Artigo Revisado por pares

THE SOUTHERN MING IN CHINESE PERIODICALS: A TENTATIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY

1980; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 1980; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1179/014703780788765027

ISSN

1759-7595

Autores

Richard T. Wang,

Tópico(s)

Financial Crisis of the 21st Century

Resumo

Interest in the history of the Southern Ming (1644–1683) has existed in China for a very long period of time, but comprehensive and systematic studies of the topic are still to be developed. The earliest studies by the Ming loyalists working in the face of suppression by the early Ch'ing court, were largely efforts to record the historical events of the period. Some notable writings available today are Cha Chi-tso's TSUI WEI LU and LU CH'UN-CH'IU, Ku Yen-wu's MING-CHI SAN-CH'AO YEH-SHIH, Huang Tsung-hsi's HSING-CH'AO LU and HUNGKUANG SHIH-LU, Wang Fu-chih's YUNG-LI SHIH-LU, and Wen Jui-lin's NAN-CHIANG I-SHIH. Writing in various forms about the southern Ming continued to appear in the later years of the Ch'ing. Hsu Feiyun's TS'AN MING SHU, Hsu Nai's HSIAO T'lEN CHI-CHUAN and HSIAO T'lEN CHI-NIEN, Yang Feng-pao's NAN-CHIANG I-SHIH SHIH-ERH PA, and Ch'ien I's NAN MING SHU are among the important works produced in the mid-Ch'ing. The term “Southern Ming” (Nan Ming) came from Ch'ien I's work and has been used by Chinese historians ever since. Unfortunately, Ch'ien's work is no longer in existence today.

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