Author | Jia Shubing 賈抒冰University of Bristol |
Place | [Great Britain] |
Publisher | University of Bristol |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English, Chinese |
Type | Thesis/Dissertation (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | ML336.P43 J53 2012 |
Description | pdf. [xiv, 245 leaves : Ill., maps (some color)] |
Note | The dissemination of Western music through Catholic missions in High Qing China (1662-1795) / Shubing Jia. Thesis (Ph.D., Music)--University of Bristol, 2012. Includes bibliographical references. Abstract:In the mid-seventeenth century, China entered its last dynastic heyday of economic prosperity and territorial expansion. This special period in Chinese history is called the High Qing, when China was ruled by three generation of Manchu Emperors. This was also a period of fast-growing Catholic expansion in the Far East. At that time, influenced greatly by Western missionaries, China saw a metamorphosis in its traditional thinking about the investigation of the natural world. In many fields, Western scientific endeavour made rapid progress in the High Qing. Western music, as a traditional European discipline, was for a time widely introduced into China in various theoretical and practical forms. On the one hand, skilled missionary musicians such as the Jesuit Tomás Pereira and the Lazarist Teodorico Pedrini joined with High Qing officials in fruitful collaboration to produce the first treatises on Western music theory in Chinese. On the other hand, performances by European musicians brought Western music to the court in such forms as instrumental sonatas, while a wider public particularly relished the sound of the organ. The spread of Western music in the High Qing widened Chinese intellectual thought and enriched imperial multiculturalism. However, the growing interest in Western music coincided and intertwined with a disastrous succession of imperial bans on the preaching of Christianity in the High Qing. This gave rise to a complex web of interactions between missionary musicians and Manchu Emperors, mixing intriguing anecdotes of exotic musics and complex personal relationships. This thesis attempts to explain how and why the twin phenomena happened during the two centuries. Moreover, it will examine this current of exuberant foreign music against the religious impact on Chinese society, grounding this on a balancing of diverse Chinese and European sources, and emphasizing that this was to some considerable extent a mutual exchange.--Source: Jesuitica.be website. Local access dig.pdf. [Jia-Western Music High Qing.pdf] |
Author | Saraiva, LuísLiu Dun 劉鈍History of Mathematical Sciences : Portugal and East Asia IV (2008 : Beijing) |
Place | Singapore ; Hackensack, NJ |
Publisher | World Scientific |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English |
Type | Conference Proceedings |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | QA21.E97 2008d |
Description | pdf. [xxx, 309 p. : ill. (some color)] |
Note | Europe and China : Science and the Arts in the 17th and 18th Centuries / edited by Luis Saraiva, with the collaboration of Liu Dun. Includes bibliographical references. "The Conference "History of Mathematical Sciences: Portugal and East Asia IV " took place at the Friendship Hotel, Beijing, from 6 to 8 November 2008"--Acknowledgements. I. Portugal and the Jesuit missions in Asia. Portugal and the Jesuit mission to China: trends in historiography / Rui Magone. Evangelization, politics, and technology transfer in 17th-century Cochinchina: the case of Joao da Cruz / Alexei Volkov -- II. The Jesuits and the knowledge of China in Europe. The Jesuits and their study of Chinese astronomy and chronology in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries / Han Qi. The Jesuit Jean-Joseph-Marie Amiot and Chinese music in the eighteenth century / Nii Yoko -- III. Tomas Pereira (1646-1708). Some data on Tomas Pereira's (Xu Risheng) biography and manuscripts / Isabel Pina. Pereira's trip to Tartary in 1685 / Davor Antonucci. Thomas Pereira and the knowledge of Western music in the 17th and 18th centuries in China / Wang Bing and Manuel Serrano Pinto. Pereira's musical heritage as context for his contributions in China / Joyce Lindorff -- IV. New sources on Western science at the Chinese Emperor's Court. Verbiest's manuscripts on astronomy and mechanics (1676): from Beijing to Moscow and Constantinople / Noel Golvers and Efthymios Nicolaidis. Manchu manuscripts on mathematics in the Toyo Bunko, the State Library of Inner Mongolia and the Bibliotheque Nationale de France / Junsei Watanabe. The new thermometer and a slice of experimental philosophy in the early Qing court / Shi Yunli -- V. Missionaries in Beijing during the reigns of Kangxi and Yongzheng. Karel Slavicek and his scientific works in China / Liu Dun. Guillaume Bonjour (1670-1714): chronologist, linguist, and "casual" scientist / Ugo Baldini. "Western astronomy vs. Korean geography": intellectual exchanges between a Korean and the Jesuits as seen from Yi Kiji's 1720 Beijing Travelogue / Lim Jongtae. Missionaries, and in particular the Portuguese Assistancy of the Society of Jesus, played a fundamental role in the dissemination of Western scientific knowledge in East Asia. They also brought to Europe a deeper knowledge of Asian countries. This volume brings together a series of essays analyzing important new data on this significant scientific and cultural exchange, including several in-depth discussions of new sources relevant to Jesuit scientific activities at the Chinese Emperor's Court. It includes major contributions examining various case studies that range from the work of some individual missionaries (Karel Slavicek, Guillaume Bonjour) in Beijing during the reigns of Kangxi and Yongzheng to the cultural exchange between a Korean envoy and the Beijing Jesuits during the early 18th century. Focusing in particular on the relationship between science and the arts, this volume also features articles pertaining to the historical contributions made by Tomas Pereira and Jean-Joseph-Marie Amiot, to the exchange of musical knowledge between China and Europe. Local access dig.pdf. [Saraiva-Europe and China Science.pdf] |
ISBN | 9789814390446 ; 9814390445 |
Author | Pedrini, Teodorico 德理格, 1671-1746Pereira, Tomás [Tomé] 徐日昇, 1645-1708 |
Place | Haikou Shi 海口市 |
Publisher | Hainan chubanshe 海南出版社 |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | Chinese 中文 |
Type | Digital Book (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | ML335.2.P45 2000d |
Description | dig.pdf. (44 frames : ill., musical notation) |
Note | Lülü zuanyao 律呂纂要.
Each frame represents 4 pages of the original. Margin title: Gugong zhenben congkan 故宮珍本叢刊. Believed to be published: 海口市 : 海南出版社, [ca. 2000]. A bound volume of 5 musical texts including this text was released in 2000 from this publisher. "... On the level of Western theory of music, the most important introduction was Lülü zuanyao 律呂纂要 (Compilation of Musical theory) written by Tomé Pereira on behalf of the Kangxi emperor, and completed after Pereira’s death by Pedrini.* The work was revised and partly integrated as the last part of the Lülü zhengyi xubian 律呂正義續編, the supplement to the imperial encyclopedia on music Lülü zhengyi 律呂正義 (part of Lülü yuanyuan 律呂淵源, 1723).** It features a presentation of the tonal system, rhythmic and staff notation and is a good example of the difficulties involved in translating musical terminology from a European into a Chinese tradition."
*mss discovered by Wu Xiangxiang 吳相湘, who first published his discovery in Guangzhou daguang bao 廣州大光報 (7 November 1936)…” Local access dig.pdf. [Pereira-Lulu zuanyao.pdf] |
Author | Barbieri, Patrizio |
Place | Pistoia |
Publisher | Fondazione accademia di musica italiana per organo di Pistoia |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | English, Italian |
Type | Extract (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | ML550.C5 B382 2016d |
Description | pdf. [pp. 205-257 : ill.] |
Note | Musical instruments, gut strings, musicians and Corelli’s Sonatas at the Chinese Imperial Court : The gifts of Clement XI (1700-1720) / Patrizio Barbieri. Extract from: Informazione organistica : rivista della Fondazione accademia di musica italiana per organo di Pistoia. Nuova Serie-n.40 Anno XXVIII-n.2 Dicembre 2016 "Saggi in ricordo di Peter Williams (II)" Includes bibliographical references and appendix with sources. “The scope of this study is to illustrate the music and musical instruments sent as a gift in 1719 by Pope Clement XI to the Emperor of China: they included harpsichords, organs, automata, flutes, bowed and plucked string instruments, as well as their stringing. Various music scores were also brought to Beijing, but the only ones named together with their composer are the sonatas and concerti grossi by Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713), whose published collections are all present, from Op. I to Op. VI. This will be viewed against the background of conspicuous musical activities at Court carried out by the missionaries sent from Rome during the last years of the reign of Kangxi (1710-1722). An excursus on the positive organs sent to other oriental missions in the same period is also provided.” Local access dig.pdf. [Barbieri-Musical instruments.pdf] |
Author | Weng Panfeng 翁攀峰 |
Place | [Beijing] [北京] |
Publisher | --- |
Collection | Ricci Institute Library |
Edition | |
Language | Chinese 中文[簡體字] |
Type | Thesis/Dissertation (PDF) |
Series | |
Shelf | Digital Archives |
Call Number | ML335.2.W465 2014d |
Description | dig.pdf (223 frames : ill.) |
Note | Qingdai lüxue ruogan wenti tantao 清代律學若干問題探討 / Weng Panfeng 翁攀峰. Thesis (Ph.D.--Zhongguo kexue jishu daxue 中國科學技術大學, 2014). Abstract also in English. Includes bibliographical references. 附錄: 清代樂律學文獻 p.211 (frame 221) Local access dig.pdf [Weng-Temperament.pdf]
清代律學若干問題探討 / 翁攀峰 Full Table of Contents see CNKI. |