detailed data on past geological hazard events are buried in geological hazard reports and have not been fully utilized. The growing developments in geographic information retrieval and temporal information retrieval offer opportunities to analyse this wealth of data to mine the spatiotemporal evolution of geological disaster occurrence and enhance risk decision making. This study presents a combined NLP and ontology matching information extraction framework for automatically recognizing semantic and spatiotemporal information from geological hazard reports. This framework mainly extracts unstructured information from geological disaster reports through named entity recognition, ontology matching and gazetteer matching to identify and annotate elements, thus enabling users to quickly obtain key information and understand the general content of disaster reports. In addition, we present the final results obtained from the experiments through a reasonable visualization and analyse the visual results. The extraction and retrieval of semantic information related to the dynamics of geohazard events are performed from both natural and human perspectives to provide information on the progress of events.展开更多
Discrete global grid systems have become an important component of Digital Earth systems.However,previously there has not existed an easy way to map between named places(toponyms)and the cells of a discrete global gri...Discrete global grid systems have become an important component of Digital Earth systems.However,previously there has not existed an easy way to map between named places(toponyms)and the cells of a discrete global grid system.The lack of such a tool has limited the opportunities to synthesize social place-based data with the more standard Earth and environmental science data currently being analyzed in Digital Earth applications.This paper introduces Wāhi,the first gazetteer to map entities from the GeoNames database to multiple discrete global grid systems.A gazetteer service is presented that exposes the grid system and the associated gazetteer data as Linked Data.A set of use cases for the discrete global grid gazetteer is discussed.展开更多
The Ontology registry system is developed to collect, manage, and compare ontological information for integrating global observation data. Data sharing and data service such as support of metadata deign, structuring o...The Ontology registry system is developed to collect, manage, and compare ontological information for integrating global observation data. Data sharing and data service such as support of metadata deign, structuring of data contents, support of text mining are applied for better use of data as data interoperability. Semantic network dictionary and gazetteers are constructed as a trans-disciplinary dictionary. Ontological information is added to the system by digitalizing text based dictionaries, developing 'knowledge writing tool' for experts, and extracting semantic relations from authoritative documents with natural language processing technique. The system is developed to collect lexicographic ontology and geographic ontology.展开更多
文摘This article examines the shifting geo-political significance of Hangzhou as presented in two local gazetteers dating from the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1276). Focusing on literary works quoted in both of these gazetteers that describe two of Hangzhou's famous halls on West Lake, I argue that geographic discourses on these halls manifest a tension between two conflicting presentations of Hangzhou's geo-political significance as understood by literati elite of the Southern Song. In writings concerning the Hall of Possessing Beauty (Youmei tang 有美堂), Hangzhou was viewed as a city of rising economic and cultural importance during the Northern Song. Writings on the Hall of Centrality and Harmony (Zhonghe tang 中和堂), in contrast, depict Hangzhou as an imperial refuge for a court in flight and associate it with the motif of territorial loss during the Southern Song when the city became the dynastic capital. By examining how these two views of Hangzhou are contrasted, this essay concludes that gazetteers functioned to grade and rank different kinds of landscapes in order to make geo-political arguments about the proper reconstitution of the empire during the Southern Song.
基金Supported by the U. S. National Science Foundation, Grant No. DEB-0321846, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant No. 40332021.
文摘Perhaps no region on earth presents such a confusing array of place names as does the area made up of the former provinces of Kham and Amdo in historic Tibet (Xizang). Within these areas, cities, towns, villages, mountains, lakes and other geographic features have at least two names applied to them, one Tibetan, the other Chinese. Overlying this indigenous nomenclature are the names applied by outsiders, mostly Europeans, each of whom used their native language to transliterate the names they heard or read from Tibetan or Chinese script, and names in the languages of other ethnic minorities who live within the area. Adding to the confusion are the conflicting “standards” for transliterating Tibetan and Chinese names. To resolve the inconsistencies and uncertainties of place names in this region, a multilingual gazetteer and thesaurus was prepared. The gazetteer-thesaurus was compiled to be used as a tool for correlating the often radically different names assigned to a single place or feature and to provide the geographic coordinates for each. The impetus for this project was the need to assign geographic coordinates to plant specimens collected in the area since the latter part of the 19th century up until the advent and widespread use of Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers in the 1990s. Georeferencing specimens is necessary for plotting the historical distribution of species and for more completely understanding the information contained on specimen labels. Knowing the distribution of plants is important for answering phylogenetic questions, determining local and widespread biogeographical patterns, identifying areas of unusually high diversity or endemism, and determining areas in need of special protection. The value of such a gazetteer, however, extends well beyond the field of botany. It is intended to be of use to anyone with a desire to know the nomenclatural history of places in the area and for pinpointing with a fair degree of accuracy the location of each of those places.
文摘Peking Gazette (京報), the information of which was derived according to Di Bao (邸報), or Di Chao (邸抄), wasa sort of Chinese official papers and a main form to spread court information in Ming and Qing dynasty. Westernersrepresented by Britons who came to China had paid great attention to the Peking Gazette in the 19th Century. Andtheir interests in the Peking Gazette endued these traditional papers a new mission. British missionaries anddiplomats coming to China kept a tradition of translating and introducing the Peking Gazette in the 19th Century.Thomas Francis Wade is the key man in promoting the formation of the tradition. During the period of the SecondOpium War, Wade's interests in the Peking Gazette had promoted the role of the Peking Gazette to be transformedfrom the "information source" to the "negotiation method", and also greatly influenced the Sino-British powerrelationship in "Information Space" in the second part of the 19th Century.
基金This paper is Supported by the National Social Science Fund in 2018 “The Translation, Spread andInfluence of The Peking Gazette from the perspective of Sino-British Relations” (Grant No. 18CZS038).
文摘The publication of the translation of Peking Gazette by North-China Herald Office began in 1850 when “TheNorth-China Herald” was first published and finally ended at the end of the 19th century. Peking Gazette is alsoknown and used by more Western readers through the great influence of English newspapers under the jurisdictionof North-China Herald Office. These translations provided western readers with rich knowledge about China in thelate Qing Dynasty, enhanced their understanding and understanding of the events from the court to the socialcustoms in the late Qing Dynasty, and on this basis, exerted an important influence on the historical process ofSino-Western relations in the middle and late 19th century.
基金the IUGS Deep-time Digital Earth (DDE) Big Science Programfinancially supported by the National Key R & D Program of China (No.2022YFB3904200)+4 种基金the Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province of China (No.2022CFB640)the Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Urban Land Resources Monitoring and Simulation,Ministry of Natural Resources (No.KF-202207-014)the Opening Fund of Hubei Key Laboratory of Intelligent Vision-Based Monitoring for Hydroelectric Engineering (No.2022SDSJ04)the Opening Fund of Key Laboratory of Geological Survey and Evaluation of Ministry of Education (No.GLAB 2023ZR01)the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities。
文摘Many detailed data on past geological hazard events are buried in geological hazard reports and have not been fully utilized. The growing developments in geographic information retrieval and temporal information retrieval offer opportunities to analyse this wealth of data to mine the spatiotemporal evolution of geological disaster occurrence and enhance risk decision making. This study presents a combined NLP and ontology matching information extraction framework for automatically recognizing semantic and spatiotemporal information from geological hazard reports. This framework mainly extracts unstructured information from geological disaster reports through named entity recognition, ontology matching and gazetteer matching to identify and annotate elements, thus enabling users to quickly obtain key information and understand the general content of disaster reports. In addition, we present the final results obtained from the experiments through a reasonable visualization and analyse the visual results. The extraction and retrieval of semantic information related to the dynamics of geohazard events are performed from both natural and human perspectives to provide information on the progress of events.
文摘Discrete global grid systems have become an important component of Digital Earth systems.However,previously there has not existed an easy way to map between named places(toponyms)and the cells of a discrete global grid system.The lack of such a tool has limited the opportunities to synthesize social place-based data with the more standard Earth and environmental science data currently being analyzed in Digital Earth applications.This paper introduces Wāhi,the first gazetteer to map entities from the GeoNames database to multiple discrete global grid systems.A gazetteer service is presented that exposes the grid system and the associated gazetteer data as Linked Data.A set of use cases for the discrete global grid gazetteer is discussed.
基金the Data Integration and Analysis System (DIAS) Project
文摘The Ontology registry system is developed to collect, manage, and compare ontological information for integrating global observation data. Data sharing and data service such as support of metadata deign, structuring of data contents, support of text mining are applied for better use of data as data interoperability. Semantic network dictionary and gazetteers are constructed as a trans-disciplinary dictionary. Ontological information is added to the system by digitalizing text based dictionaries, developing 'knowledge writing tool' for experts, and extracting semantic relations from authoritative documents with natural language processing technique. The system is developed to collect lexicographic ontology and geographic ontology.