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Recent Posts
- Imperial China – Palette for Miscellaenous Editing
- China’s Relics That Survived Qin Shihuangdi’s Book Burning – Debunking the Fodder That Was Fed to Sino-Plantonic Clique’s Nihilation of the Chinese Civilization
- Shan Hai Jing – The Book of Mountains and Seas
- Who Were The Eastern Yi People?
- Preliminary Discussion on the Forgeries in Chinese Classics
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Imperial China – Palette for Miscellaenous Editing
Welcome to Imperial China Blogging! Preliminary Discussions on Forgeries in Chinese Classics Huangdi – the Late Newcomer Chi-you – China’s Ancient Overlord Yandi’s Dynasty Re-write of China’s Prehistory Who Were the Eastern Yi People? Shan Hai Jing – The Book … Continue reading
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China’s Relics That Survived Qin Shihuangdi’s Book Burning – Debunking the Fodder That Was Fed to Sino-Plantonic Clique’s Nihilation of the Chinese Civilization
Chinese Civilization A total denial of the first Chinese dynasty of Xia by Victor Mair could be seen at http://sino-platonic.org/complete/spp238_xia_dynasty_china.pdf Mair’s basis was that the character ‘Xia’ was not found on the oracle bone, and that China’s 20th century ‘doubt-ancient’ … Continue reading
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Shan Hai Jing – The Book of Mountains and Seas
《山海經》- Shan Hai Jing (i.e, The Legends of Mountains and Seas) Shan Hai Jing (i.e, The Legends of Mountains and Seas) was a book compiled by Liu Xiu (Liu Xin) of the Western Han Dynasty. According to the preface that … Continue reading
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Who Were The Eastern Yi People?
This webmaster’s view is that the original Nine Yi people, being not homogeneous, could have lived in the interface ground among the three main groups of O1-, O2- and O3-haplogroup people [plus the C-haplogroup Tungunsic people]. The Nine Yi people, whom the … Continue reading
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Preliminary Discussion on the Forgeries in Chinese Classics
The ancient Chinese classics from prehistory, per Xiao Qi’s comment on Wang Jia’s Shi-yi-ji (Records of Collected Extant Heritage), were written on the jades wrapped by the golden threads, and inscribed using the bird-scratch-style characters and worm-crawl-style characters, with characters’ … Continue reading
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Huangdi – the Yellow Overlord
Huangdi’s line appears to be still a branch of the Sino-Tibetan group. However, he was implied to be the father of ‘Bei-di’ (北狄) or the ‘barbarian’ from the north in ‘The Legends of Mountains and Seas’, which was said to be a … Continue reading
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Chi-you – China’s Ancient Overlord
At http://www.imperialchina.org/ImperialChina/?p=12 this webmaster inferred that Yandi was likely an admixture of the O3-haplogroup and O2/O1-haplogroup people, who originally dwelled in the heartland of ancient China. As to Chi-you, the ancient scholars, in commenting on the extant works, repeatedly stated … Continue reading
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Yandi’s Dynasty
Yandi, being the inventor of “farming on the burnt wilderness” and “herbal medicine”, was said to be the same as Shennong-shi (the Divine Farmer), carrying the Fiery Overlord title. Yandi was said to be a successor to the Shennong-shi reign. In the … Continue reading
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Re-write of China’s Prehistory
This is a total re-write of China’s prehistory (http://www.imperialchina.org/Pre-history.html) which was previously jotted down in an objective way but more or less following the orthodox Huangdi or the Yellow Emperor (overlord) line, i.e., Sima Qian’s Shi Ji perspective. The new … Continue reading
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