ファイル:Imperial Gate Of The Imperial City, Looking North, Peking, China (1901) Hawley C. White Co. (RESTORED) (4080019687).jpg

元のファイル(2,440 × 2,652 ピクセル、ファイルサイズ: 980キロバイト、MIME タイプ: image/jpeg)

概要

解説
English: Entitled: Imperial Gate of The Imperial City, Looking North, Peking China [1901] HC White Co. [RESTORED] I did the usual spot and defects repair, adjusted for tone and contrast, rotational corrected, and added a sepia tone. The original is from a pair of stereoscope images and can be found in the US Library Of Congress.

From the Hawley C. White Company and now residing in the US Library of Congress, an image that bridges two cultures, both of which have faded into history long ago (the Chinese monarchy and Qing Dynasty are both gone almost a century). Hawley C. White's company was one of the most prolific stereoscope image companies ever. His catalog reportedly listed over 13,000 assorted images from around the world, covering the end of the 1800's through 1915. Moreover, he was able to mass produce his pictures by his invention of an automated darkroom process in which negatives were placed on photographic print paper, properly exposed, and then chemically developed, all automatically by machine. In the present day, it's not much to hoot and holler about; back in the early 1900's however, it was considered an engineering miracle. HC White Company's images were not only of higher quality, but were consistent, and produced quickly in much greater numbers vastly eclipsing both his larger rivals, Keystone or Underwood's (the other stereoscope view companies) daily production. Keystone was to eventually buy out White's company when he decided to retire.

The southern gate to the imperial city, considered the ceremonial gateway to China, had stood since Ming times. Under Qing rule, it had been renamed as The Great Qing Gate 大清門, and also bore its public title in a rare display of both Chinese and Manchu text. Upon the fall of the Qing however, the gate was renamed once more, to be called the Gate of China 中華門. Sadly, the historic gate itself fell not to conquerors, but to urban planning. It was demolished in 1954 in order to expand Tiananmen Square, and would later become the site of Mao's mausoleum after his death in 1976.

      • Sidebar*** Many historic buildings in Beijing, had their dual Chinese - Manchu signs replaced by pure Chinese ones after the fall of the Qing, though some may still have both and can be found if one is persistent enough. Sadly too, the Manchu language itself today is expected to be extinct in a just a few more years, as the last remaining native speakers die off. This presents unique problems for Qing historians as there is no longer anyone who natively understands the written Manchu text found in about 20% of Qing dynasty archives.
日付
原典

flickr

LoC LC-USZ62-137033
作者 ralph repo

ライセンス

w:ja:クリエイティブ・コモンズ
表示
このファイルはクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.0 一般ライセンスのもとに利用を許諾されています。
あなたは以下の条件に従う場合に限り、自由に
  • 共有 – 本作品を複製、頒布、展示、実演できます。
  • 再構成 – 二次的著作物を作成できます。
あなたの従うべき条件は以下の通りです。
  • 表示 – あなたは適切なクレジットを表示し、ライセンスへのリンクを提供し、変更があったらその旨を示さなければなりません。これらは合理的であればどのような方法で行っても構いませんが、許諾者があなたやあなたの利用行為を支持していると示唆するような方法は除きます。
この画像は当初、ralphrepo によって Flickrhttps://www.flickr.com/photos/34607376@N08/4080019687 に投稿されたものです。2014-06-16、FlickreviewR ボットによってレビューされ、cc-by-2.0 のライセンスで提供されていることが確認されました。

2014年6月16日

キャプション

このファイルの内容を1行で記述してください

このファイルに描写されている項目

題材

6 11 2009

ファイルの履歴

過去の版のファイルを表示するには、その版の日時をクリックしてください。

日付と時刻サムネイル寸法利用者コメント
現在の版2014年6月16日 (月) 01:492014年6月16日 (月) 01:49時点における版のサムネイル2,440 × 2,652 (980キロバイト)Brainy JTransferred from Flickr via Flickr2commons

以下のページがこのファイルを使用しています: