The Terracotta Warriors near the Tomb of Emperor Qin Shihuang (259BC- 210BC) in Xi’an city is regarded as the eighth marvel in the world. With great study values in military, economy and culture of its time, the excavation and exhibition of the grand Terracotta Duplicates has shocked the world and attracted thousands of visitors home and abroad. Today, Terracotta duplicates are designed for sale as tourist souvenirs according to the primary Terracotta Warriors in kinds of shapes and sizes. Terracotta duplicates can be found in museums, galleries, hotels and souvenir shops in Xi’an city as well as some other famous tourist cities like Guilin. Some of the duplicates are made in the same size as the original ones, while some in scaling down sizes that easy to be carried as decorations in offices and houses, or gifts for friends and relatives. Owing to the different making materials and sizes, the prices of Terracotta duplicates are various from tens of yuan to thousands of yuan for visitors options.
Category: Chinese customs
Chinese Paintings
Chinese Painting, or Chinese ink and wash, also called Guo Hua (国画) in Chinese, is well-known for its unique art form and painting skills. Chinese painting is generally done on rice paper or silk, sometimes also on fan, porcelain, bowl, dish and screen; and painting materials include brushes, Chinese ink and dye. There are broadly three subjects for traditional Chinese paintings, portrait, landscape, and flowers and birds, of which the landscape is the most familiar with people that the Chinese painting often known as mountains and waters painting, or Shan Shui Hua (Chinese:山水画).
Chinese painting has a long historical standing as early as 2000 years ago in the Warring States Period (475BC- 221BC) and done on silks. From the premier religious painting to the landscape and flowers and birds in the two Han dynasties (202BC- 220AD), Chinese painting was flourishing in Tang Dynasty (618-907) and matured in different styles in Ming and Qing dynasties (1368-1911).
Chinese paintings are often mounted into frames or scrolls, and generally combine with Chinese calligraphy. On a typical Chinese painting, there is always an inscription as well as the painter’s seal on the corner space; what is more interesting is that some genuine pieces by great painters are always full of seals and inscriptions, as collectors in the past were habituated to put on their own seals and add some new inscriptions on paintings. Therefore, some paintings are extremely precious with many seals and inscriptions by quite a few great painters and some emperors, while it is also a pity that sometimes too much to cover parts of the paintings. Today, famous paintings of past dynasties are generally collected in national museums; and those paintings of modern times in markets are with sole seal or inscription of the painter. To buy a Chinese painting, visitors may go to the specialized shops around scenic spots, art academies and art galleries.
Systematization of Modern TCM
Modern TCM can be classified to be Basic TCM and Clinical TCM.
The Basic TCM contains Basic Theories of Chinese Medicine, Diagnostics of Chinese Medicine, Science of Chinese Pharmacology, Formulas of Chinese Medicine, Internal Canon of Medicine, Treatise on Febrile Diseases, History of Chinese Medicine, Doctrines of Various Historical Schools, etc.
The Clinical TCM includes Internal Medicine of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Surgery of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Gynaecologic Traditional Chinese Medicine, Paediatrics of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chinese Acupuncture, Chinese Orthopedics and Traumatology, Chinese Massage, Chinese Ophthalmology, Chinese Otolaryngology, Chinese and Western Integrative Medicine, Chinese Qigong (breathing technique), TCM Nursing Care, etc.
Common Therapies of TCM
a. Herbal Ingredients
Nowadays Chinese herbal medicines can be classified into two: raw herbal ingredients and Chinese patent drugs.
Raw herbal ingredients (usually sun-dried herbs as well as animals such as snake gall, minerals such as magnetite, ostracum such as pearls, etc) are available in private TCM clinics, pharmacies and hospitals. People can decoct them with water and drink the decoction following the doctor's advice. Due to natures and characters of different medicinal herbs, the decocting time and decocting methods may vary. Therefore, people should pay attention to that to gain the best curative effect while decocting.
By contrast, Chinese patent drugs (decoction, pills, electuary, pulvis, vinum, troche, syrup, electuary, medicinal tea, etc) are more convenient, as they have usually been processed by modern medical technology and patients can take them directly. Generally speaking, herbal therapy is most widely used among all of the TCM treatments.
b. Acupuncture and Moxibustion(针灸)
Acupuncture is a traditional Chinese medical treatment of pain or disease by inserting the tips of needles at specific points on the skin, while moxibustion treats patients by burning moxa strips or moxa cones above the skin to warm specific acupoints up to regulate the qi and blood of the body.
Clinically, acupuncture and moxibustion are adopted on different acupoints according to the pathogenesis diagnosed by traditional Chinese medical treatment. As a miraculous part of TCM, the acupuncture-moxibustion therapy has been spread to the world early in the 6th century.
There is a story between this old treatment and James Reston, former director of New York Times, who was sent to Beijing for covering news in July of 1971. During his stay in Beijing, Reston had a successful appendectomy but felt pain on the next day. With his permit, Doctor Li, who is an expert of acupuncture and moxibustion, treated Reston by acupuncture and moxibustion therapy. Unimaginably, Reston’s symptom eased and never relapsed after that. Returning to the USA, this famous journalist published an article about his personal medical experience in China, which made this old Chinese medical treatment known in his country.
So far, acupuncture and moxibustion have been used in over 120 countries and regions; in addition, acupuncture and moxibustion organizations, educational institutions and research institutes (such as Medical College of Paris University) were set up in the world. It is reported that acupuncture and moxibustion therapy is effective at 307 diseases, of which over 100 get significant effect. In 1980, 43 diseases were recommended to use the therapy by the World Health Organization (WHO). Then in 1987, the World Federation of Acupuncture and Moxibustion Societies (WFAS) was established in Beijing, which marks acupuncture and moxibustion is officially notarized as a part of world medical community. On November 16th, 2010, this therapy was listed as “Intangible Cultural Heritage” by the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
Origin and Development of TCM
The original TCM emerged in primitive society, then formed its basic medical theory and developed iatrology and anatomy during the Spring and Autumn Period (771 BC – 403 BC). Together with Four Diagnostic Methods, in that time stone needles, acupuncture, decoction of medicinal ingredients, moxa-moxibustion and some other methods have been used in medical treatment, and human physiology began to be related to the Taoist Yin & Yang, and five elements.
In Eastern Han Dynasty (25 AD – 220 AD), the famous medical scientist Zhang Zhongjing had realized the “Eight Principal Syndromes” (阴阳: Yin and Yang, 表里: exterior and interior, 寒热: cold and heat, 虚实: hypofunction and hyperfunction) and summarized the “Eight Therapeutic Methods” (emesis, purgation , mediation, warming, heat reducing, toning up, and elimination); another doctor and metical scientist Hua Tuo was famous for excelling in surgical operation and anesthesia, and he had also invented a set of body building exercise – Wuqinxi, which is based on movements of tiger, deer, bear, ape, and crane; moreover, “Sheng Nong's Herbal Classic”, the first TCM monograph, was also completed in this dynasty.
It was Tang Dynasty (618 – 907) when one of the earliest pharmacopeia "Tang Materia Medica" was issued by the imperial authority of the dynasty; and Sun Simiao, who is still respected as "King of Medicine" by Chinese today, summed up the antecedent medical experience and gathered over 5000 prescriptions. With the coming of boom period of Tang Dynasty and its following dynasties, traditional Chinese medical science and a large number of Chinese medical writings were diffused to Japan, Korea, Central Asia, West Asia and some other areas.
During the Song Dynasty, imperial medical colleges were set up and medical branches were classified in a more systematic way, and the illustrated pharmacopoeia "Ben Cao Tu Jing" was published.
From the Jin (1115 – 1234) and Yuan (1271 – 1368) dynasties, TCM began to decline. At the late Ming Dynasty, one of the most famous TCM doctor Li Shizhen summarized the TCM materials and experience before the 16th century and authored the "Compendium of Materia Medica", which is hailed as a priceless treasure of TCM.
When the history moved into the end of Qing Dynasty (1616 – 1912), the western powers’ invasion to China made a great impact on the country, including change in medical science. With the pouring in of western medicine, some Chinese people began to advocate it and the development of TCM faced a huge challenge, but it is fortunate that it is still passed on from generation to generation until this day.
After the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949, the government attached great importance to TCM and series of measures were adopted to protect its development. Chairman Mao Zedong, the founder of PRC, said TCM is one of the most the great treasures that China contributes to the world.
Traditional Chinese Medicine
According to research, TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) had been very popular during the Qin and Han dynasties and many monographs on TCM were written, which are regrettably lost today. In the following dynasties, more medical writings came out successively, among which the “Sheng Nong's Herbal Classic” and the “Compendium of Materia Medica” are the most foremost and famous ones. Nowadays, TCM is still very popular among Chinese people even if the western medical technology produces effect faster. The most important reason for that is Chinese people believe that TCM makes less side-effect and pays more attention to health cultivation. For a long time, TCM impact exerts a deep influence on Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese medical science. Today, TCM is classified as alternative medicine as well as hypnotherapy, Homeopathic Medicine and others. In China today, courses of both western medicine and TCM are commonly provided in medical colleges, and students can even choose a college of traditional Chinese medicine where they have a chance to study more about TCM.
Chinese Modern Architecture
The Chinese Modern Architecture refers to those built after the first Opium War in 1840. Chinese architecture remains the traditional styles under the close policy of Qing government until the Opium War in the middle of 19th century that western concepts and styles of are introduced into China which brings new blood and ideas to Chinese architecture.
Chinese Buildings and Related laws
1. Related Laws of Land and Housing in China According to the laws, land in the cities is owned by the state, and land in the rural and suburban areas is own by collectives except for those portions which belong to the state; house sites and privately farmed plots of cropland and hilly land are also owned by collectives. Land can only be transferred in line with laws and land sales are illegal in China.
Features of Ancient Chinese Architecture
Wood Frame Structure Wood is the main material in ancient Chinese architecture and most of the buildings are in wood frame structure. The wood frame can successfully separate the bearing structure (the wood frame) and the maintaining structure (walls), what’s more, for the special properties, wood can easily adapt to different climates, effectively diminish the destroy of the earthquakes, and more important, it is the material to be find easily on the spot.
Styles of Ancient Chinese Architecture
1. Four Basic Styles of Ancient Chinese Architecture Chinese architectures can be divided into many types and styles but generally falls into four basic ones.