001464440 000__ 05732nam\\2200637\i\4500 001464440 001__ 1464440 001464440 003__ Credo 001464440 005__ 20230624003209.0 001464440 006__ m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ 001464440 007__ cr\cn\nnnunnun 001464440 008__ 230523r20232019njuabe\\ob\\\\001\0\eng\d 001464440 010__ $$z 2018961518 001464440 020__ $$a9781803162225$$q(electronic book) 001464440 020__ $$z0691169985 001464440 020__ $$z9780691169989 001464440 035__ $$a(CaBNVSL)slc00004473 001464440 035__ $$a(Credo)princetonca2019 001464440 035__ $$a(OCoLC)1380642655 001464440 040__ $$aCaBNVSL$$beng$$erda$$cCaBNVSL$$dCaBNVSL 001464440 043__ $$aa-cc--- 001464440 050_4 $$aNA1540$$b.S738 2019eb 001464440 08204 $$a722.11$$223 001464440 1001_ $$aSteinhardt, Nancy Shatzman,$$eauthor. 001464440 24510 $$aChinese architecture :$$ba history /$$cNancy Shatzman Steinhardt. 001464440 250__ $$a[Enhanced Credo edition] 001464440 263__ $$a20230614 001464440 264_1 $$aPrinceton, NJ :$$bPrinceton University Press,$$c[2019] 001464440 264_4 $$c©2019 001464440 26431 $$aBoston, Massachusetts :$$bCredo Reference,$$c2023. 001464440 300__ $$a1 online resource (102 entries) :$$b360 images 001464440 336__ $$atext$$2rdacontent 001464440 336__ $$astill image$$2rdacontent 001464440 337__ $$aelectronic$$2isbdmedia 001464440 338__ $$aonline resource$$2rdacarrier 001464440 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 357-376) and index. 001464440 5050_ $$aIntroduction. Beyond the forbidden city -- Chapter 1. Genesis of Chinese buildings and cities. Cities and buildings before written records ; Cities and buildings of the Bronze Age ; Western Zhou to warring states -- Chapter 2. Architecture of the First Emperor and his predecessors. Rulers' cities ; Rulers' tombs ; Architecture of China's First Empire -- Chapter 3. Han architecture. Han Chang'an: the First Emperor's vision realized ; Han Luoyang and other cities: realistic imperial vision and nonimperial presence ; Han Tombs outside the capitals ; Additional evidence of Han architecture ; China's earliest Buddhist architecture -- Chapter 4. An age of turmoil: three kingdoms, two Jins, sixteen states. Urbanism and palaces in an age of disunion ; New buildings for a Buddhist age ; Tombs -- Chapter 5. Northern dynasties and southern dynasties. Cities and palaces ; Tombs of royalty ; Tombs in Gansu, Koguryo, and Datong ; Great age of Buddhist cave-chapels ; China's earliest pagodas ; Toward a timber frame ; A Buddhist monument to Pious deeds ; Sarcophagus as architecture -- Chapter 6. Sui and Tang: architecture for empires. Three great cities ; Palace architecture in and outside the Sui-Tang capitals ; Sacred wooden architecture ; Exemplary Tang pagodas ; Tombs ; Five extraordinary buildings ; Tang architecture outside the empire -- Chapter 7. Five dynasties and ten kingdoms. Humble halls for aspiring rulers, 963-966 ; Tenth-century timber architecture before 960 ; Official and royal tombs ; Architecture of the Dali Kingdom -- Chapter 8. Grandeur and magnificence under Liao and Western Xia. The ancestral prefecture ; Magnificent halls--Liao style ; Liao pagodas ; Liao tombs ; Octagonal construction: Liao and Western Xia -- Chapter 9. The Chinese building standards. Fundamentals of the Chinese timber frame ; Bracket sets and roofs ; Jiehua -- Chapter 10. Song elegance and Jin opulence.Religious architecture north and south, 960-1127 ; Religious architecture, 1127-1279 ; Secular architecture -- Chapter 11: The Chinese city between Tang and Ming. Urbanism on the grasslands ; Metropolises of millions ; Jin capitals ; The road to Dadu ; Yuan Dadu and Zhongdu ; Cities and princely retreats outside the capitals -- Chapter 12. The Mongol century. Eminent halls ; Other Yuan buildings ; Architecture of foreign faiths -- Chapter 13. The Chinese imperial city and its architecture, Ming and Qing. Imperial Nanjing ; Imperial Beijing ; Building standards in Qing palatial architecture ; Altars ; Thirteen Ming tombs ; Qing imperial architecture -- Chapter 14: Late imperial architecture in Chinese style. Ming Buddhist monasteries ; Monasteries on sacred peaks ; Architecture of Confucianism ; Three towers in Shanxi -- Chapter 15. Convergences: Lamaist, Dai, Islamic. Architecture of Lamaist Buddhism ; Chengde: Qing vision realized ; Buddhist architecture in the Yunnan marshes ; Dong towers ; Ming and Qing Islamic architecture -- Chapter 16. Garden and house. Gardens of South China ; Imperial gardens of Beijing ; Residential architecture -- Chapter 17. China comes to Europe, Europe comes to China, Chinese students come to the United States. Chinoiserie ; Sequestered European architecture ; China's First Generation of Architects ; Conclusion. Resolving the Forbidden City. The Counteraxis. 001464440 506__ $$aAccess limited to authorized users. 001464440 588__ $$aDescription based on print version record. 001464440 650_0 $$aArchitecture$$zChina$$xHistory. 001464440 650_0 $$aBuddhist architecture$$zChina$$xHistory. 001464440 655_0 $$aElectronic books 001464440 7102_ $$aCredo Reference (Firm),$$edistributor. 001464440 77608 $$iPrint version:$$z0691169985$$z9780691169989$$w(DLC) 2018961518 001464440 852__ $$bebk 001464440 85640 $$3Credo Reference $$uhttps://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/title/princetonca?institutionId=3155$$zOnline Access 001464440 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:1464440$$pGLOBAL_SET 001464440 980__ $$aBIB 001464440 980__ $$aEBOOK 001464440 982__ $$aEbook 001464440 983__ $$aOnline