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Some Chinese Sources on the Khazars and Khwarazm |
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时间:2009-7-24 13:48:37 来源:不详
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had most well-maintained archives and library. Therefore, most historian, even including independent authors like Sima Qian, were shi officials or imperial librarians. Down to the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), 24 Jizhuan ti histories admitted by the court had been accumulated which were so-called 24 shi. They were also named Zhenshi (Standard History) which was first seen in the literature of Liang Dynasty (502-557) and accepted as the formal subject of library classification in the early Tang Dynasty (618-907). The transmission of 24 shi is inseparable from the block printing technology of China. The Song Dynasty (960-1279) saw the first appearance of block-printed history books, which included only 17 shi at that time. The Emperor Qianlong (re. 1736-1796) ordered his courtiers to compile and reprint the 24 shi. They completed Dianben (the Court Edition of 24 shi), which became very popular since publication. In addition, Juben and Bainaben are both important editions. The union of five large book houses published Juben in the late 19th century. The compilation was based on&nb上一页 [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] ... 下一页 >> |
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