One cultural route span the millenary: Chinese Tea Road

Baihao, Li, Jianhua, Zhu, Li, Huang and Jian, Guo (2005) One cultural route span the millenary: Chinese Tea Road. In: 15th ICOMOS General Assembly and International Symposium: ‘Monuments and sites in their setting - conserving cultural heritage in changing townscapes and landscapes’, 17 – 21 oct 2005, Xi'an, China. [Conference or Workshop Item]

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Abstract (in English)

In the process of Chinese ancient civilization, The Tea Road is the most famous and important road as the cultural route that communicated extensively with other countries in the world, which still affects people’s life style and behavior yet. The paper shows the great international channel from Yangloudong Town to Mongolia and Russia of tea trade by describing the tea-horse trade from Yangloudong to Shanxi Merchants and Russian merchants, and puts forward the content, object, meaning and strategy of the protection.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Authors:
Authors
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Baihao, Li
UNSPECIFIED
Jianhua, Zhu
UNSPECIFIED
Li, Huang
UNSPECIFIED
Jian, Guo
UNSPECIFIED
Languages: English
Keywords: cultural route; trade route; conservation; protection
Subjects: H.HERITAGE TYPOLOGIES > 07. Cultural routes
E.CONSERVATION AND RESTORATION > 11. Legal protection and Administration
Name of monument, town, site, museum: Tea Road
ICOMOS Special Collection: Scientific Symposium (ICOMOS General Assemblies)
ICOMOS Special Collection Volume: 2005, 15th
Depositing User: Jose Garcia
Date Deposited: 06 Dec 2010 13:07
Last Modified: 13 Jan 2011 19:15
References: 1. Hankou concession compilation council, The Hankou concession Chronicle, wuhan: Wuhan Public House,2003

2. Niu Dingda, Tea Culture of Hubei,Wuhan: Hubei Public House,1995

3. Ding Guangping, The Characteristics and Influences of Tea-Making Industry at YangLouDong in Early-Modern Times, Journal of Huazhong Normal University, 2004(3): P101-106

4. Fen Dingxiang, The Brief History of Hubei Tea, Journal of Xiamen University, 2001(2): P270-274

5. Mei Li, The Production and Distribution of Hubei Tea in Ming and Qing Dynasty, Journal of Hubei University, 1994(2):P46-52

6. Ding Guangping Qiu Hongmei, Shanxi Merchants In Yangloudong From Qing Dynasty, Journal of Shanxi Normail University, 2004(2):P36-43

7. Puqi Local Chronicle Compilation Council, The Puqi Chronicle, Shenzhen:Haitian Press,1995
URI: https://openarchive.icomos.org/id/eprint/442

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