This dataset contains 404 mulberry disasters found in a digital collection of 4,000 Chinese local gazetteers (published in Erudition's Zhongguo Fangzhi Ku, or the Database of Chinese Local Gazetteers) that was curated during 2018 and 2019 by scholars at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science to support their joint research paper entitled: “What Is Local Knowledge: Digital Humanities and Yuan Dynasty Disasters in Imperial China’s Local Gazetteers.” The paper appeared in the Journal of Chinese History in its 2020 spring issue. The authors use this dataset to ask what results the emerging methodology of analyzing data drawn from historical sources can produce for historical research, given that such data-driven analysis is inevita...
In traditional historical research, interpreting historical documents subjectively and manually caus...
This paper demonstrates how historical research is a valuable tool for identifying past geological, ...
In this webinar hosted by the Harvard-Yenching Library, Dr. Chen Shih-Pei from the Max Planck Instit...
Chinese local gazetteers have been recording local information since the seventh century: the corpus...
Chinese local gazetteers have long been widely used by scholars to investigate the local products, c...
The past three decades have witnessed great changes and developments in the publishing industry in C...
To train students for research is a challenge. It is more so in the field of non-Western history bec...
Temple gazetteers are a subset of the Chinese genre of gazetteers (difang zhi 地方志). Chinese gazettee...
This workshop will introduce CHMap, an open-access web GIS platform developed by the Max Planck Inst...
Workshop at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science(MPIWG), Department III, Berlin, Germ...
In 1980 China embarked on a huge project of compiling thousands of volumes of "New Gazetteers" – thu...
This dataset was produced as part of the Research Workshop on China’s Local Gazetteers, Computerized...
Reconstructions of historical cropland area and spatial distribution are necessary for studying huma...
International audienceThis poster outlines my research project entitled “A connected history of the ...
Drought has long existed in the natural world; however, it is not always easily identified, especial...
In traditional historical research, interpreting historical documents subjectively and manually caus...
This paper demonstrates how historical research is a valuable tool for identifying past geological, ...
In this webinar hosted by the Harvard-Yenching Library, Dr. Chen Shih-Pei from the Max Planck Instit...
Chinese local gazetteers have been recording local information since the seventh century: the corpus...
Chinese local gazetteers have long been widely used by scholars to investigate the local products, c...
The past three decades have witnessed great changes and developments in the publishing industry in C...
To train students for research is a challenge. It is more so in the field of non-Western history bec...
Temple gazetteers are a subset of the Chinese genre of gazetteers (difang zhi 地方志). Chinese gazettee...
This workshop will introduce CHMap, an open-access web GIS platform developed by the Max Planck Inst...
Workshop at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science(MPIWG), Department III, Berlin, Germ...
In 1980 China embarked on a huge project of compiling thousands of volumes of "New Gazetteers" – thu...
This dataset was produced as part of the Research Workshop on China’s Local Gazetteers, Computerized...
Reconstructions of historical cropland area and spatial distribution are necessary for studying huma...
International audienceThis poster outlines my research project entitled “A connected history of the ...
Drought has long existed in the natural world; however, it is not always easily identified, especial...
In traditional historical research, interpreting historical documents subjectively and manually caus...
This paper demonstrates how historical research is a valuable tool for identifying past geological, ...
In this webinar hosted by the Harvard-Yenching Library, Dr. Chen Shih-Pei from the Max Planck Instit...