The Korea Republic (1953-1965); The Korea Herald (1965-2007).
The Korean republic [microform].
Seoul [Korea], Korea Information Service, -1965.
Volume/date range: Began Aug. 15, 1953.
Volume/date range: -v. 12, no. 310 (Aug. 14, 1965)
The Korea herald [microform].
Seoul : [Korea Information Service, 1965-
Volume/date range: Vol. 13, no. 1 (Aug. 15, 1965)-
Acquired through the Eaton W. and Beverly H. Ballard Fund & the Luckie Waller Fund.
This is an English newspaper published in Korea.
195 Microfilm reels.
See the Socrates record for the Korean Republic.
Korea: Political and Economic Reports, 1882-1970.
Korea : political & economic reports 1882-1970 / edited by Robert Jarman.
[Slough] : Archive Editions, 2005.
14 vols.
This is a collection of diplomatic reports regarding Korea that are housed in the British National Archives.
Han Kyore Sinmun.
Seoul : Han Kyŏre Sinmunsa, 1989-2007.
Acquired through the Dewey Donnell Fund.
Microfilm of the most liberal newspaper in Korea.
175 microfilm reels
Hanguk haebanggi sinmun charyo.
Seoul : Kaen Sisutem Koria.
After liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, many newspapers were launched and discontinued within few years in Korea. This microfilm set is a collection of those newspapers.
80 microfilm reels
Choson hyangto taebaekkwa = Encyclopedia of North Korean geography and culture.
Seoul : Pyonghwa Munje Yonguso, 2005.
This encyclopedia consists of nearly 350,000 entries with 15,000 pictures and over 230 maps for each administrative district of North Korea. Pictures were taken very recently (mostly after 2002). This was a product of multi-year cooperation by the scholars in two Koreas. It is an important reference sources for accurate and latest information about North Korea.
20 vols.
Major Buddhist canon Tripitaka series
Qisha da zang jing 磧砂大藏經 / Beijing Shi : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2005
120 volumes
Yongle bei zang 永樂北藏 / Beijing : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2000
200 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing频伽大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-2000
100 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing xu bian bu 频伽大藏经续编部 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-200
100 volumes
Puhui da zang jing 普慧大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Zhongguo shu dian, 2007
42 volumes
Tripitaka is the formal term for a Buddhist canon of scriptures. All editions of the Tripitaka were translated from the Sanskrit edition. The editions vary in content since they were repeatedly revised and amended. Many different versions of Tripitaka exist throughout the Buddhist world, containing an enormous variety of texts.
Through the Song to Qing dynasty, tremendous efforts were put into compiling Tripitaka, including translations of Buddhist cannon as well as original works by Chinese Buddhist monks and scholars. These are historical treasures and indispensable research materials. For the past 20 years, enormous amounts of resources from governments as well as various Chinese and Taiwanese publishers have been put in collecting, restoring and compiling these texts. The complete collection of the Tripitaka series represents years of scholarly labor and constitutes the single largest repository of such documents in the world. As such, the value of the collection to present and future scholars is, and will remain, inestimable.
With partial funding from Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, East Asia library acquired four important editions of Tripitaka in 2007/08 to support active research on Buddhism on Stanford campus. The addition of these four major editions of Tripitaka to the collection made Stanford East Asia library one among few libraries in North America to hold a majority of the published Tripitaka series. Other Tripitaka editions in the EAL holding include:
Da zheng xin xiu da zang jing 大正新修大藏經
Wan zheng zang jing 卍正藏經
Wan xu zang jing 卍續藏經
Zhonghua da zang jing 中华大藏经
Gaoli da zang jing 高麗大藏經
Qianlong da zang jing 乾隆大藏經
Fangshan shi jing房山石经
Song Zang yi zhen 宋藏遺珍
Xizang da zang jing 西藏大藏经
Two collections for studies of Shanghai
Shanghai Dao Qi (Shanghai title deed) 上海道契 / Cai Yutian zhu bian / Shanghai: Shanghai gu ji chu ban she, 2005
30 volumes
Shanghai: political and economic reports, 1842-1943: British government records from the international city /edited by Robert L. Jarman / Slough : Archive Editions, 2008
18 volumes
“Dao qi” is the permanent land lease issued by the local officials “Dao tai” 道台 to the foreigners living and doing business in cities such as Shanghai and Tianjing during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This 30 volume set re-produces in facsimile more than 10,000 original records of land leases issued in Shanghai from 1847-1911 and includes over 5,000 persona such as merchants, missionary, foreign residents, and elites of society from Europe, North and South America, Japan, and other countries and areas. The records contain letters, reports, maps, and certificates in both Chinese and English. This unique collection is extremely valuable to the study of the social and economic history of Shanghai.
In addition to these important primary materials that East Asia library has obtained for the studies of Shanghai, another large set added to the Green library in 2008 has also had significant impact on the studies of Shanghai. It is an 18-volume set of Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City, published by Archive Edition. This collection of primary documents includes annual reports and trade returns, judicial reviews, dispatches on topics of interest and telegrams on urgent matters of Shanghai and China from the British consul in Shanghai to the British ambassador to China based usually in Peking, but in the 1930s based in Shanghai itself. These reports provide first-hand records and analysis of political, commercial and social developments throughout the period.
Together, Shanghai dao qi and Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City will greatly facilitate the research and teaching of Chinese history and Shanghai on campus.
Minguo ji cui (Collection of publications during the Republic period of China [1912-1949]) 民国籍粹
8,000 titles in more than 8,500 volumes.
For many scholars, the Republican period witnessed one of the largest and most sweeping intellectual revolutions in human history. It was during this period that Chinese scholars began to look westward and incorporate Western research methodologies into their existing, traditional modes of conducting research. Also, many new academic disciplines were founded outside of the traditional arenas of history, philosophy, and literature.
In the 1980s, scholars began to regard publications from the Republican period as products of an academically vigorous and significant period that offered a window through which to examine the intellectual development of modern China. Given this development, Chinese publishing houses began to reprint important publications from the Republican period, a process that witnessed its culmination in the publication of Mingguo ji cui. This collection, with a highly limited print run and only several copies offered to North American institutions, is the largest of its kind and offers researchers unprecedented access to the period.
At Stanford, there are strong and ever-increasing research interests on modern China and the Republican period in particular. The Stanford East Asia Library is known to hold one of the preeminent collections of Republican period materials in the world; the addition of this unique collection to the EAL simply strengthening an already outstanding collection. This has greatly facilitated the research of modern China specialists at Stanford as well as throughout North America.
East Asian Studies
The Korea Republic (1953-1965); The Korea Herald (1965-2007).
The Korean republic [microform].
Seoul [Korea], Korea Information Service, -1965.
Volume/date range: Began Aug. 15, 1953.
Volume/date range: -v. 12, no. 310 (Aug. 14, 1965)
The Korea herald [microform].
Seoul : [Korea Information Service, 1965-
Volume/date range: Vol. 13, no. 1 (Aug. 15, 1965)-
Acquired through the Eaton W. and Beverly H. Ballard Fund & the Luckie Waller Fund.
This is an English newspaper published in Korea.
195 Microfilm reels.
See the Socrates record for the Korean Republic.
Korea: Political and Economic Reports, 1882-1970.
Korea : political & economic reports 1882-1970 / edited by Robert Jarman.
[Slough] : Archive Editions, 2005.
14 vols.
This is a collection of diplomatic reports regarding Korea that are housed in the British National Archives.
Han Kyore Sinmun.
Seoul : Han Kyŏre Sinmunsa, 1989-2007.
Acquired through the Dewey Donnell Fund.
Microfilm of the most liberal newspaper in Korea.
175 microfilm reels
Hanguk haebanggi sinmun charyo.
Seoul : Kaen Sisutem Koria.
After liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, many newspapers were launched and discontinued within few years in Korea. This microfilm set is a collection of those newspapers.
80 microfilm reels
Choson hyangto taebaekkwa = Encyclopedia of North Korean geography and culture.
Seoul : Pyonghwa Munje Yonguso, 2005.
This encyclopedia consists of nearly 350,000 entries with 15,000 pictures and over 230 maps for each administrative district of North Korea. Pictures were taken very recently (mostly after 2002). This was a product of multi-year cooperation by the scholars in two Koreas. It is an important reference sources for accurate and latest information about North Korea.
20 vols.
Major Buddhist canon Tripitaka series
Qisha da zang jing 磧砂大藏經 / Beijing Shi : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2005
120 volumes
Yongle bei zang 永樂北藏 / Beijing : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2000
200 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing频伽大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-2000
100 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing xu bian bu 频伽大藏经续编部 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-200
100 volumes
Puhui da zang jing 普慧大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Zhongguo shu dian, 2007
42 volumes
Tripitaka is the formal term for a Buddhist canon of scriptures. All editions of the Tripitaka were translated from the Sanskrit edition. The editions vary in content since they were repeatedly revised and amended. Many different versions of Tripitaka exist throughout the Buddhist world, containing an enormous variety of texts.
Through the Song to Qing dynasty, tremendous efforts were put into compiling Tripitaka, including translations of Buddhist cannon as well as original works by Chinese Buddhist monks and scholars. These are historical treasures and indispensable research materials. For the past 20 years, enormous amounts of resources from governments as well as various Chinese and Taiwanese publishers have been put in collecting, restoring and compiling these texts. The complete collection of the Tripitaka series represents years of scholarly labor and constitutes the single largest repository of such documents in the world. As such, the value of the collection to present and future scholars is, and will remain, inestimable.
With partial funding from Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, East Asia library acquired four important editions of Tripitaka in 2007/08 to support active research on Buddhism on Stanford campus. The addition of these four major editions of Tripitaka to the collection made Stanford East Asia library one among few libraries in North America to hold a majority of the published Tripitaka series. Other Tripitaka editions in the EAL holding include:
Da zheng xin xiu da zang jing 大正新修大藏經
Wan zheng zang jing 卍正藏經
Wan xu zang jing 卍續藏經
Zhonghua da zang jing 中华大藏经
Gaoli da zang jing 高麗大藏經
Qianlong da zang jing 乾隆大藏經
Fangshan shi jing房山石经
Song Zang yi zhen 宋藏遺珍
Xizang da zang jing 西藏大藏经
Two collections for studies of Shanghai
Shanghai Dao Qi (Shanghai title deed) 上海道契 / Cai Yutian zhu bian / Shanghai: Shanghai gu ji chu ban she, 2005
30 volumes
Shanghai: political and economic reports, 1842-1943: British government records from the international city /edited by Robert L. Jarman / Slough : Archive Editions, 2008
18 volumes
“Dao qi” is the permanent land lease issued by the local officials “Dao tai” 道台 to the foreigners living and doing business in cities such as Shanghai and Tianjing during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This 30 volume set re-produces in facsimile more than 10,000 original records of land leases issued in Shanghai from 1847-1911 and includes over 5,000 persona such as merchants, missionary, foreign residents, and elites of society from Europe, North and South America, Japan, and other countries and areas. The records contain letters, reports, maps, and certificates in both Chinese and English. This unique collection is extremely valuable to the study of the social and economic history of Shanghai.
In addition to these important primary materials that East Asia library has obtained for the studies of Shanghai, another large set added to the Green library in 2008 has also had significant impact on the studies of Shanghai. It is an 18-volume set of Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City, published by Archive Edition. This collection of primary documents includes annual reports and trade returns, judicial reviews, dispatches on topics of interest and telegrams on urgent matters of Shanghai and China from the British consul in Shanghai to the British ambassador to China based usually in Peking, but in the 1930s based in Shanghai itself. These reports provide first-hand records and analysis of political, commercial and social developments throughout the period.
Together, Shanghai dao qi and Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City will greatly facilitate the research and teaching of Chinese history and Shanghai on campus.
Minguo ji cui (Collection of publications during the Republic period of China [1912-1949]) 民国籍粹
8,000 titles in more than 8,500 volumes.
For many scholars, the Republican period witnessed one of the largest and most sweeping intellectual revolutions in human history. It was during this period that Chinese scholars began to look westward and incorporate Western research methodologies into their existing, traditional modes of conducting research. Also, many new academic disciplines were founded outside of the traditional arenas of history, philosophy, and literature.
In the 1980s, scholars began to regard publications from the Republican period as products of an academically vigorous and significant period that offered a window through which to examine the intellectual development of modern China. Given this development, Chinese publishing houses began to reprint important publications from the Republican period, a process that witnessed its culmination in the publication of Mingguo ji cui. This collection, with a highly limited print run and only several copies offered to North American institutions, is the largest of its kind and offers researchers unprecedented access to the period.
At Stanford, there are strong and ever-increasing research interests on modern China and the Republican period in particular. The Stanford East Asia Library is known to hold one of the preeminent collections of Republican period materials in the world; the addition of this unique collection to the EAL simply strengthening an already outstanding collection. This has greatly facilitated the research of modern China specialists at Stanford as well as throughout North America.
East Asian Studies
The Korea Republic (1953-1965); The Korea Herald (1965-2007).
The Korean republic [microform].
Seoul [Korea], Korea Information Service, -1965.
Volume/date range: Began Aug. 15, 1953.
Volume/date range: -v. 12, no. 310 (Aug. 14, 1965)
The Korea herald [microform].
Seoul : [Korea Information Service, 1965-
Volume/date range: Vol. 13, no. 1 (Aug. 15, 1965)-
Acquired through the Eaton W. and Beverly H. Ballard Fund & the Luckie Waller Fund.
This is an English newspaper published in Korea.
195 Microfilm reels.
See the Socrates record for the Korean Republic.
Korea: Political and Economic Reports, 1882-1970.
Korea : political & economic reports 1882-1970 / edited by Robert Jarman.
[Slough] : Archive Editions, 2005.
14 vols.
This is a collection of diplomatic reports regarding Korea that are housed in the British National Archives.
Han Kyore Sinmun.
Seoul : Han Kyŏre Sinmunsa, 1989-2007.
Acquired through the Dewey Donnell Fund.
Microfilm of the most liberal newspaper in Korea.
175 microfilm reels
Hanguk haebanggi sinmun charyo.
Seoul : Kaen Sisutem Koria.
After liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, many newspapers were launched and discontinued within few years in Korea. This microfilm set is a collection of those newspapers.
80 microfilm reels
Choson hyangto taebaekkwa = Encyclopedia of North Korean geography and culture.
Seoul : Pyonghwa Munje Yonguso, 2005.
This encyclopedia consists of nearly 350,000 entries with 15,000 pictures and over 230 maps for each administrative district of North Korea. Pictures were taken very recently (mostly after 2002). This was a product of multi-year cooperation by the scholars in two Koreas. It is an important reference sources for accurate and latest information about North Korea.
20 vols.
Major Buddhist canon Tripitaka series
Qisha da zang jing 磧砂大藏經 / Beijing Shi : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2005
120 volumes
Yongle bei zang 永樂北藏 / Beijing : Xian zhuang shu ju, 2000
200 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing频伽大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-2000
100 volumes
Pin jia da zang jing xu bian bu 频伽大藏经续编部 / Beijing Shi : Jiu zhou tu shu chu ban she, 1998-200
100 volumes
Puhui da zang jing 普慧大藏经 / Beijing Shi : Zhongguo shu dian, 2007
42 volumes
Tripitaka is the formal term for a Buddhist canon of scriptures. All editions of the Tripitaka were translated from the Sanskrit edition. The editions vary in content since they were repeatedly revised and amended. Many different versions of Tripitaka exist throughout the Buddhist world, containing an enormous variety of texts.
Through the Song to Qing dynasty, tremendous efforts were put into compiling Tripitaka, including translations of Buddhist cannon as well as original works by Chinese Buddhist monks and scholars. These are historical treasures and indispensable research materials. For the past 20 years, enormous amounts of resources from governments as well as various Chinese and Taiwanese publishers have been put in collecting, restoring and compiling these texts. The complete collection of the Tripitaka series represents years of scholarly labor and constitutes the single largest repository of such documents in the world. As such, the value of the collection to present and future scholars is, and will remain, inestimable.
With partial funding from Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, East Asia library acquired four important editions of Tripitaka in 2007/08 to support active research on Buddhism on Stanford campus. The addition of these four major editions of Tripitaka to the collection made Stanford East Asia library one among few libraries in North America to hold a majority of the published Tripitaka series. Other Tripitaka editions in the EAL holding include:
Da zheng xin xiu da zang jing 大正新修大藏經
Wan zheng zang jing 卍正藏經
Wan xu zang jing 卍續藏經
Zhonghua da zang jing 中华大藏经
Gaoli da zang jing 高麗大藏經
Qianlong da zang jing 乾隆大藏經
Fangshan shi jing房山石经
Song Zang yi zhen 宋藏遺珍
Xizang da zang jing 西藏大藏经
Two collections for studies of Shanghai
Shanghai Dao Qi (Shanghai title deed) 上海道契 / Cai Yutian zhu bian / Shanghai: Shanghai gu ji chu ban she, 2005
30 volumes
Shanghai: political and economic reports, 1842-1943: British government records from the international city /edited by Robert L. Jarman / Slough : Archive Editions, 2008
18 volumes
“Dao qi” is the permanent land lease issued by the local officials “Dao tai” 道台 to the foreigners living and doing business in cities such as Shanghai and Tianjing during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This 30 volume set re-produces in facsimile more than 10,000 original records of land leases issued in Shanghai from 1847-1911 and includes over 5,000 persona such as merchants, missionary, foreign residents, and elites of society from Europe, North and South America, Japan, and other countries and areas. The records contain letters, reports, maps, and certificates in both Chinese and English. This unique collection is extremely valuable to the study of the social and economic history of Shanghai.
In addition to these important primary materials that East Asia library has obtained for the studies of Shanghai, another large set added to the Green library in 2008 has also had significant impact on the studies of Shanghai. It is an 18-volume set of Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City, published by Archive Edition. This collection of primary documents includes annual reports and trade returns, judicial reviews, dispatches on topics of interest and telegrams on urgent matters of Shanghai and China from the British consul in Shanghai to the British ambassador to China based usually in Peking, but in the 1930s based in Shanghai itself. These reports provide first-hand records and analysis of political, commercial and social developments throughout the period.
Together, Shanghai dao qi and Shanghai: Political & Economic Reports, 1842-1943 British Government Records from the International City will greatly facilitate the research and teaching of Chinese history and Shanghai on campus.
Minguo ji cui (Collection of publications during the Republic period of China [1912-1949]) 民国籍粹
8,000 titles in more than 8,500 volumes.
For many scholars, the Republican period witnessed one of the largest and most sweeping intellectual revolutions in human history. It was during this period that Chinese scholars began to look westward and incorporate Western research methodologies into their existing, traditional modes of conducting research. Also, many new academic disciplines were founded outside of the traditional arenas of history, philosophy, and literature.
In the 1980s, scholars began to regard publications from the Republican period as products of an academically vigorous and significant period that offered a window through which to examine the intellectual development of modern China. Given this development, Chinese publishing houses began to reprint important publications from the Republican period, a process that witnessed its culmination in the publication of Mingguo ji cui. This collection, with a highly limited print run and only several copies offered to North American institutions, is the largest of its kind and offers researchers unprecedented access to the period.
At Stanford, there are strong and ever-increasing research interests on modern China and the Republican period in particular. The Stanford East Asia Library is known to hold one of the preeminent collections of Republican period materials in the world; the addition of this unique collection to the EAL simply strengthening an already outstanding collection. This has greatly facilitated the research of modern China specialists at Stanford as well as throughout North America.
