Attēls:Han_foreign_relations_CE_2.jpg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
![Attēls:Han foreign relations CE 2.jpg](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b0/Han_foreign_relations_CE_2.jpg/800px-Han_foreign_relations_CE_2.jpg)
Sākotnējais fails (965 × 650 pikseļi, faila izmērs: 558 KB, MIME tips: image/jpeg)
![]() | Šis fails ir no Vikikrātuves. Tā apraksts no attēla lapas Vikikrātuvē ir parādīts zemāk. Vikikrātuve ir brīvi licencēta failu krātuve. Tu vari tai palīdzēt. |
Satura rādītājs
Introduction
This map shows the world as was known to Han Dynasty China in 2 CE. Names of non-Chinese peoples and states have been purposely left with their Chinese names, (e.g. Dayuan instead of Fergana; Gaogouli instead of Goguryeo), to reflect the fact that our knowledge of participants in the Han world order comes almost exclusively from Chinese sources.
- Credits
- Chinese Version of Image:Han foreign relations CE 2.jpg.
- Created and copyright (2005) by Yu Ninjie.
- Released under the GNU FDL.
Territorial garrisons
The headquarters of chief commandants (都尉) are shown in yellow. Chief commandants commanded territorial garrisons and were responsible for the supression of local armed threats and supervision of recruitment for military service. Note that these were concentrated on the frontiers, especially on the northern border region. When in the interior of the Han empire, they were often placed near iron or salt industries, or on important communication routes. A few dependent states (屬國) are shown in green. These were usually mixed settlements of Chinese and Xiongnu or more commonly, Qiang, under Han administration.
Routes of communication
The broad outline of communication and transport routes from the capital Chang'an is marked in white. These were based on Qin Dynasty imperial highways, Han roads (such as the Chang'an-Anyi-Taiyuan-Yu road) and navigable riverways (such as the Chenliu and Shouchun river routes). The long road, often known as the Silk Road, extended west from Chang'an to the "Western Regions".
These are based in part on the reconstruction of early Chinese roads and waterways by Joseph Needham in Science and Civilisation, Vol. IV, 1954-, and the additions of Rafe de Crespigny in Generals of the South, 1992. The northern and southern routes of the Silk Road in the Western Regions is based on Map 16 in Cambridge History of China, vol. 1, 1986.
The Western Regions
From the end of the 2nd century CE, Han China fought with the Xiongnu over control of the "Western Regions". By the time that they established the office of Protector General of the Western Regions (at Wulei) in 60 BCE or 59 Bnnnnnnnjyyt2twyeydyyruueutuudj que CE, the entire region was dominated by the Chinese. Tributary city-states, in light orange, sent periodic tribute to Chang'an and were rewarded by the Han court.
License and Source
![]() |
Ir dota atļauja kopēt, izplatīt un/vai pārveidot šo dokumentu saskaņā ar GNU brīvās dokumentācijas licences, versijas 1.2 vai jebkuras vēlākas versijas, ko publiskojis Brīvās programmatūras fonds nosacījumiem; bez nemainīgajām sadaļā, priekšējā un aizmugurēja'vāka tekstiem. Licences kopija ir iekļauta sadaļā ar nosaukumu GNU brīvās dokumentācijas licence.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Free Documentation Licensetruetrue |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Šis fails tiek izplatīts saskaņā ar licences Creative Commons Atsauce-Līdzīgi Noteikumi 3.0 Vispārējiem noteikumiem. | |
| ||
This licensing tag was added to this file as part of the GFDL licensing update.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/CC BY-SA 3.0Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0truetrue |
Source: English Wikipedia, original upload see version history
File history english Wikipedia
(del) (cur) 04:28, 10 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (571826 bytes) (free "documentation") (del) (rev) 03:05, 9 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (576822 bytes) (fixed up key) (del) (rev) 02:52, 9 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (571794 bytes) (more rivers) (del) (rev) 09:49, 8 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (566080 bytes) (More non-Chinese peoples; also cleaned up the rivers.) (del) (rev) 23:10, 3 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (559685 bytes) (fixed up key) (del) (rev) 07:36, 3 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (552630 bytes) (correction to rivers) (del) (rev) 07:10, 3 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (554025 bytes) (Han Great Wall shown.) (del) (rev) 05:23, 3 April 2005 . . Yu Ninjie . . 965x650 (549512 bytes) (Han foreign relations CE 2)
Captions
Šajā failā attēlotais
attēlo
Faila hronoloģija
Uzklikšķini uz datums/laiks kolonnā esošās saites, lai apskatītos, kā šis fails izskatījās tad.
Datums/Laiks | Attēls | Izmēri | Dalībnieks | Komentārs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
tagadējais | 2005. gada 4. oktobris, plkst. 05.42 | ![]() | 965 × 650 (558 KB) | Saperaud~commonswiki | Created and copyright (2005) by Yu Ninjie. Released under the GNU FDL. This map shows the world as was known to Han Dynasty China in CE 2. Names of non-Chinese peoples and states have |
Faila lietojums
Šo failu izmanto šajā 1 lapā:
Globālais faila lietojums
Šīs Vikipēdijas izmanto šo failu:
- Izmantojums als.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums ar.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums azb.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums bar.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums bg.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums da.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums de.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums en.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums eo.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums fa.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums frr.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums it.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums lt.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums nds.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums no.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums sh.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums sv.wikipedia.org
- Izmantojums sw.wikipedia.org
Metadati
Šis fails satur papildu informāciju, kuru, visticamāk, ir pievienojis digitālais fotoaparāts vai skeneris, ar ko veidots fails. Ja šis fails pēc tam ir ticis modificēts, šie dati var neatbilst izmaiņām (var būt novecojuši).
Orientācija | Normāla |
---|---|
Horizontālā izšķirtspēja | 150 dpi |
Vertikālā izšķirtspēja | 150 dpi |
Lietotā programma | Adobe Photoshop CS Windows |
Attēla pēdējās izmainīšanas datums un laiks | 2005. gada 10. aprīlis, plkst. 12.23 |
Krāsu telpa | sRGB |