Bulletin (Östasiatiska Samlingarna (Stockholm, Sweden))"Bibliography of publications based upon collections made with the support of the Swedish China research committee, by Fr. E. Åhlander": Bulletin no. 1, p. 185-191. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 17
Page 12
At this later point in time Confucian exegesis recognized taotie as a moral symbol of gluttony , and cthonic , popular belief of the time recognized taotie as one of many shiren - spirits who devour men or shixie - spirits who devour ...
At this later point in time Confucian exegesis recognized taotie as a moral symbol of gluttony , and cthonic , popular belief of the time recognized taotie as one of many shiren - spirits who devour men or shixie - spirits who devour ...
Page 13
The passage moralizes on the greed of the Duke Ji of Ying ( Chu ) and the unfilial acts of his son Pu at the court of Duke Xuan of Lu by citing a reference to taotie from the far distant past . If later literary evidence is used in ...
The passage moralizes on the greed of the Duke Ji of Ying ( Chu ) and the unfilial acts of his son Pu at the court of Duke Xuan of Lu by citing a reference to taotie from the far distant past . If later literary evidence is used in ...
Page 14
To Han and earlier Warring States man taotie were respected as beneficent powers who destroyed evil by devouring it . One of the Shanhaijing spirits who eats men is called Gouxiao ( Hook Owl ) . The spirit resides on Gouwu mountain ...
To Han and earlier Warring States man taotie were respected as beneficent powers who destroyed evil by devouring it . One of the Shanhaijing spirits who eats men is called Gouxiao ( Hook Owl ) . The spirit resides on Gouwu mountain ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abbreviated abstract According ancestral portraits animal animal image animal mask Anyang appears argali Beijing bird body bone bone inscriptions buffalo carried century chariot China Chinese cicada claws Collection deceased decorated deer depicted described devouring ding displayed divined Drawing dynasty earlier Early ears evidence example extension face feathers four funeral graph hall head Henan horns human hunt identified illustrated imagery inscriptions jade king known Lady Late Shang later limbs meaning Middle Ming Ming dynasty Museum offered official op.cit origin painted painter pattern Period person placed Press province Qing qingtongqi reference religious remains rendered representation represented rite ritual royal scholar seen Shang bronze significant silk similar species spirit spirit-tablet style symbol Taipei taotie term tiger tomb tradition University vessel Wenwu wife wild Xiaotun Yinxu Zhongguo Zhou