Fang Zhuangyou
Fang Zhuangyou | |||||||
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方壮猷 | |||||||
Born | 1902 | ||||||
Died | 1970 (aged 67–68) | ||||||
Occupation | Historian | ||||||
Children | Fang Keli | ||||||
Academic background | |||||||
Alma mater | Hunan First Normal University Beijing Normal University Tsinghua University University of Tokyo University of Paris | ||||||
Academic work | |||||||
Discipline | History | ||||||
Sub-discipline | Ethnic History History of Song, Liao, Jin and Yuan | ||||||
Institutions | Wuhan University | ||||||
Chinese name | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 方莊猷 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 方壮猷 | ||||||
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Xin'an | |||||||
Chinese | 欣安 | ||||||
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Fang Zhangxiu | |||||||
Chinese | 方彰修 | ||||||
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Fang Zhuangyou (Chinese: 方壮猷; 1902 – 1970), courtesy name Xin'an (欣安), was a Chinese historian who was a professor at Wuhan University, and best known for studying Chinese ethnic history and the history of Song, Liao, Jin and Yuan Empires.
Biography
[edit]Fang was born Fang Zhangxiu (方彰修) in Fenshui Township, Hunan, Qing Empire, in 1902.[1][2] After graduating from Hunan First Normal University, he was accepted to Beijing Normal University, and transferred to the Institute of Chinese Classics of Tsinghua University two years later.[1][2] In 1929, he pursued advanced studies at the University of Tokyo, studying history under the direction of Shiratori Kurakichi.[1][2] He taught at universities and colleges in both cities of Beijing and Nanjing after returning to China.[1][2] He later went to the University of Paris in France to follow the sinologist Paul Pelliot study the history of oriental nationalities.[1][2]
In 1936, Fang joined the faculty of Wuhan University, and taught there until 1949.[1][2]
After the founding of the Communist State, in 1950, Fang became deputy director of the Cultural Relics Division of the Department of Culture of the Central-South Military and Administrative Commission , in addition to serving as president of Central South China Library since 1951.[1][2] He was appointed director of the Hubei Provincial Bureau of Culture in 1955, and subsequently researcher of Hubei Institute of Philosophy and Social Sciences in 1958.[1][2] He was chosen as deputy director of the Hubei Provincial Commission for the Administration of Cultural Relics in 1965.[1][2]
Fang died in Wuhan, Hubei, in 1970.[1]
Personal life
[edit]Fang's son, Fang Keli (1938–2020), was a Chinese New Confucian philosopher.[2]
Publications
[edit]- 中国史学概要 [Summary of History of China] (in Chinese). Wuhan, Hubei: Wuhan University Press. 2011. ISBN 9787307085350.
- 契丹民族考 [A Study of the Qidan] (in Chinese). Beijing: Beijing Zhongxian Tuofang Technology Development Co., Ltd., Beijing Zhongxian Tuofang Technology Development Co., Ltd. 2007. OCLC 465491237.
- 鲜卑语言考 [A Study of Xianbei Language] (in Chinese). Beijing: Yenching University. 1930. OCLC 25133223.
- 南宋編年史家二李年譜 [Chronographer of the Li Family of the Southern Song Dynasty] (in Chinese). Shuo Wen She. 1944. OCLC 45770231.
- 宋史类编 [History of the Song Empire] (in Chinese).
Translation
[edit]- Shiratori Kurakichi (1934). 东胡民族考 [A Study of the Donghu] (in Japanese and Chinese). Translated by Fang, Zhuangyou. Shanghai: Commercial Press. ISBN 9787203092971. OCLC 703822040.
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Long, Jianyu (1998). "Chapter II: Xiangtan - A Place Propitious for Giving Birth to Great Men" 第二章 湘潭——地灵人杰. 乌石寨揽胜——彭德怀故里纪行 [Enjoying the Scenery at Wushizhai: Notes on Peng Dehuai's Hometown] (in Chinese). Chongqing: Southwest Normal University Press. ISBN 7-5621-2044-7.