24 Hours in Ancient China: A Day in the Life of the People Who Lived There

Bìa trước
Michael O'Mara Books, 25 thg 6, 2020 - 272 trang

Spend 24 hours with the ancient Chinese.

The year is
AD 17. The Han dynasty is in power and we are in and around Chang'an, the capital and one of the most developed regions of the empire, which is enjoying a prolonged economic and cultural pinnacle.

There are extraordinary palaces, military bases and city walls. Households are benefitting from the invention of numerous agricultural technologies and an unprecedented level of craft production, which includes ceramics, bronzes, iron objects and many other elaborate goods.

This is an age that is both vibrant and innovative but also riven with conflict and contradictions. For as successful as the empire is, the reality is that life for the ordinary inhabitants is still about the same problems: earning money, work struggles and family dramas.

Discover what one day in ancient China is like by spending twenty-four hours with the people who lived there. Every hour we meet a different person - from dancers to doctors, priests to convicts, textile workers to tomb looters - and build a multi-layered picture of the social fabric of ancient China and this fascinating period in history.

 

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Contents
丑 EIGHTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 01 0002
寅 TENTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 03 0004
寅 ELEVENTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 04 0005
卯 TWELFTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 05 0006
卯 FIRST HOUR OF THE DAY 06 0007
SECOND HOUR OF THE DAY 07 0008
THIRD HOUR OF THE DAY 08 0009
未 NINTH HOUR OF THE DAY 14 0015
TENTH HOUR OF THE DAY 15 0016
申 ELEVENTH HOUR OF THE DAY 16 0017
TWELFTH HOUR OF THE DAY 17 0018
FIRST HOUR OF THE NIGHT 18 0019
戌 SECOND HOUR OF THE NIGHT 19 0020
戌 THIRD HOUR OF THE NIGHT 20 0021
亥 FOURTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 21 0022

FIFTH HOUR OF THE DAY 10 0011
午 SIXTH HOUR OF THE DAY 11 0012
午 SEVENTH HOUR OF THE DAY 12 0013
未 EIGHTH HOUR OF THE DAY 13 0014
亥 FIFTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 22 0023
SIXTH HOUR OF THE NIGHT 23 0000
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Giới thiệu về tác giả (2020)

Dr Yijie Zhuang obtained his PhD in archaeology from Cambridge University and is now as Associate Professor in Chinese archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. He is primarily interested in ancient water-management systems and agricultural histories of China and South East Asia and has published many peer-reviewed articles and he has recenetly been surveying at an Iron Age site in Myanmar. He edited 30 Second Ancient China (Ivy Press).

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