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

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

Spend 24 hours with the ancient Chinese.

Travel back to AD 17, during the fourth year of the reign of Wang Mang of the Han dynasty, a vibrant and innovative era full of conflicts and contradictions. But as different as the Han culture might have been to other great ancient civilizations, the inhabitants of ancient China faced the same problems as people have for time immemorial: earning enough money, coping with workplace dramas and keeping your home in order . although the equivalent in this era was more about bribing inspectors, avoiding bullying from abusive watchmen and trying to keep your house from being looted by Huns.

In each chapter we meet one of 24 citizens of this ancient culture, from the midwife to the soldier, the priest to the performer and the blacksmith to the tomb looter, and see what an average day in ancient China was really like.

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Giới thiệu về tác giả (2020)

Yijie Zhuang obtained his PhD from the Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge. He is now a senior lecturer in Chinese archaeology at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. He teaches several courses on Chinese and East Asian archaeology such as Archaeologies of Asia, and Art and Archaeology of Early Imperial China. He has conducted intensive fieldwork in different parts of East and South-East Asia. He is primarily interested in the reconstruction of the water-management systems and agricultural ecologies of both the monsoonal and arid regions of Asia and in how these related to long-term social evolution. He edited 30 Second Ancient China (Ivy Press).

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