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0787 Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.2
中国砂漠地帯の遺跡 : vol.2
Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.2 / 787 ページ(白黒高解像度画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000213
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INDEX

497

Chandu, Shikarpuri moneylender at Khotan,

  1. 170

Chang Ch'ien, envoy of Emperor Wu-ti

(second century B.c. ), i. 512, 513 Ch'ang-ma, oasis in Nan-shan Range, ii.

265-267

Chang Ta-lao-ye, magistrate of Shahyar,

  1. 377

` Charas ' habit, i. 114, 154, 267

Charchan, oasis and river, i. 321- 331 ;

river delta, i. 429-431, 434, 435 Chariot, four-horsed, in Miran fresco, i.

487

Charklik oasis in Lop- nor, i. 336-346,

435-437

Chavannes, M., Sinologist collaborator, his

help, i. xx, xxi ; his translation of Chinese Annals, i. 58, 514, 523 ; ii. 114, 152, 153, 185 ; his interpretation of

Chinese documents, i. 275, 384, 395, 401; ii. 55, 61, III, Ito, I21, I24, 125, I26,

  1. 146-147, 149, 155, 229, 419 Chavash Beg, owner of house occupied at

Kök-yar, i. 145, 146

Chên Tsung, emperor (998 A.D.), ii. 187

Cherries, at Kashgar, i. Io9

Cherubim, on Miran frescoes, i. 457

Ch'ê Ta-jên, Amban of Khotan, i. 172,

173, 215-219

Chiang-huan, guide at Nan-hu, ii. 86, 90,

91

Chiang-ssû-yeh, or Yin Ma Chiang, Chinese

secretary : engaged in Kashgar, on Mr. Macartney's recommendation, i. xvIr,

I 15- 117; his travel arrangements at Yarkand, i. 132 ; lessons in Chinese from,

i. 142-143 ; his dress and dignity, i. 143144 ; his company in walks, i. 147 ; left at Khotan, i. 176 ; takes to excavation work, i. 234, 247 ; his interpretation of Chinese documents, i. 275, 542 ; ii. 51,

52-53, 55, 61, 94, 95, 97, 116, 12I, 129, 136, 146, 229 ; his penmanship,

i. 332 ; ii. 9, 38 ; his knowledge of local officials and of official scandals, i.

  1. 338, 339, 532 ; ii. 17, 36, 423 ;
    left at Abdal, i. 355; his welcome on

return, i. 438 ; his assistance in excavations, i. 314, 352, 446 ; ii. IOI, 113, 116, 143, 144, 252 ; his weighing of silver ` horse-shoes,' i. so I ; his interest in old stories of Lop-nor, i. 519, 527, 531 ; his interest in surveying, i. 531 ; his restraint in fixing dates, i. 542 ; his perturbation on first reception at Tunhuang, ii. 9 ; his assistance in conversation with Chinese officials, ii. 14, 16, 33, 34, 232, 233, 290, 291 ; first visit to Caves of Thousand Buddhas, ii. 20, 22, 28, 29, 30, 31 ; his anxiety over lost labourers in desert, ii. 89, 91, 119 ; his patience and care for the labourers, ii.

VOL. II

157, 160 ; his delight in the ` rumbling' sand-hill, ii. 161; his story of the god-sent dust-storm, ii. 162 ; his accommodation at Caves of Thousand Buddhas, ii. 165 ; his negotiation with Taoist priest for hidden MSS., ii. 166-169; he brings and interprets the first rolls,

  1.  171, 175 ; carries away MSS. during seven nights, ii. 181 ; argues with priest for transfer of entire collection to England, ii. 191 ; his assistance in securing secular Chinese MSS., ii. 216 ; suffers from cold and hunger, ii. 244 ; his elation at return to ` true China,'

  2. 275 ; his accommodation at Su-chou, ii. 287-288 ; his assistance with unruly pony-men, ii. 317-319 ; his argument for barley as orthodox food, ii. 325 ; his pleading for dismissed official, ii. 337 ; fetches four more camel-loads of MSS. from Caves of Thousand Buddhas, ii. 339 ; his piety to dead companion in desert, ii. 340-341 ; sent from Kuchar to Khotan in charge of antiquities, ii. 377 ; petition for official employment through P'an Ta-jên, ii. 422 ; his sympathy for blind Ram Singh, ii. 435 ; his slip catalogue of Chinese MSS. and translation of Chinese documents, ii. 435 ; farewell to, ii. 438-439 ; appointment as Chinese Munshi to British Consulate at Kashgar, ii. 439 ; presented with gold watch by Indian Government, ii. 490

Ch'iao-tzti, ruins of, near An-hsi, ii. 247-253

Chiaroscuro, in frescoes at Miran, i. 472,

475

Chia-yii-kuan = ` Barrier of the Pleasant Valley,' West gate of Great Wall, ii. 267, 268, 271, 272, 275-283, 337

Chichiklik, in Sarikol, i. 98, 99

Chi-chiu-chang,' Chinese lexicon of first century B.C., ii. 124

Ch'ien-fo-tung. See Caves of Thousand Buddhas

Ch'ien-lung (eighteenth century), coins of, ii. 87

Chien Wu, first regnal title of founder of Eastern Han dynasty, ii. 53

Chilap Jilga, on Little Pamir, i. 78, 79 Chinar. See Plane-tree

Chinese Annals, i. 35, 50, 52, 65, 70, 323, 345, 395-396, 401, 511-515; ii. 16, 8o, Io6

Chinese banquets, i. 118, 133, 173, 216219, 235 ; ii. 33, 234, 277, 289

Chinese Buddhist texts, from Caves of Thousand Buddhas, ii. 29-3o, 175, 216218 ; slip catalogue of, ii. 435

Chinese coins, ancient, i. 132, 224, 225,

232, 245, 313, 325, 333, 370, 372, 374,

3$z, 404, 416, 426 ; i1. 4, 51, 65, 77,

87, 12I, 249, 335, 366, 418, 427

2K