Ditemukan 10420 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Medhurst, Walter Henry
Boston: Crocker & Brewster, 1838
951 MED c
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Dobson, W. A. C. H.
Canada: University of Toronto Press, 1959
495.15 DOB l
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Wilson-Hartgrove, Jonathan, 1980-
"Just as Reconstruction after the Civil War worked to repair a desperately broken society, our Christianity requires a spiritual reconstruction that undoes the injustices of the past. Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove traces his journey from the religion of the slaveholder to the Christianity of Christ, showing that when the gospel is reconstructed, freedom rings both for individuals and for society as a whole."
USA: Inter Varsity Press, 2018
277 WIL r
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Beijing: Zhongguo Wenlian Chuban Gongsi, 1999
R SIN 495.1 ZHO I
Buku Referensi Universitas Indonesia Library
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
"Right up until the end of the Hellenistic era the ancient Greeks did not realise that on the far eastern side of the Asiatic continent there was a Chinese civilisation. Before knowledge of China reached the West, silk was introduced there, imported from a country inhabited by a people called the Seres (Σῆρες). We find in Strabo’s Geography the oldest certain reference to the Seres, which originates in the lost history of Apollodorus of Artemita, who described the successes of the Indo-Greek rulers (200–180 BC and 155–130 BC). The real explosion of information about silk and the Seres as its producers came only at the beginning of the Augustan era, for the first time in Horace’s Epodes (between 40 and 30 BC). The Seres became a popular motif in Augustan poetry; in the Georgics Virgil was the first to mention expressis verbis that the Seres were the producers of fabrics. Yet even though the appearance of silk in Augustan Rome is absolutely certain, we cannot be completely sure that contemporary Romans knew anything of China. It is highly likely that the first references to the Seres refer to people from southern India. The first certain piece of information about China is a reference in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea (40–70 AD) about a country called Thin, whose capital is Thina. New observations made by travellers on overland and maritime routes were written about by Marinus of Tyre and then Claudius Ptolemy, who separated Serica, which is placed in the middle of the continent, from the country of Sinae (Σῖναι). In the third century AD the Roman Empire was experiencing an internal crisis and in China the empire of the Han dynasty was fractured into local states, so there is nothing strange in the weakening of direct trade relations between China and Rome. The book-knowledge of the ancient authors would from this point be the only source for garnering information about China in the Latin West right up until the thirteenth century."
300 HOZ 6:1 (2015)
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Kiang, Kang Hu
Shanghai: Chung Hwa Book, 1935
915.1 KIA c
Buku Teks SO Universitas Indonesia Library
Beijing, China: Chinese Literature Press, 1996
050 CL
Majalah, Jurnal, Buletin Universitas Indonesia Library
Peters, Gary L.
Dubuge, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt, 1983
304.6 PET p
Buku Teks Universitas Indonesia Library
Haupt, Arthur
Washington, DC: Population Reference Bureau, 1998
R 304.602 HAU p
Buku Referensi Universitas Indonesia Library