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CHINESE SOURCES OF SOUTH ASIAN HISTORY IN TRANSLATION : data for study of India-China relations through history, Vol.7: From nationalism to foreign occupation : Mongol Interlude

By: Language: English Publication details: Kolkata Asiatic Society 2004-<2018>Edition: 1Description: 103ISBN:
  • 8172361513 (v. 1)
  • 9788192061504 (v. 4)
  • 9789381574713 (v. 5)
  • 9789381574720 (v. 6)
  • 9789381574737 (v. 7)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.51054 HAR/CH
Incomplete contents:
v. 1. The Qin dynasty, the former and later Han dynasties, the period of the three kingdoms, (Liu) Song, Southern Qi, the northern, eastern, and western Wei dynasties (3rd century B.C.-6th century A.D.) -- v. 2. Chinese sources on ancient Indian geography -- v. 3. The Buddhist trilogy -- v. 4. The golden period of India-China relations (6th century AD-10th century AD) -- v. 5. Socio-econo-political relations between South India and China, AD 502-1620 : with emphasis on the fifteenth century -- v. 6. From religion to commerce : the maritime renzezvous between India and China, tenth to thirteenth century AD -- v. 7. From nationalism to foreign occupation : the Mongol interlude
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"This is the second volume of the series Chinese Sources of South Asian History in Translation. Entitled "Chinese Sources on Ancient Indian Geography", it comprises two texts on historical geography. The author has translated and annotated exhaustively the latest collated versions of the texts which will help the students of ancient Indian history and geography in exploring some of the hitherto unexplored domains of ancient India. The first work, Kang Tai's notices on Foreign Countries during the Wu Dynasty (AD 220-280) is a collated text of all available notices that go in the names of Kang Tai and other envoys and travellers whose writings are no more extant but are scattered in other collectanea. Collected over a number of years they give a coherent idea about the all-sea route passing through the Malacca straits touching Ge-Ying and Jia-na-Tiao (Ganadvipa), and reaching the Eastern and Southern India and may be the Asia Minor (Daqin). The second work, The Commentary on the Water Classic (5-6 cent. A.D.) does not only record the geography of Central Asia, but also acquaints us with profuse information on the countries nearby, and India, Afghanistan and other areas outside China. The author shows knowledge of many Indian cities of North, South and Eastern India, and gives the impression that to the Chinese the entire Indian continent constituted one geographical and political concept. Both the works are important additions to the libraries of bibliophiles and will prove to be sine qua non for the Indian orientalists researching for data on our past."
"Volume 4 of this series, titled the Golden Period of India – China Relations, contains extremely important data on China, Central Asia and India to the middle of the tenth century AD. Of special interest are the personal relations between emperor Harsavardhana and the Chinese monk Zuanzang; the remarks of the Indian Emperor after meeting the Chinese Pilgrim, details some of the accounts given by Wang Zuance, the Chinese envoy to India whose written accounts are lost now, as well as the political relations between the state of Kashmir, Tibet and China, etc. A must-read for scholars and students of ancient and medieval history of Asia."

v. 1. The Qin dynasty, the former and later Han dynasties, the period of the three kingdoms, (Liu) Song, Southern Qi, the northern, eastern, and western Wei dynasties (3rd century B.C.-6th century A.D.) -- v. 2. Chinese sources on ancient Indian geography -- v. 3. The Buddhist trilogy -- v. 4. The golden period of India-China relations (6th century AD-10th century AD) -- v. 5. Socio-econo-political relations between South India and China, AD 502-1620 : with emphasis on the fifteenth century -- v. 6. From religion to commerce : the maritime renzezvous between India and China, tenth to thirteenth century AD -- v. 7. From nationalism to foreign occupation : the Mongol interlude

Includes bibliographical references (v. 1, p. [201]-205) and index.

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