期刊文献+
共找到4篇文章
< 1 >
每页显示 20 50 100
东阿地名说
1
作者 安敬岱 《青年思想家》 2003年第1期87-88,共2页
关键词 地名说 铜城 东阿县 史书记载
下载PDF
甲骨文“囧”形义新证 被引量:19
2
作者 蒋瑞 《徐州师范大学学报(哲学社会科学版)》 2003年第1期60-62,共3页
About , there have been four views: windows, granaries, a name of sacrifice and sites. This paper offers new research on the shape and meaning of the inscription  on bones, following the former researchers. The su... About , there have been four views: windows, granaries, a name of sacrifice and sites. This paper offers new research on the shape and meaning of the inscription  on bones, following the former researchers. The suggestion is that the inscription  should be shaped from the sun, and its original meaning is sacrificial sites. 展开更多
关键词 祭祀地 甲骨文 窗户 仓廪 祭名 地名说
下载PDF
《哀郢》“陵阳”研究述评 被引量:1
3
作者 周秉高 《职大学报》 2012年第1期1-6,共6页
从古到今,对《九章》"陵阳"的解释,主要有四种不同的说法,即:动词说、地名说、未详说和大波说。从目前情况看,四种说法中,地名说和大波说是学界认知的主流,而大波说的说服力更胜一筹。
关键词 楚辞 《哀郢》 陵阳 地名说 大波
下载PDF
Zhao Yingcheng from Fact to Fiction: The Story of "The Great Advisor"
4
作者 Moshe Y. Bernstein 《Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences》 2018年第2期191-218,共28页
Zhao Yingcheng (1619-1657), known as "The Great Advisor", is the only Kaifeng Jew who is mentioned both in the synagogal stele of 1663 and in Chinese gazetteers during his lifetime. Zhao, given the Hebrew name of ... Zhao Yingcheng (1619-1657), known as "The Great Advisor", is the only Kaifeng Jew who is mentioned both in the synagogal stele of 1663 and in Chinese gazetteers during his lifetime. Zhao, given the Hebrew name of Moshe ben Avram, was fluent in Hebrew but also achieved success as a Confucian scholar familiar with the Chinese classics. He would have witnessed the destruction of his hometown by a catastrophic flood during the 1642 Siege of Kaifeng. In 1645, at the age of 26, he attained the jinshi rank in the Imperial Exams, in which only one in 10,000 can- didates was successful. A year later, he was appointed Minister of Justice for the newly installed Qing Dynasty and supervised the controversial decree forcing the Manchu tonsure onto the Han population as a mark of submission. In 1647, he was sent as an envoy to quell the unrest in Fujian province. After defeating bands of violent warlords funded by the notorious pirate Koxinga, Zhao set up a system of public schools to provide greater economic opportunity for the poor. After the death of his father, Zhao returned to Kaifeng for the three-year mourning period; during that time, he funded the restoration of the synagogue, which had been destroyed in the deluge, and the rectification of the Torah scrolls damaged in that catastrophe. Though the biographical facts are sparse, when these are juxtaposed with the dra- matic events that unfolded during his short lifetime, the potential for a fascinating historical fictionalization emerges. Moreover, many of those historical events in seventeenth-century China--climate change, elite corruption, populist revolt, xenophobia, terrorism, law and order, etc.--resonate with contemporary tropes. The story of "The Great Advisor" shows how a Jew in seventeenth-century China rose to national prominence at a time when Jews in Europe faced severe discrimination and persecution. 展开更多
关键词 Chinese Jews Kaifeng Zhao Yingcheng Ethnographic history Ming-Qing transition
原文传递
上一页 1 下一页 到第
使用帮助 返回顶部