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Reisverslag, afgewisseld met levensverhalen, historische uitweidingen en zakelijke achtergrondinformatie, over met name de minderheden die in deze provincie wonen
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Yunnan Sheng (China) --- Description and travel. --- History
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Minorities --- Yunnan Sheng (China) --- Civilization --- Christian influences.
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The Chinese Government's five-year strategy for social and economic development to 2015 includes the aim of making the southwestern province of Yunnan a bridgehead for 'opening the country' to southeast Asia and south Asia. Yunnan - A Chinese Bridgehead to Asia traces the dynamic process which has led to this policy goal, a process through which Yunnan is being repositioned from a southwestern periphery of the People's Republic of China to a 'bridgehead' between China and its regional neighbours. It shows how this has been expressed in ideas and policy frameworks, involvement in regional...
Yunnan Sheng (China) -- Economic conditions. --- Yunnan Sheng (China) -- Politics and government. --- Yunnan Sheng (China). --- Business & Economics --- Economic History --- China --- Economic conditions. --- Politics and government. --- Space in economics. --- Spatial economics --- Economics --- Regional economics --- Yunnan Sheng (China)
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Haimenkou was an important location, with trade and cultural links connecting parts of modern Southeast Asia and northwestern China in ancient times. This book is based on an analysis of the faunal assemblage recovered from the Haimenkou site during the 2008 field season in Yunnan Province, China. It investigates the human-animal relationships at Haimenkou through a time span running from the late Neolithic Period to the middle Bronze Age (ca. 5000-2400 BP). The animal exploitation patterns, local animal domestication processes, human subsistence strategies and communication networks linking Haimenkou and other regions in prehistoric China are studied. Domesticated pig, dog and sheep bones were identified. Over sixteen wild mammal species as well as bird and fish bones and mollusc shells were also recovered. The results suggest that the Haimenkou people developed a mixed subsistence economy, consisting of crop farming, plant food gathering, animal husbandry, hunting and fishing.
Animal remains (Archaeology) --- Animals, Fossil --- Yunnan Sheng (China) --- Antiquities --- Neolithic period --- Bronze age --- Domestic animals
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H.R. Davies (1865-1950) was an English army officer and member of the British intelligence service. Between 1894 and 1900 he was asked by the British government to lead survey expeditions into the modern Chinese province of Yunnan to discover possible routes for a railway connecting British-occupied Burma with the upper Yangtze river and through to Sichuan. This book contains an account of his travels though Yunnan province, written as a travelogue and first published in 1909. The region had been little explored by westerners before Davies' expeditions, and this is the first detailed description of Yunnan from a European traveller. The society, diverse indigenous cultures, geography, economy and political situation of the province are described in detail, with an introductory three chapters on the political context of the expeditions, and on railway construction in south-east Asia in the late nineteenth century.
Davies, Henry Rodolph, --- Travel --- Yunnan Sheng (China) --- Description and travel. --- Davies, H. R. --- Tʻai-wei-ssu,
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Lolos. --- Legendre, A.-F. --- Sichuan Sheng (China) --- Yunnan Sheng (China) --- Description and travel.
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