Citations:Ch'ang-chih

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English citations of Ch'ang-chih

  • 1970, Thomas P. Bernstein, “Keeping the revolution going: Problems of village leadership after land reform”, in John Wilson Lewis, editor, Party Leadership and Revolutionary Power in China[1], Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 245:
    A study of 6 Party branches in Ch’ang-chih Special District, Shansi, showed that 39 of 141 Party members engaged in exploitation.
  • 1973, Michael Sullivan, The Arts of China[2], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 52:
    In vessels unearthed in 1923 at Li-yü, and more recently in the much more prosperous and important area of Ch‘ang-chih in Central Shansi, the décor of flat inter- locking bands of dragons looks forward to the restless, intricate decoration of the mature Huai style; but in their robust forms, in the tiger masks which top their legs and the realistic birds and other creatures which adorn their lids, these vessels recall the vigour of an earlier age.
  • 1982, Thomas Lawton, “Bronze Vessels, Fittings, and Weapons”, in Chinese Art of the Warring States Period[3], Smithsonian Institution, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 79, column 1:
    Further support for the Shansi provenance came in 1965, when a bronze quadruped with identical ornamentation and of approximately the same size as the Freer example was unearthed in tomb 126, at Fen-shui-ling, Ch'ang-chih, Shansi Province.² However, a bronze human figure holding a shallow rimmed basket mounted on the back of the quadruped from Ch'ang-chih indicates that the piece actually did serve as a container. There is no indication that the Freer quadruped ever supported such a figure or that it was meant to be used tor any related function.