[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Iranians in China

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Detail of the stone panel painting on the sarcophagus, depicting two nimbate male figures dressing in Sasanian-style attire, drinking wine and playing pipa. Tomb of Yu Hong, 6th century CE.
Left: a man holding a plate of fruits; right: a bearded man is performing the Huteng ("Barbarian leap") dance. Both figures have haloes. Tomb of Yu Hong, 6th century CE.

Iranian people, such as Persians and Sogdians, have lived in China throughout various periods in history.

History

[edit]
Persian ambassador at the Chinese court of Emperor Yuan of Liang in his capital Jingzhou in 526-539 CE, with explanatory text. Portraits of Periodical Offering of Liang, 11th century Song copy.

The Parthian Iranian An Shigao introduced Hinayana Buddhism to China, while the Kushan Lokaksema introduced Mahayana Buddhism.[1]

Chorasmians

[edit]

Shams al-Din was an Iranian of Khwarezmian origin from Bukhara, and was appointed by the Mongols to serve as the first provincial governor of Yunnan, in southwestern China. He was allegedly descended from 'Alī bin Abī Tālib and the Prophet, Sayyid Ajall's father was Kamāl al-Dīn and his grandfather was Shams al-Dīn 'Umar al-Bukhārī. He served the court of the Yuan dynasty at Yanjing (modern day Beijing). Later, he was in charge of Imperial finances in 1259, sent to Yunnan by Kublai Khan after conquering the Kingdom of Dali in 1274. After his death, Sayyid was given the posthumous name Zhongyi (忠懿). Later, the imperial court conferred the title "Prince of Xianyang" (咸陽王) and the posthumous name Zhonghui (忠惠) to him.[2]

Nasr al-Din (Persian: نصرالدین; Chinese: 納速剌丁, pinyin: Nàsùládīng;) (died 1292) was a provincial governor of Yunnan during the Yuan dynasty succeeded by his brother 忽先 Hu-sien (Hussein).[3]

Persians

[edit]

Tang dynasty

[edit]
Tang-dynasty foreigner. Shaanxi History Museum, Xi'an

Sassanian royals like Peroz III and his son Narsieh fled the Arab Islamic invasion of Sassanid Persia for safety in Tang dynasty China where they were granted asylum.[4]

The Chinese pirate Feng Ruofang stored Persian slaves on Hainan whom he captured when raiding ships in the 8th century.[5] Hainan was filled with Persian slaves by Feng from his raids on their shipping.[6][7][8][9][10] Persians sought a hardwood grown in Guangdong province.[11] In 758 there was a raid on Canton by Persians and Arabs and then there was an attack in 760 in Yangzhou upon Persians and Arabs.[12][13] On Hainan 100 katis of incense were burned in a single go by Feng.[14][15]

Five dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period

[edit]

During the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period (Wudai) (907–960), there are examples of Chinese emperors marrying Persian women. "In the times of Wudai (907–960) the emperors preferred to marry Persian women, and the Song dynasty official families liked to marry women from Dashi [Arabia]" was written by Chen Yuan.[16]

Former Shu
[edit]
Textile fragment featuring a drinking scene of two Byzantines or Central Asians within the so-called "Sogdian pearl roundel"; Shu brocade, 7th–10th century.
Textile fragment featuring a Sasanian horsemen hunting scene within a "Sogdian pearl roundel"; Shu brocade, 7th–10th century.

Many Iranians took the Chinese name Li to use as their last name when they moved to China. One prominent Iranian family included Li Xuan (李玹) and Li Xun [zh]. Sources say that either one of them was responsible for writing the Hai Yao Ben Cao (Chinese: 海藥本草; Wade–Giles: Hai Yao Pen Ts'ao), translating to "Overseas Pharmacopoeia".[17] Li Xun was interested in foreign drugs and his book, The Haiyao Bencao, was all about foreign drugs. His family sold drugs for a living.[18][19]

Li Xuan had an older sister Li Shunxian, who was known for being beautiful and was a concubine of the Former Shu Emperor Wang Zongyan, and a brother older than both of them named Li Xun. They lived at the court of the royal family of Former Shu in Chengdu (modern-day Sichuan). Li Shunxian also was a poet. Their family had come to China in 880 and were a wealthy merchant family. Li Xuan dealt with Taoist alchemy, perfumes and drugs.[20]

The Huang Chao rebellion had earlier made their family flee. Li Susha, an Iranian who dealt in the incense trade, is speculated to be the grandfather of the three siblings.[21]

Lo Hsiang-lin wrote a biography of the three siblings. The family were Nestorian Christians. The two brothers then became Taoist. Li Xun was also a poet who wrote in the manner of Chinese Song poetry. Li Xuan used urine to concoct "steroid sex hormones".[22]

Iranians dominated the drug trade in China. In 824, Li Susha presented to Emperor Jingzong, the chen xiang ting zi, a type of drug.[23]

Li Xun wrote poems in the tz'u style and was one of its masters. He and his brother Li Xuan traded in the drug business. The family lived in Sichuan.[24]

Li Xun was known for his poetry and being the author of Overseas Pharmacopoeia (海藥本草). He and his brother Li Xuan were also well known perfume merchants who lived in the 900s AD. They lived at the court of the Former Shu.[25] Li Xuan also, in addition to being an "alchemist", "naturalist" and "chess master", composed poetry like his brother.[26]

Southern Han
[edit]

From the tenth to twelfth century, Persian women were to be found in Guangzhou (Canton), some of them in the tenth century like Mei Zhu in the harem of the Emperor Liu Chang, and in the twelfth century large numbers of Persian women lived there, noted for wearing multiple earrings and "quarrelsome dispositions".[27][28] It was recorded that "The Po- ssu-fu at Kuang-chou make holes all round their ears. There are some who wear more than twenty ear-rings."[29] Descriptions of the sexual activities between Liu Chang and the Persian woman in the Song dynasty book the "Ch'ing-i-lu" by T'ao Ku were so graphic that the "Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library), Issue 2" refused to provide any quotes from it while discussing the subject.[30] Liu had free time with the Persian women by delegating the task of governing to others.[31] Multiple women originating from the Persian Gulf lived in Guangzhou's foreign quarter, they were all called "Persian women" (波斯婦 Po-ssu-fu or Bosifu).[32]

Some scholars did not differentiate between Persian and Arab, and some say that the Chinese called all women coming from the Persian Gulf "Persian Women".[33]

The young Chinese Emperor Liu Chang of the Southern Han dynasty had a harem, including one Persian girl he nicknamed Mei Zhu, which means "Beautiful Pearl". Liu liked the Persian girl (Mei Zhu) because of her tan skin color, described in French as "peau mate" (olive or light brown skinned). He and the Persian girl also liked to force young couples to go naked and play with them in the palace.[34][35] and he favored her by "doting" on her. During the first year of his reign, he was not over sixteen years old when he had a taste for intercourse with Persian girls.[36] The Persian girl was called a "princess".[37]

The Wu Tai Shï says that Liu Ch'ang [劉鋹], Emperor of the Southern Han dynasty reigning at Canton, about A.D. 970. "was dallying with his palace girls and Persian [波斯] women in the inner apartments, and left the government of his state to the ministers."[38] The History of the Five Dynasties (Wu Tai Shih) stated that- "Liu Chang then with his court- ladies and Po-ssu woman, indulged in amorous affiurs in the harem".[39]

Song dynasty

[edit]

Guangzhou (Canton) had a community which included Persian women in the 10th-12th centuries, found in Liu Chang's harem in the 10th century and in Song dynasty era Guangzhou in the 12th century the Persian women (波斯婦) there were observed wearing many earrings.[40][41][42][43]

The Muslim women in Guangzhou were called either Persian women 波斯婦 or Pusaman 菩薩蠻 菩萨蛮 according to Zhu Yu (author)'s book "Pingzhou ke tan" 萍洲可談 which may be from "Mussulman" or "Bussulman" which means Muslim in Persian.[44][45][46][47][48][49] [50] Pusaman was also the name of a tune 樂府 about female dancers sent as tribute to China.[51][52][53]

Ming dynasty

[edit]
Sogdians, depicted on the Anyang funerary bed, circa 567/573.
Sogdians on the Tomb of Wirkak, 580 CE.[54]

Of the Han Chinese Li family in Quanzhou, Lin Nu, the son of Li Lu, visited Hormuz in Persia in 1376, married a Persian or an Arab girl, and brought her back to Quanzhou. Li Nu was the ancestor of the Ming Dynasty reformer Li Chih.[55][56] Lin Nu and his descendants were erased from the family genealogy by his relatives who were angry at him for converting to Islam and marrying a Persian girl because xenophobic feeling against foreigners was strong at that time due to Persian Semu atrocities in the Ispah Rebellion in which the Yuan defeated the Ispah and the Semu were massacred. The branch of the family who held to their Chinese customs felt ashamed so they changed their surname from Lin to Li to avoid associating with their relatives, Lin Nu's descendants with his Persian wife who practiced Islam.[57]

Sogdians

[edit]

Tang dynasty

[edit]

Sogdians in China used 9 Chinese surnames after the Chinese name of the states they came from.[58][59][60][61][62]

Xizhou had a Han and Sogdian population.[63] A record from the Astana Cemetery dating to 639 preserves the transaction where a Sogdian slave girl was being sold in Xizhou. The Han Zhang family also owned Chunxiang, a Turk slave woman in Xizhou. He Deli, a Sogdian who knew how to speak Turkic, Chinese and translated.[64][65][66][67][68][69][70] 120 coins of silver were paid for the slave girl[71] from Samarkand.[72] The contract was written in Sogdian.[73] Translated by Yoshida Yutaka.[74][65] The slave girl was from the Chuyakk family and born in Central Asia. Upach was her name and the buyer's name was written as Yansyan in Sogdian from the Chan family. The seller of the slave was from Samarqand called Wakhushuvirt and his father was Tudhakk The contract said they could they do anything they wanted to Upach, give her away, sell her, abuse her, beat her and she belonged to Yansyan's family forever.[75] Zhang Yanxiang 張延相, whose name is found in Chinese language documents in Turfan, is believed to be Chan Yansyan.[76][77][78][79][80][81] Kuchean girls were sold as slaves in the Jin and Wei dynasties. On the Silk Road, slave girls were a major item and much more expensive than silk. Silk was up to five times less than the value of a slave girl.[vague] Central Asian slave girls were exported from Central Asia Iranian areas to China. It is believed wealthy merchants and noblemen of the Chinese capital of Chang'an, were the consumers for the huge number of Central Asian slave women brought by the Sogdians, to sell to the Chinese. The Central Asian foreign women in the Sogdian owned wineshops in the Chinese capital are believed to have been slaves, as Chinese poets depicted then as homesick, sad and melancholy and they would service travelers by keeping them company overnight. Merchants and literati would frequent the wineshops.[82] The Sogdians reaped massive profits from selling slave girls and so did the Chinese government by taxing the sale of the slaves. Slave girls were one of the major products Chinese bought from Sogdians. Persian poets often wrote about wine and women since the wineservers were often girls and this wine culture with girl servers seems to have spread to China. There were many Sogdian wineshops and Persian shops in Chang'an along with a large slave market. The wineshops were staffed with young girls who served wine to customers and danced for them. Most of the slave girls were 14 or 15 years old. They provided services like sex, dancing, singing, and served wine to their customers in Chang'an as ordered their masters.

A Sogdian merchant, Kang Weiyi had Indian, Central Asian, and Bactrians among the 15 slave girls he was bringing to sell in the Chinese capital of Chang'an.[83][84][85][86][87] Khotan and Kucha both sold women for sexual services.[88][89]

Shi Randian was a Xizhou Sogdian merchant who had a Chinese military title.[90][91] He went to Guazhou to trade from Kucha.[73] He went to Shazhou and Yizhou.[92] A local acted as Shi Randian's guarantor.[93]

Sogdian figures on the "Tomb of An Jia", Xi'an, China. Dated 579 CE. Shaanxi History Museum.[94]

In 731 a Han Chinese called Tang Rong 唐榮 from the capital district bought an 11 year old slave girl Shimaner 失滿兒 from Mi Lushan 米祿山, a Sogdian recorded in a contract written in Chinese.[91] There was a translator in Xizhou, Di Nanipan who had a Sogdian name but a non-Sogdian surname. Either he was not a Sogdian and was given the name because Sogdian language was prevalent or only his mother was Sogdian was his father was Han.

Sogdians opened shops which sold wine and had dance performances by Sogdian women called 胡姬酒肆. The poet Li Bai in his poem Shao Nian Xing wrote about a young man who entered one of these Huji Jiusi shops.[95][96]

Lady Caoyena 曹野那 was a concubine of the Chinese Emperor Xuanzong of Tang and gave birth to the Princess of Shou'an Li Chongniang 李蟲娘. The historian Ge Chengji identified Caoyena as a Sogdian from the Principality of Ushrusana 曹國 (昭武九姓) as indicated by the surname Cao which was adopted by Sogdians from Ushrusana who came to China since China called Ushrusana "Cao kingdom" and while Yena is a foreign name to Chinese, it is a unisex Sogdian name which means "most favorite person" in Sogdian.[97][98] She may have been one of the Sogdian Hu women "胡人女子" or Sogdian whirling dancing girls "胡旋女" who were given as tribute by Sogdians to China. Names like Cao Yena and Cao Yanna were used by Sogdians which appears on historical texts from Turfan. Chinese frequently bought Hu (Sogdian) slave girls in the Gaochang (Turfan) markets.[99][100][101][102][103] Yena means favorite one in Sogdian.[104][105]

Acrobats and dancers
[edit]
Sogdian Huteng dancer, Xiuding temple pagoda, Anyang, Hunan, China, Tang dynasty, 7th century.
Pilgrim flask with Central Asian dancers, China, 6th century CE. Metropolitan Museum of Art

Li Bai wrote a poem about a boy riding a white horse "gently walking in the spring breeze. Where can he be going, after having trodden upon so many fallen flowers? Behold! How he smiles as he enters a tavern attended by a Persian girl!" The dancing girls jumped and whirled with silk gauze clothing. Western caucasian girls ran these wine stores as Li Bai wrote: "... how he smiles as he enters a bar tended by a Persian girl." These blue eyed girls were frequented by playboys in Chang'an.[106] The northeastern Iranian Sogdians in Khumdeh, Maimargh, Samarkand, and Kesh in 718, 719, 727, and 729 sent dancing whirling girls as tribute to the Chinese Imperial court. Yuan Chen and Bo Juyi wrote poems on these Sogdian girls.[107][108][109][110][111] The poem by Bo Juyi says the Iranian girl from Sogdia whirled while drums and strings were played and bowed to the Emperor when it was over. It mentioned people already in China learned how to do the whirl like An Lushan and Yang Guifei.[112][113][114][115] Yuan Chen mentioned that a whirling girl was given to the Emperor by the Iranians at the time of An Lushan's rebellion and that the Emperor was enchanted by her dance. The song mentions sashes around her body twirling as she danced.[116] Xuangzang's flight to Sichuan is mentioned at the end of the song.[117] Chinese cities saw high demand for dancers from Central Asia and in the wineshops of the cities the Iranian waitresses were admired over by young Chinese poets.[118] China and India had major appetite for Iranian dancers.[119] Blue eyed waitresses in the pleasure quarters poured wine. Giant balls were used to dance on by the Sogdian whirling girls and dancers from Tashkent.[120] Tashkent dancing girls, according to Bai Juyi, bared their shoulders by pulling their blouses and came out of lotuses when starting their dance. The twirling girls from Sogdia danced on rolling balls and wore boots made of deerskin which were colored red, green pants, and crimson robes and they were sent to the Emperor Xuanzong. Western singing and dancing girls filled Chang'an taverns.[121][122][123] Samarkand and Tashkent dancing girls who came to China were called "hu" which was used by Chinese to refer to Iranian countries.[124] Dancing girls were among the gifts sent in 10 diplomatic embassies from "Persia" to China in the reigns of Kaiyuan (Emperor Ruizong)) and Tianbao (Emperor Xuanzong).[125][126] Emperor Yan-si (Emperor Yang of Sui) received from Persia 10 young girl dancers.[127][128][129][130] Central Asian Iranian girls who performed as acrobats, dancers, musicians, and waitresses were referred to by Chinese poets as Hu ji 胡姬. Tokharestan and Sogdiana style dances like boti, huteng 柘枝, and huxuan 胡旋.[131] The Shi kingdom (Tashkent) brought the Huteng dance to China which involved back flips, leaps and spinning. The Kang kingdom brought the "whirling barbarian" huxuan dance to China. It involved spinning while dressed in shoes of red leather and white pants by a woman. The Jumi, Shi, Wei, and Kang kingdoms in Central Asia sent dance girls to perform the huxuan dance for the Xuanzong Emperor in the Tianbao and Kaiyuan eras. Bai Juyi wrote the "Huxuan Dance Girl" poem. The "thorn branch" zhezhi dance was another one introduced to China.[132] The Sogdian Kang kingdom is where huxuan dance came from according to the Tong Dian by Du Yu. In Luoyang and Chang'an these Serindian dances were extremely popular.[133][134] Huxian and Huteng dances had connections to the Zoroastrian beliefs practiced in Sogdiana.[135] Huxian and Huteng were practiced by Central Asians in the Northern Qi dynasty of China.[136] Huxuan dance was introduced to China through long journeys over thousands of kilometers by girls from Kang in Sogdia.[137][138][139][140][141] In the T'ang Annals we read that in the beginning of the period K'ai-yuan (a.d. 713-741) the country of K'an (Sogdiana), an Iranian region, sent as tribute to the Chinese Court coats-of-mail, cups of rock-crystal, bottles of agate, ostrich-eggs, textiles styled yüe no, dwarfs, and dancing-girls of Hu-suan 胡旋 (Xwārism).1 In the Ts'e fu yüan kwei the date of this event is more accurately fixed in the year 718.2[142][143]

The Dunhuang ruler received from the Ganzhou Kaghan 40 Sogdian slaves as tribute.[144]

Central Asian rulers from Chach sent dancing girls and from Khuttal sent singing girls to Tang dynasty China.[145]

Central Asian rulers sent slave musicians as tribute to China. A female musician troupe was sent from the upper Oxus country of Khuttal by its king in 733 to China. The Tang dynasty Chinese Xuanzang (Hsüan Tsung) emperor's court received Sogdian girls who danced on rolling balls and dressed in boots of red deerskin, pantoloons made of green damask and crimson robes as tribute from Samarkand, Maimargh, Kish and Kumadh in the beginning of the 8th century. They were called "Western Twirling Girls" and these female dancers were a favorite in China.There was an erotic and amorous dance done by two girls wearing gold bells on peaked hats, red shoes and silver girdles belted around caftans which were diaphanous and embroided. This dance was called "The Dance of Chach" from Tashkent and was performed by these girls sent to China.[146][147]

Big nosed Sogdians were massacred during the An Lushan rebellion.[148]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Yiu, Martha Cheung Pui; Wusun, Lin (3 June 2014). An Anthology of Chinese Discourse on Translation (Version 1): From Earliest Times to the Buddhist Project. Routledge. p. 57. ISBN 978-1-317-63928-2.
  2. ^ Yao, Jide (1 January 2017). 伊斯兰与中国西南边疆社会 (in Chinese). Beijing Book Co. Inc. pp. 62, 71. ISBN 978-7-5482-3175-2.
  3. ^ Akhtar, Ali Humayun (12 July 2022). 1368: China and the Making of the Modern World. Stanford University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-5036-3151-9.
  4. ^ Garver, John W. (2011). China and Iran: Ancient Partners in a Post-Imperial World. University of Washington Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-295-80121-6.
  5. ^ University of California (1868-1952), University of California (System), University of California, Berkeley (1951). University of California Publications in Semitic Philology, Volumes 11-12. University of California Press. p. 407.
  6. ^ "Archäologie und Frühe Texte". South China and Maritime Asia. 13 of South China and Maritime Asia (illustrated ed.). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag: 230. 2004. ISBN 978-3-447-05060-9. ISSN 0945-9286.
  7. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (2016). The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of T'ang Exotics. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78720-112-5.
  8. ^ Literacy in the Persianate World: Writing and the Social Order. Vol. 4 of Penn Museum international research conferences. University of Pennsylvania Press. 2012. p. 403. ISBN 978-1-934536-56-8.
  9. ^ MAIR, VICTOR H. "Persian Scribes (Munshi) and Chinese Literati (Ru).: The Power and Prestige of Fine Writing (Adab/Wenzhang)." Literacy in the Persianate World: Writing and the Social Order, edited by Brian Spooner and William L. Hanaway, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012, pp. 388–414. JSTOR j.ctt3fhh4r.
  10. ^ University of California (1868-1952), University of California (System), University of California, Berkeley (1951). University of California Publications in Semitic Philology, Volumes 11-12. University of California Press. p. 407.
  11. ^ Schafer, Edward Hetzel (1967). The Vermilion Bird. University of California Press. p. 180. feng pirate persians hainan.
  12. ^ Monumenta Serica, Volumes 35-36. H. Vetch. 1984. p. 289.
  13. ^ "第四节 唐代中西文化交流的盛况". 读国学网. 18 August 2014. Archived from the original on 22 April 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  14. ^ Monographs on Malay Subjects, Volume 32, Part 2. Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 1961. p. 32.
  15. ^ Wade, Geoff, ed. (2007). Southeast Asia-China interactions: reprint of articles from the Journal of the Malaysian Branch, Royal Asiatic Society. Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. p. 201. ISBN 978-967-9948-38-7.
  16. ^ Jaschok, Maria; Shui, Jingjun (2000). The History of Women's Mosques in Chinese Islam: A Mosque of Their Own (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7007-1302-8.
  17. ^ Yarshater (1993). William Bayne Fisher; Yarshater, Ilya Gershevitch (eds.). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 3 (reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 553. ISBN 978-0-521-20092-9. Retrieved 4 January 2012. Probably by the 7th century Persians had joined with Arabs to create the foreign emporium on the Grand Canal at Yangchou noted by the New T'ang History. The same source records a disturbance there in 760 in which a thousand of the merchants were killed. Some Persian families residing at the Chinese capital had adopted the surname Li. Their riches were proverbial, so that the idea of a "poor Persian" could be listed as a paradox. As late as the 10th century Li Hsien, the descendant of a Persian family which had settled in China under the Sui, composed a "Pharmacopoeia of foreign drugs" (Hai yao pen ts'ao) and was known as a Taoist adept with special skill in arsenical medicines.
  18. ^ Carla Suzan Nappi (2009). The monkey and the inkpot: natural history and its transformations in early modern China (illustrated ed.). Harvard University Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-674-03529-4. Retrieved 4 January 2012. The Haiyao bencao [Bencao of overseas drugs], compiled by Li Xun (fl. 923), survives only in reconstructions from later texts in which it was cited. Li Xun's compendium was apparently devoted entirely to drugs imported from India and Persia, a focus that is reflected in the few surviving drug descriptions from the texts. Li Xun's Persian ancestry and the fact that his family ran a business selling aromatic drugs probably stirred his interest in foreign materia medica. The text itself is notable not simply for its treatments of the medicinal uses of exotica.
  19. ^ Carla Suzan Nappi (2009). The monkey and the inkpot: natural history and its transformations in early modern China (illustrated ed.). Harvard University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-674-03529-4. Retrieved 4 January 2012. One of the sources of such names, widely cited in the discussion of animals because many of the shellfish in the Bencao hailed from the "South Seas" and other foreign contexts, was Li Xun, the Chinese-born Persian discussed earlier whose family made a living by selling fragrant herbs. His Haiyao bencao recorded many drugs of foreign origin. These objects were of particular import to Li Shizhen, as drugs from remote regions were considered especially valuable in the Ming medical marketplace.
  20. ^ Joseph Needham (1986). Joseph Needham (ed.). Science and civilisation in China: Biology and biological technology. Botany. Vol. 6, Part 1 of Science and Civilisation in China. Cambridge University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-521-08731-5. Retrieved 4 January 2012. In the Former Shu State, in the capital of Chengtu, between the years +919 and +925, one could have met at the court of the reigning house of Wang a remarkable girl named Li Shun-Hsien3, ornamenting the age by her poetic talent no less than her beauty. Together with her two brothers, the younger Li Hsien4 and the elder Li Hsiin5, she came of a family of Persian origin which had settled in West China about + 88o,b acquiring wealth and renown as ship-owners and merchants in the spice trade. c Li Hsien was a student of perfumes and their distilled attars as well as a merchant,d but he also worked on Taoist alchemy and investigated the actions of inorganic medicaments. e The one who took up the brush was Li Hsiin, for about +923 he produced his Hai Tao Pen Tshao6 (Materia Medico of the Countries beyond the Seas)/ study of 12 1 plants and animals and their products, nearly all foreign, with at least 15 completely new introductions.8 His work as a naturalist was highly regarded by subsequent scholars, and often quoted in the later pandects.11 Li Hsiin was interested in all 'overseas' drugs, whether of the Arabic and Persian culture-areas or of East Indian and Malayo-Indonesian origin.
  21. ^ Joseph Needham (1986). Joseph Needham (ed.). Science and civilisation in China: Biology and biological technology. Botany. Vol. 6, Part 1 of Science and Civilisation in China. Cambridge University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-521-08731-5. Retrieved 4 January 2012. The family was fleeing from the rebellion of Huang Chhao in +878, cf. Vol. i, p. 216. Their grandfather may well have been the Persian incense merchant Li Su-Sha', whose dates would be between +820 and +840.
  22. ^ Joseph Needham (1986). Joseph Needham (ed.). Science and civilisation in China: Biology and biological technology. Botany. Vol. 6, Part 1 of Science and Civilisation in China. Cambridge University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-521-08731-5. Retrieved 4 January 2012. The best biography of Li Hsiin and his brother and sister is that by Lo Hsiang- Lin (4, 5). From some of the entries in his book, one can see that Li Hsiin, although by origin a Nestorian Christian, acquired a very Taoist belief in medicines which would promote longevity and material immortality. He wrote much poetry in the Northern Sung style. His brother, Li Hsien, was even more Taoist, and had much regard as an adept, engaging in the preparation of chiu shih (Chinese: 秋石) (steroid sex hormones from urine, cf. Vol. 5, pt 5, pp. 311 ff.).
  23. ^ Fuwei Shen; Jingshu Wu (1996). Cultural flow between China and outside world throughout history (illustrated ed.). Foreign Languages Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-7-119-00431-0. Retrieved 4 January 2012. The drug and herb traders consisted mainly of Persian merchants. One of them was a naturalized Chinese merchant of Persian origin called Li Susha, who was known for his wealth and his offering of the valuable aromatic drug chen xiang ting zi to Emperor Jingzong of the Tang Dynasty in 824. Later, in the turbulent era of the Five Dynasties, more people became known for their dealings in drugs or
  24. ^ The Vermilion Bird. University of California Press. 1967. p. 83. Retrieved 4 January 2012. Outstanding among these innovators were two poets of tenth-century Szechwan, composers of tz'u-poems of irregular meter made to fit popular airs. Their names were Ou-yang Chiung and Li Hsiin. . . The story of Li Hsiin is more complicated. His ancestors were Persian. His younger brother Li Hsiian sold aromatic drugs for a living in Szechwan.28 Most important for reconstructing his biography : was he the same person as the Li Hsiin who wrote an important treatise on imported drugs called The Basic Herbal of Overseas Drugs?
  25. ^ Joseph Needham; Ling Wang; Gwei-djen Lu (1974). Science and civilisation in China, Volume 5, Part 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-521-08571-7. Retrieved 4 January 2012. The +10th-century writings ...were only a little later than the period of activity of two of the most remarkable perfume-merchants in Chinese history, Li Hsiin and his younger brother Li Hsien. Of a family originally Persian and resident at the court of Shu, independent Szechuan, the elder was a notable poet and naturalist, the writer of the Hai Yao Pen Tshao (Pharmaccutical Natural History of Overseas Drugs and Sea Products) often afterwards quoted. The younger was an alchemist and herbalist, known for his expertise in perfumes and probably their distillation Original from the University of California
  26. ^ Joseph Needham; Ho Ping-Yü; Gwei-Djen Lu; Nathan Sivin (1980). Joseph Needham (ed.). Science and civilisation in China: apparatus, theories and gifts. Chemistry and chemical technology. Spagyrical discovery and invention, Volume 5, Part 4 (illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-521-08573-1. Retrieved 4 January 2012. Thao himself had probably seen this masterpiece, the constituents of which were said to have come in part from the conquered State of Shu in Szechuan. This reminds us that during the first thirty years of the century Shu had been the home of two outstanding experts on perfumes and aromatic drugs, Li Hsiin,4 the writer of the Hai Yao Pen Tshao* (Natural History of the Southern Countries beyond the Seas), and his younger brother Li Hsien,6 alchemist, naturalist, chess master and like Li Hsiin a poet.c The family was of Persian origin, and it is hard to believe that they were ignorant of the distillation of essential oils. Peppermint oil (po ho yu7) is said to be mentioned in the I Hsin Fang (Ishinho8) of +982, which would imply steam distillation.
  27. ^ Walter Joseph Fischel (1951). Walter Joseph Fischel (ed.). Semitic and Oriental studies: a volume presented to William Popper, professor of Semitic languages, emeritus, on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday, October 29, 1949. Vol. 11 of University of California publications in Semitic philology. University of California Press. p. 407. Retrieved 4 January 2012. At least from the tenth to the twelfth century, Persian women were to be found in Canton, in the former period observed among the inmates of the harem of Liu Ch'ang, Emperor of Southern Han,'2 and in the latter seen as typically wearing great numbers of earrings and cursed with quarrelsome dispositions.
  28. ^ Walter Joseph Fischel, ed. (1951). Semitic and Oriental studies: a volume presented to William Popper, professor of Semitic languages, emeritus, on the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday, October 29, 1949. Vol. 11 of University of California publications in Semitic philology. University of California Press. p. 407. Retrieved 4 January 2012. At least from the tenth to the twelfth century, Persian women were to be found in Canton, in the former period observed among the inmates of the harem of Liu Ch'ang, Emperor of Southern Han,'2 and in the latter seen as typically wearing great numbers of earrings and cursed with quarrelsome dispositions.
  29. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan). Kenkyūbu (1928). Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library), Issue 2. The Toyo Bunko. p. 52. Retrieved 4 January 2012. 17) Concerning the Po-sm-fu $L $f M, ie. the Persian women, Chttang Ch'o 3£$# towards the beginning of the South Sung, in his Chi-lei-pien WM, says: "The Po- ssu-fu at Kuang-chou make holes all round their ears. There are some who wear more than twenty ear-rings." M jW Hfc Sf £w. ... The ear-rings were much in fashion among the Persians in the reign of Sasan ( Spiegee, Erani^e/ie Alterthumskunde, Bd. Ill, s. 659), and after the conquest of the Saracens, the Moslem ladies had a still stronger passion for them (Hughes, Dictionary of Islam, p. 102). Original from the University of Michigan.
  30. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan) Kenkyūbu (1928). Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library), Issue 2. The Toyo Bunko. p. 55. Retrieved 4 January 2012. and did not came out to see governmental business." [IF1] §§71#il5i$S£$l?;£c 3£ (2L« jfe3B,«/S+ a, SiaitB:*). In the Ch'ing-i-lu m »»(ed. of ttl&fFSSO attributed to T'AO Ku ft ft towards the beginning of the North Sung era, we have a minute description of Liu Chang's licentious conduct with the Po-ssu woman, but decency would forbid as to give quotations from the book. Original from the University of Michigan.
  31. ^ Herbert Franke, ed. (1976). Sung biographies, Volume 2. Steiner. p. 620. ISBN 978-3-515-02412-9. Retrieved 4 January 2012. During his reign the number of castrati at the palace increased to about 5 000. Great power was also given to a palace beauty named Liu Ch'iung- hsien JäP) 3^ iA* , and especially to a female shaman Fan Hu-tzu ^ fcfi 3~ , who claimed to. . .But Liu was free to spend his days with the Persian girls in his harem, and to oversee the decoration of his splendid new palaces with costly substances. It is said that he used 3 000 taels of silver in making a single column of the ceremonial hall named Wan-cheng tien
  32. ^ Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library), Issue 2. Japan: The Toyo Bunko. 1928. p. 34. Retrieved 4 January 2012. 63 At the foreign quarter, there lived of course many foreign women, and they were called by the Chinese Po-ssu-fu 波斯婦 (lit. Persian women),1'3 perhaps because most of them came from near the Persian Gulf.18) During the Five Dynasties 五代 (907-959), Liu Chang 劉鋹, king of the Nan-han 南漢, had in his harem a young Persian woman, whom he doted upon so much Original from the University of Michigan
  33. ^ History of Science Society, Académie internationale d'histoire des sciences (1939). Isis, Volume 30. Publication and Editorial Office, Dept. of History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania. p. 120. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  34. ^ Roger Darrobers (1998). Opéra de Pékin: théâtre et société à la fin de l'empire sino-mandchou. Bleu de Chine. p. 31. ISBN 978-2-910884-19-2. Retrieved 4 January 2012. L'expression trouvait son origine sous le règne de Liu Chang (958-971), ultime souverain des Han du sud (917-971), un des États apparus dans la Chine du nord après la chute des Tang, avant que les Song ne réalisent pour leur propre... Liu Chang se rallia au nouveau pouvoir qui lui conféra le titre de Marquis de la Bienveillante Amnistie 17. Son règne a laissé le souvenir de ses nombreuses dépravations. S'en remettant aux eunuques pour gouverner, il prenait plaisir à assister aux ébats de jeunes personnes entièrement dévêtues. Il avait pour favorite une Persane de seize ans, à la peau mate et aux formes opulentes, d'une extrême sensualité qu'il avait lui-même surnommée « Meizhu » (« Jolie Truie »). Il déambulait en sa compagnie parmi les couples s'ébattant dans les jardins du palais, spectacle baptisé « corps en duo », on rapporte qu'il aimait voir la Persanne livrée à d'autres partenaires 18. Original from the University of Michigan
  35. ^ Xiu Ouyang; Richard L. Davis (2004). Historical records of the five dynasties (illustrated, annotated ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 544. ISBN 978-0-231-12826-1. Retrieved 4 January 2012. Liu Chang, originally named Jixing, had been invested Prince of Wei. . .Because court affairs were monopolized by Gong Chengshu and cohort, Liu Chang in the inner palace could play his debauched games with female attendants, including a Persian. He never again emerged to inquire of state affairs
  36. ^ 文人誤會:宋真宗寫錯了一個字(5)
  37. ^ Barnett, K. M. A. (1964). "HOong Kong before the Chinese: The frame, the puzzle and the missing pieces: A lecture delivered on 18th November 1963". Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 4: 42–67. JSTOR 23891884.
  38. ^ Journal of the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volume 24. SHANGHAI: Kelly & Walsh. 1890. p. 299. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  39. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan). Kenkyūbu (1928). Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library), Issue 2. The Toyo Bunko. p. 54. Retrieved 4 January 2012. 22) In the Wu-tai-shih-cM 2.^ jfc,12, we read, "Liu Chang then with his court- ladies and Po-ssu woman, indulged in amorous affiurs in the harem The names of Po-li i£ >f Il ( = P'o-li JSiflJ) and Original from the University of Michigan
  40. ^ University of California Publications in Semitic Philology, Volumes 11-12. University of California Press. 1951.
  41. ^ 説郛 (四庫全書本). Vol. 卷027上. 泉福二州婦人轎子則用金漆雇婦人以荷福州以為肩擎至他男子則不肻肩也廣州波斯婦繞耳皆穿穴帶環有二十餘枚者家家以篾為門人食㯽榔唾地如血北人嘲之曰人人皆唾血家家盡篾門又婦人㐫悍喜鬬訟雖遭刑責而不畏恥寢陋尤甚豈秀美之氣中於緑珠而已邪
  42. ^ "全覽". 雞肋編 (四庫全書本). 廣州波斯婦繞耳皆穿穴𢃄環有二十餘枚者家家以篾為門人食梹榔唾地如血北人嘲之曰人人皆吐血家家盡篾門又婦女凶悍喜闘訟雖SKchar刑責而不畏恥寢陋尤甚豈秀美之氣鍾於緑珠而已耶
  43. ^ "全覽2". 説郛 (四庫全書本). 泉福二州婦人轎子則用金漆雇婦人以荷福州以為肩擎至他男子則不肻肩也廣州波斯婦繞耳皆穿穴帶環有二十餘枚者家家以篾為門人食㯽榔唾地如血北人嘲之曰人人皆唾血家家盡篾門又婦人㐫悍喜鬬訟雖遭刑責而不畏恥寢陋尤甚豈秀美之氣中於緑珠而已邪
  44. ^ "蕃坊里的回族先民". 人民网-中国民族新闻. 1 April 2010. Archived from the original on 20 April 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  45. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan). Kenkyūbu (1928). Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko (the Oriental Library)., Issue 2. Publications - Tōyō Bunko. Ser. B. Vol. 10171 of Harvard anthropology preservation microfilm project. Toyo Bunko. p. 34.
  46. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan). Memoirs of the Research Department. Tokyo Bunko publications. p. 34.
  47. ^ Jaschok, Maria; Shui, Jingjun (2000). The History of Women's Mosques in Chinese Islam: A Mosque of Their Own (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-7007-1302-8.
  48. ^ Hai shan xian guan cong shu, Volume 13. Hai shan xian guan. 1849.
  49. ^ 朱, 彧. 萍洲可談. Vol. 卷二. (page link). 廣州雜俗,婦人強,男子弱。婦人十八九,戴烏絲髻,衣皂半臂,謂之「遊街背子」。樂府有「菩薩蠻」,不知何物,在廣中見呼蕃婦為「菩薩蠻」,因識之。
  50. ^ 萍洲可談 (四庫全書本). Vol. 卷2.
  51. ^ 唐唐蘇鄂《杜陽雜編》:大中初,女蠻國入貢,危髻金冠,纓絡被體,號菩薩蠻隊,當時倡優遂制《菩薩蠻》曲,文士亦往往聲其詞。
  52. ^ 溫, 庭筠. 菩薩蠻 (溫庭筠).
  53. ^ 韋, 莊. 菩薩蠻 (韋莊).
  54. ^ Grenet, Frantz (2007). "Religious Diversity among Sogdian Merchants in Sixth-Century China: Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, Manichaeism, and Hinduism" (PDF). Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 27 (2): 463–478. doi:10.1215/1089201x-2007-017. S2CID 144300435.
  55. ^ "A-L". Dictionary of Ming Biography, 1368-1644. Vol. 1–2. Columbia University Press. 1976. p. 817. ISBN 978-0-231-03801-0. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  56. ^ Chen, Da-Sheng. "CHINESE-IRANIAN RELATIONS vii. Persian Settlements in Southeastern China during the T'ang, Sung, and Yuan Dynasties". Encyclopedia Iranica. Archived from the original on 8 December 2010. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  57. ^ Kühner, Hans. "'The Barbarians' Writing Is like Worms, and Their Speech Is like the Screeching of Owls' - Exclusion and Acculturation in the Early Ming Period." Zeitschrift Der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, vol. 151, no. 2, 2001, pp. 407–429. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/43380301.
  58. ^ Xiong, Victor Cunrui (2017). Historical Dictionary of Medieval China. Vol. 2 of Historical Dictionaries of Ancient Civilizations and Historical Eras (2 ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 838. ISBN 978-1-4422-7616-1.
  59. ^ Jeong, Su-Il (2016). The Silk Road Encyclopedia. Seoul Selection. ISBN 978-1-62412-076-3.
  60. ^ Ying, Lin (2000–2001). Some Chinese Sources on the Khazars and Khwarazm. ARCHIVUM EURASIAE MEDII AEVI. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 339–364.
  61. ^ Hansen, Valerie (2003). "New Work on the Sogdians, the Most Important Traders on the Silk Road, A.D. 500-1000". T'oung Pao. 89 (1/3): 157. doi:10.1163/156853203322691347. JSTOR 4528925.
  62. ^ Nicolini-Zani, Mattco (2013). Tang, Li; Winkler, Dietmar W. (eds.). From the Oxus River to the Chinese Shores: Studies on East Syriac Christianity in China and Central Asia (illustrated ed.). LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 978-3-643-90329-7.
  63. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2012). Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors: Culture, Power, and Connections, 580-800. Oxford Studies in Early Empires. Oxford University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-19-987590-0.
  64. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2012). Sui-Tang China and Its Turko-Mongol Neighbors: Culture, Power, and Connections, 580-800. Oxford Studies in Early Empires. Oxford University Press. pp. 70, 383. ISBN 978-0-19-987590-0.
  65. ^ a b Hansen, Valerie (2003). "New Work on the Sogdians, the Most Important Traders on the Silk Road, A.D. 500-1000 - with an Appendix by Y. Yoshida "Translation of the Contract for the Purchase of a Slave-Girl found at Turfan and Dated 639". T'oung Pao. 89 (1/3): 149–161. doi:10.1163/156853203322691347. JSTOR 4528925.
  66. ^ Hansen, Valerie (2005). "The Tribute Trade with Khotan in Light of Materials Found at the Dunhuang Library Cave". Bulletin of the Asia Institute. New Series, Vol. 19, Iranian and Zoroastrian Studies in Honor of Prods Oktor Skjærvø. 19: 37–46. JSTOR 24049203.
  67. ^ Grenet, Frantz (December 2003). Waugh, Daniel C.; Salfrank, Heather (eds.). "The Pre-Islamic Civilization of the Sogdians (seventh century BCE to eighth century CE): A Bibliographic Essay (studies since 1986)" (PDF). The Silk Road. 1 (2): 31.
  68. ^ DE LA VAISSIÈRE, ÉTIENNE (2005). "Sogdian Traders: A History". Handbook of Oriental Studies. 10 (Section 8 Central Asia). BRILL: 132, 169, 170, 173, 355. ISBN 90-04-14252-5. ISSN 0169-8524.
  69. ^ Hansen, V., Negotiating Daily Life in Traditional China. How Ordinary People Used Contracts 600–1400, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995, 285 p.
  70. ^ Mallory, J. P. (Winter 2010). "Bronze Age Languages of the Tarim Basin". Expedition Magazine (Silk Road Issue). 52 (3): 45. ISSN 0014-4738.
  71. ^ Hansen, Valerie; Rong, Xinjiang (2013). "How the Residents of Turfan used Textiles as Money, 273–796 ce" (PDF). Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 23 (2): 290. doi:10.1017/S1356186313000205. S2CID 162891974.
  72. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (1998). "Sasanian and Arab-Sasanian Silver Coins from Turfan: Their Relationship to International Trade and the Local Economy". Asia Major. THIRD SERIES. 11 (2): 89. JSTOR 41645542.
  73. ^ a b Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 507. JSTOR 3632829.
  74. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 523–524. JSTOR 3632829.
  75. ^ Hansen, Valerie (2003). "New Work on the Sogdians, the Most Important Traders on the Silk Road, A.D. 500-1000". T'oung Pao. 89 (1/3): 160. doi:10.1163/156853203322691347. JSTOR 4528925.
  76. ^ Hansen, Valerie (2003). "New Work on the Sogdians, the Most Important Traders on the Silk Road, A.D. 500-1000". T'oung Pao. 89 (1/3): 161. doi:10.1163/156853203322691347. JSTOR 4528925.
  77. ^ 孟, 宪实 (May 2009). "论唐朝的佛教管理". 北京大学学报(哲学社会科学版) Journal of Peking University(Philosophy and Social Sciences). 46 (3).
  78. ^ 摘, 要. "虞世南書學之研究" [The Study on the Calligraphy of Yu Shi-Nan] (PDF). National Taichung University of Education Institutional Repository. p. 76. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  79. ^ Wu, Zhen (July 2002). ""Hu" Non-Chinese as They Appear in the Materials from the Astana Graveyard at Turfan" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. 119: 16. ISSN 2157-9679.
  80. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 523. JSTOR 3632829.
  81. ^ Wu Zhen ~ 吳震 "Tangdai Sichou zhilu yu hu nubi maimai" 唐代絲綢之路與胡奴婢買賣吐魯番. (The Silk Road of the Tang dynasty and the sale and purchase of non-Chinese slaves). In 1994 nian Dunhuangxue guoji yantaohui wenji 1994 年敦煌學國際研討會文集 ed. Dunhuang yanjiuyuan 敦煌研究院 (Lanzhou: Gansu minzu chubanshe, 2000) pp. 128-154.
  82. ^ 温, 翠芳 (2006). "唐代长安西市中的胡姬与丝绸之路上的女奴贸易". pp. 19–21.
  83. ^ 郭, 雪妮 (2012) [2012(北京师范大学文学院北京100875)]. "酒肆论文摘要,唐代"胡姬"诗与现代日本的西域想象". 长安学刊 (3). Archived from the original on 22 April 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  84. ^ 森, 林鹿 (25 November 2015). "第6章 一年之计在于吃(5)". 唐朝定居指南.
  85. ^ 林梅村《粟特文买婢契与丝绸之路上的女奴贸易》,《文物》1992 年9 期,49—54 页;收入
  86. ^ 荣, 新江 (9 September 2014). "从撒马尔干到长安——中古时期粟特人的迁徙与入居(《中古中国与粟特文明》代序言)". Kaogu – via via 三联学术通讯.
  87. ^ "温翠芳特聘研究员". 西南大学伊朗研究中心. 27 December 2017. Archived from the original on 15 August 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
  88. ^ Trombert, Éric; de La Vaissière, Étienne (2005). "The Impact of the Silk Road Trade on a Local Community: The Turfan Oasis, 500-800" (PDF). Les sogdiens en Chine. Vol. 17 of Études thématiques. École française d'Extrême-Orient. p. 299. ISBN 978-2-85539-653-8.
  89. ^ Whitfield, Susan (2015). Life along the Silk Road: Second Edition (2, reprint ed.). Univ of California Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-520-96029-9.
  90. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (1998). "Sasanian and Arab-Sasanian Silver Coins from Turfan: Their Relationship to International Trade and the Local Economy". Asia Major. THIRD SERIES. 11 (2): 97. JSTOR 41645542.
  91. ^ a b Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 506. JSTOR 3632829.
  92. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 508. JSTOR 3632829.
  93. ^ Skaff, Jonathan Karam (2003). "The Sogdian Trade Diaspora in East Turkestan during the Seventh and Eighth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 46 (4): 510. JSTOR 3632829.
  94. ^ "An Qie's Funerary Bed The Sogdians". sogdians.si.edu.
  95. ^ 李, 白. 少年行 (五陵年少金市東). 五陵年少金市東,銀鞍白馬度春風。 落花踏盡遊何處,笑入胡姬酒肆中。
  96. ^ 李, 白. 襄陽歌.
  97. ^ "传说中的曹野那:唐玄宗竟有来自中亚的洋贵妃". 趣历史网. 24 June 2017.
  98. ^ "唐玄宗有一位来自中亚的洋贵妃:曹野那(图)". 深圳新闻网. 18 February 2008.
  99. ^ "曹野那:唐玄宗曾经最喜欢的"洋贵妃"(1)". 新华网. 15 November 2016. Archived from the original on 20 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  100. ^ "你知道嗎?這些皇帝也愛洋人曾談異國戀". CTnews話題. 8 August 2016.
  101. ^ "传说中的曹野那唐玄宗竟有来自中亚的洋贵妃". 最图图.
  102. ^ "唐玄宗有位洋貴妃?". 大陸頻道_新浪網-北美. 27 January 2010.
  103. ^ "歷數古代中國帝王們的洋情人 朱棣朝鮮愛妃曝光【8】". --讀書--人民網. 25 September 2012.[permanent dead link]
  104. ^ Trombert, Éric; de La Vaissière, Étienne (2005). Les sogdiens en Chine. Vol. 17 of Études thématiques. École française d'Extrême-Orient. p. 306. ISBN 978-2-85539-653-8.
  105. ^ Trombert, Éric; de La Vaissière, Étienne (2005). Les sogdiens en Chine. Vol. 17 of Études thématiques. École française d'Extrême-Orient. p. 305. ISBN 978-2-85539-653-8.
  106. ^ Shiba, Ryōtarō (2003). Takemoto, Akiko (ed.). 空海の風景 Kukai the Universal (illustrated ed.). ICG Muse. pp. 127, 132, 135. ISBN 978-4-925080-47-7.
  107. ^ Mair, Victor H. (2000). The Shorter Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Columbia Asian studies series (abridged, illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. pp. 278–281. ISBN 978-0-231-11999-3.
  108. ^ Mair, Victor H. (2000). The Shorter Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Columbia Asian studies series (abridged, illustrated ed.). Columbia University Press. pp. 278–281. ISBN 978-0-231-11998-6.
  109. ^ Mair, Victor H., ed. (2012). The Shorter Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian Classics (abridged ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-231-50562-8.
  110. ^ Mair, Victor H. (1994). Mair, Victor H. (ed.). The Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian classics (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. pp. 485–488. ISBN 978-0-231-07429-2.
  111. ^ The Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian classic (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. 1994. pp. 485–488. ISBN 978-0-231-07429-2.
  112. ^ Mair, Victor H. (1994). Mair, Victor H. (ed.). The Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian classics (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 486. ISBN 978-0-231-07429-2.
  113. ^ Shiba, Ryōtarō (2003). Takemoto, Akiko (ed.). 空海の風景 Kukai the Universal (illustrated ed.). ICG Muse. p. 133. ISBN 978-4-925080-47-7.
  114. ^ Bulliet, Richard; Crossley, Pamela; Headrick, Daniel; Hirsch, Steven; Johnson, Lyman (2014). The Earth and Its Peoples, Brief: A Global History (6 ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-305-14709-6.
  115. ^ Bulliet, Richard; Crossley, Pamela; Headrick, Daniel; Hirsch, Steven; Johnson, Lyman; Northrup, David (2007). The Earth and Its Peoples: A Global History to 1200 (4, illustrated ed.). Houghton Mifflin. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-618-77152-3.
  116. ^ Mair, Victor H. (1994). Mair, Victor H. (ed.). The Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian classics (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 487. ISBN 978-0-231-07429-2.
  117. ^ Mair, Victor H. (1994). Mair, Victor H. (ed.). The Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature. Translations from the Asian classics (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 488. ISBN 978-0-231-07429-2.
  118. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (1963). The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of T'ang Exotics. Vol. 742 of History: University of California Press (illustrated, reprint, revised ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05462-2.
  119. ^ Shiloah, Amnon (2001). Music in the World of Islam: A Socio-Cultural Study (illustrated, reprint ed.). Wayne State University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-8143-2970-2.
  120. ^ Weinberger, Eliot (2009). Oranges & Peanuts for Sale. Vol. 1148 of New Directions Paperbook. New Directions Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-8112-1834-4.
  121. ^ Ebrey, atricia Buckley; Walthall, Anne; Palais, James B. (2009). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History, Volume I: To 1800: A Cultural, Social, and Political History. Cengage Learning. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-547-00539-3.
  122. ^ Ebrey, Patricia Buckley; Walthall, Anne (2013). East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History (3 ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-285-52867-0.
  123. ^ Ebrey, Patricia Buckley; Walthall, Anne (2013). Pre-Modern East Asia: A Cultural, Social, and Political History, Volume I: To 1800 (3 ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-285-54623-0.
  124. ^ University of California Publications in Semitic Philology, Volumes 11-12. University of California Press. 1951. p. 410. It resembles closely the stories discovered recently at Tun- huang, and also such ch'uan-ch'i as the Chou Ch'in hsing chi and the Ch'in Regions who serve the fire deity . . ." See also Hsiang Ta, op. cit., for probable cultural influences in China from Iranian lands which are classified as hu. Thus certain hu dances and dancing girls called hu originated in Tashkent and Samarkand. " ch'iung po-ssu. See Li Shang-yin, Tsa-tsuan in T'ang-jen shuo-hui 7.1a. 60 Hu P'u-an and Hu Huai-ch'en, ...
  125. ^ Mahler, Jane Gaston (1959). The Westerners Among the Figurines of the T'ang Dynasty of China. Serie orientale Roma. Instituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente. p. 19. (book search: dancing girls Persia China). ... a) Though this type of dress did not change Chinese fashion at the time (and it is unlikely that it would, for the native population probably had little regard for what they must have thought of as the inferior Barbarian styles of the conquerors), ... Annals note the importation of these entertainers: in the K'ai-yiian and T'ien-pao eras (713 to 755), Persia had sent ten embassies bearing gifts, among them a bed of agate, troops of dancing girls, and " Woolen embroideries the color of fire, ...
  126. ^ Mahler, Jane Gaston (1959). Serie orientale Roma, Volume 20. Serie orientale Roma, Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente. Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente. p. 19. Though this type of dress did not change Chinese fashion at the time (and it is unlikely that it would, for the native population probably had little regard for what they must have thought of as the inferior Barbarian styles of the conquerors), it did return ... and T'ien-pao eras (713 to 755), Persia had sent ten embassies bearing gifts, among them a bed of agate, troops of dancing girls, and " Woolen embroideries the color of fire, "3) the last item being interpreted by Laufer as being asbestos.
  127. ^ Oz, Avraham (1993). Assaph: Studies in the theatre, Issues 9-10. Faculty of Visual and Performing Arts, Tel-Aviv University. p. 89. Masks in Medieval Arabic Theatre Shmuel Moreh Hebrew University, Jerusalem In pre-Islamic period theatre and dance in Asia were indebted largely to ancient Greek and Persian ritual cults. Greek and Persian theatrical ... in India and even in China. A Chinese chronical from the time of the Emperor Yan-Si 605-616 reports that ten young dancing girls were sent from Persia to China to entertain the Emperor.3 Persian dancers were sent as a present to important Chinese personalities ...
  128. ^ ASSAPH.: Studies in the theatre, Issues 9-12. Faculty of Visual and Performing Arts, Tel Aviv University. 1993. p. 89. Masks in Medieval Arabic Theatre Shmuel Moreh Hebrew University, Jerusalem In pre-Islamic period theatre and dance in Asia were indebted largely to ancient Greek and Persian ritual cults. Greek and Persian theatrical ... in India and even in China. A Chinese chronical from the time of the Emperor Yan-Si 605-616 reports that ten young dancing girls were sent from Persia to China to entertain the Emperor.3 Persian dancers were sent as a present to important Chinese personalities.
  129. ^ Ross, Laurie Margot (2016). The Encoded Cirebon Mask: Materiality, Flow, and Meaning along Java's Islamic Northwest Coast. Studies on Performing Arts & Literature of the Islamicate World. BRILL. p. 44. ISBN 978-90-04-31521-1.
  130. ^ Rezvani, Medjid (1962). Le Theatre et la Danse en Iran. Paris: G.-P. Maisonneuve et Larose. pp. 57, 65.
  131. ^ Tōyō Bunko (Japan) (1961). Memoirs of the Research Department, Issue 20. pp. 35, 38.
  132. ^ Jeong, Su-Il (2016). The Silk Road Encyclopedia. Seoul Selection. ISBN 978-1-62412-076-3.
  133. ^ China Archaeology & Art Digest, Volume 2, Issue 1. Art Text (HK) Limited. 1997. p. 85. Huxuan $\fk, huteng #JJBt and zhezhi Mi$L were the Chinese names for the most popular dances in Chang'an and Luoyang in the Tang dynasty; all originated in Serindia. According to Du You's ttfft Tang dynasty work Tong dian MH, huxuan dancing originated in the Kang state $i[iS established by one branch of the Sogdians BB^Att and located in what is today Uzbekistan. It is still uncertain when the huxuan dance was introduced to the Central Plains, but during the period from ...
  134. ^ China Archaeology and Art Digest, Volume 2, Issues 1-2. Art Text (HK) Limited. 1997. p. 85. Huxuan i^te, huteng i*'fl)jS and zhezhi Sj+i were the Chinese names for the most popular dances in Chang'an and Luoyang in the Tang dynasty; all originated in Serindia. According to Du You's tt#f Tang dynasty work Tong dian &A, huxuan dancing originated in the Kang state ^$l established by one branch of the Sogdians BSa£A.tt and located in what is today Uzbekistan. It is still uncertain when the huxuan dance was introduced to the Central Plains, but during the period from ...
  135. ^ Zhuo, Xinping (2017). Religious Faith of the Chinese. China Insights. Dong Zhao. Springer. p. 125. ISBN 978-981-10-6379-4.
  136. ^ Valenstein, Suzanne G. (2007). Cultural Convergence in the Northern Qi Period: A Flamboyant Chinese Ceramic Container: a Research Monograph. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 70. ISBN 978-1-58839-211-4.
  137. ^ Trombert, Éric; de La Vaissière, Étienne (2005). Les sogdiens en Chine. Vol. 17 of Études thématiques. École française d'Extrême-Orient. p. 95. ISBN 978-2-85539-653-8.
  138. ^ Académie des inscriptions & belles-lettres (France), Fondation Eugène Piot (2005). Monuments et mémoires publiés par l'Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres. Vol. 84 of Monuments et mémoires. E. Leroux. p. 80. ISBN 978-2-87754-163-3.
  139. ^ Musée Guimet (Paris, France) (2004). Lit de pierre, sommeil barbare: présentation, après restauration et remontage, d'une banquette funéraire ayant appartenu à un aristocrate d'Asie centrale venu s'établir en Chine au VIe siècle, Musée Guimet, 13 avril-24 mai 2004. Musée Guimet. p. 42. ISBN 978-2-9521597-0-8.
  140. ^ Treasures of Chang-an: capital of the Silk Road. Urban Council. 1993. p. 28. ISBN 978-962-215-117-8.
  141. ^ Monumenta Serica, Volume 48. H. Vetch. 2000. p. 25.
  142. ^ Laufer, Berthold (1919). Sino-Iranica: Chinese Contributions to the History of Civilization in Ancient Iran, with Special Reference to the History of Cultivated Plants and Products, Volume 15, Issue 3. Publication Series. Vol. 15. Field Museum of Natural History. p. 494. ISBN 978-0-608-02108-9.
  143. ^ Laufer, Berthold (1919). Publication: Anthropological series, Volume 15, Issue 3. Vol. 15. Field Museum of Natural History. The Museum. p. 494.
  144. ^ Hansen, Valerie (2005). "The Tribute Trade with Khotan in Light of Materials Found at the Dunhuang Library Cave". Bulletin of the Asia Institute. New Series. 19, Iranian and Zoroastrian Studies in Honor of Prods Oktor Skjærvø: 39. JSTOR 24049203.
  145. ^ Arabian American Oil Company (1985). Aramco World Magazine, Volumes 36-37. Arabian American Oil Company. p. 15.
  146. ^ Schafer, Edward H. (1963). The Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of T'ang Exotics, Volume 1. University of California Press. pp. 55, 56.
  147. ^ And, Metin (1991). Drama at the Crossroads: Turkish Performing Arts Link Past and Present, East and West. Isis Press. p. 18. ISBN 9754280266.
  148. ^ Vaissière, Étienne de la (2005). Sogdian Traders: A History. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section 8 Uralic & Central Asian Studies. BRILL. p. 220. ISBN 9047406990.
[edit]
  • Hansen, Valerie (1999). "The Silk Road Project Reuniting Turfan's Scattered Treasures". Revue Bibliographique de Sinologie. Nouvelle série. 17: 63–73. JSTOR 24581348.