Bad sons
Over at A Ku Indeed Chris asks about Mencius 4A28, in which Mencius commends Shun for transforming his father. He (Shun) considered that if one could not get t...
Over at A Ku Indeed Chris asks about Mencius 4A28, in which Mencius commends Shun for transforming his father. He (Shun) considered that if one could not get t...
Via HNN some information on standards for teaching history at the college level. For those of you who are not Americans, there has been a big push towards R...
Hooray for me! China Beat, my second favorite China blog, has started a series of quizzes — why didn’t we think of that? The most recent asked reade...
Just a quick post of a wonderful website I stumbled upon doing a bit of background research for a point I needed to make in the chapter I’m currently work...
Jeff Vanke, now blogging at The Historical Society’s THS Blog, was looking for some guidance on how to properly divide up the history of the world into fi...
The anniversary for the June 4th movement in China is just about here, once again shining a light on China’s progress in the human rights area in the last...
A description of the administrative methods of the Han Dynasty chancellor Cao Shen Day and night he drank strong liquor. Everyone from the aristocratic high off...
In an absolutely fascinating article on the modern petition redress system1 focusing on attempts by regional officials to prevent petitions from reaching a nati...
I was surprised to learn, about ten days ago, that PSU was going to be hosting a group of Tibetan Buddhist monks creating a sand mandala. This is a touring comp...
Here is a bit of a puzzle for our readers to clear up. A while back I pointed at a nice collection of 17th Century Dutch pictures of Japan. Jonathan Dresner was...
Recently, I’ve been looking at Maoist period elementary Chinese textbooks (or perhaps a better translation would be Language Arts textbooks), which are co...
Speechwars.com lets you see how many times American presidents have used various words in their State of the Union addresses. This is not a perfect representati...
Historians write a lot about taxes, in part because we are often interested in states and what they do, and taxes are something that states do a lot of. Taxatio...
Two Western Zhou bronze inscriptions, both dating from around 850 B.C. and describing the war against the Xianyun1 It was the ninth month, first auspiciousness,...