Show
40 citations
related to Tang dynasty (China, 618-907)
Show
40 citations
related to Tang dynasty (China, 618-907) as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Linda Rui Feng
(2022)
Producing Knowledge of the Sea Coast: Marine Life and a Tang Geographical Miscellany of Lingnan.
East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine.
(/isis/citation/CBB898481566/)
Chapter
Von Glahn, Richard
(2022)
The Tang–Song Transition in Chinese Economic History.
In: The Cambridge economic history of China. Vol. 1, To 1800
(pp. 24-256).
(/isis/citation/CBB273506540/)
Chapter
Von Glahn, Richard; Lamouroux, Christian
(2022)
Public Finance.
In: The Cambridge economic history of China. Vol. 1, To 1800
(pp. 340-380).
(/isis/citation/CBB526306297/)
Book
D. Jonathan Felt
(2021)
Structures of the Earth: Metageographies of Early Medieval China.
(/isis/citation/CBB997951735/)
Chapter
Qi Han; Xiaoyuan Jiang
(2021)
Invention and Evolution of Printing.
In: A New Phase of Systematic Development of Scientific Theories in China: History of Science and Technology in China Volume 4
(pp. 291-333).
(/isis/citation/CBB838509872/)
Article
Alexis Lycas
(2020)
The Patterned Guidelines of Shazhou (shazhou Tujing) and Geographical Practices in Tang China.
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
(pp. 479-497).
(/isis/citation/CBB127255711/)
Book
Konrad Herrmann; Guan Zengjian
(2020)
Kao Gong Ji: The World's Oldest Encyclopaedia of Technologies.
(/isis/citation/CBB593330134/)
Book
Ao Wang
(2018)
Spatial Imaginaries in Mid-Tang China: Geography, Cartography, and Literature.
(/isis/citation/CBB875745228/)
Article
Linda Rui Feng
(2018)
Can Lost Maps Speak? Toward a Cultural History of Map Reading in Medieval China.
Imago Mundi: A Review of Early Cartography
(pp. 169-182).
(/isis/citation/CBB635819769/)
Article
Dominic Steavu
(2018)
The Marvelous Fungus and The Secret of Divine Immortals.
Micrologus: Nature, Sciences and Medieval Societies
(pp. 353-384).
(/isis/citation/CBB732903543/)
Chapter
Shenmi Song
(2016)
The Twelve Signs of the Zodiac during the Tang and Song Dynasties: A Set of Signs Which Lost Their Meanings within Chinese Horoscopic Astrology.
In: The Circulation of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ancient World
(pp. 478-526).
(/isis/citation/CBB578449181/)
Article
Louis Fu
(2015)
Medical Missionaries to China: The Antecedents.
Journal of Medical Biography
(pp. 45-54).
(/isis/citation/CBB895241556/)
Article
Lim, Tina Su-lyn; Wagner, Donald B.
(2013)
The Grand Astrologer's Platform and Ramp: Four Problems in Solid Geometry from Wang Xiaotong's “Continuation of Ancient Mathematics” (7th Century AD).
Historia Mathematica
(pp. 3-35).
(/isis/citation/CBB001252137/)
Article
Lowrey, Ying; Baumol, Wiliam J.
(2013)
Rapid Invention, Slow Industrialization, and the Absent Innovative Entrepreneur in Medieval China.
Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society
(pp. 1-21).
(/isis/citation/CBB001450282/)
Article
Liao, Wenfang
(2012)
An Explanation of the Original Plant of “Mulan” in Ancient Books.
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
(p. 428).
(/isis/citation/CBB001200181/)
Chapter
Christopher Cullen
(2011)
Reflections on the Transmission and Transformation of Technologies: Agriculture, Printing and Gunpowder between East and West.
In: Science between Europe and Asia: Historical Studies on the Transmission, Adoption and Adaptation of Knowledge
(pp. 13-26).
(/isis/citation/CBB689327508/)
Book
Saberi, Helen
(2010)
Tea: A Global History.
(/isis/citation/CBB001500553/)
Thesis
Salguero, C. Pierce
(2010)
Buddhist Medicine in Medieval China: Disease, Healing, and the Body in Crosscultural Translation (Second to Eighth Centuries C.E.).
(/isis/citation/CBB001561130/)
Article
Wu, Jiabi
(2009)
Bian Gang's Method of “Subtract before Multiply” as Derived from Yi Xing.
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
(p. 376).
(/isis/citation/CBB000933771/)
Article
Li, Zhen
(2009)
Study on the Masonry of Traditional Chinese Architecture during and after the Sui and Tang Dynasties.
Ziran Kexueshi Yanjiu (Studies in the History of Natural Sciences)
(p. 227).
(/isis/citation/CBB000933761/)
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