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Notes on Marco Polo : vol.3 |
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48 INDEX
raised it in 1279 to the status of a tsung-kuan fu.
See TUNDINFU, p. 862.
chi-pei : (and ku-pei) occurs in preT'ang and T'ang texts; it is connected with Skr. karpâsa, but is not a direct representation of it.
See COTTON, p. 435.
chi-pei : said by Sung authors to be the same as ku-pei in the Nan shih; the Liang shu always gives this form.
See COTTON, p. 437.
chi pei : occurs in some texts and ku-pei in others; one of the two forms is a graphic corruption of the other.
See COTTON, p. 437.
chi pei : does not seem to have survived in the modern dialects of Fu-chien and Kuang-tung. See COTTON, p. 439.
chi-pei : it was the only form (and not ku-pei) used in southern China from the 11th till the 14th cent.
See COTTON, p. 439.
chi-pei : occurs in the Liang shu and later under the Sung. See COTTON, p. 440.
chi pei : the statement that it is « nearer » chieh-pei than ku-pei cannot be retained.
See COTTON, p. 441.
chi pei : this would suppose *kirpâi < Skr. *kdrpâsi.
See COTTON, p. 441.
chi pei : this form must be the result of scholarly corrections. See COTTON, p. 442.
chi pei : title of a paragraph devoted to cotton in the Ling-wai tai-ta. See COTTON, p. 454.
chi pei : in the paragraph on it, Chao Ju-kua enumerates four qualities of cotton cloth. See COTTON, p. 455.
chi pei : the distinction apparently drown by Chao Ju-kua between it and mu-mien seems artificial.
See COTTON, p. 455.
chi-pei : it is said to be woven from the pan-chih hua in Wang Kuang-yang's song.
See COTTON, p. 480.
chi pei : according to the Wu-hsün tsa-p'ei, it was anciently said that it was made from the mu-
mien by the Barbarians of Hai-nan.
See COTTON, p. 482.
chi-pei : the Cho-kêng lu says that it is the name of the cloth made from the mu-mien planted in Fu-chien and Kuang-tung. See COTTON, p. 484.
chi-pei : according to Hsü, it is what the popular writers call mu-mien; it is certainly a plant.
See COTTON, p. 488.
chi-pei : according to Hsü, the Chinese sort is not the best. See COTTON, p. 489.
chi-pei : according to Hsü, it is the same as the mu-mien of the Wu-lu; both mean herbaceous mu-mien.
See COTTON, p. 489.
chi-pei : according to the Liang-shu, it grows in Champa and is the name of a tree.
See COTTON, p. 490.
chi pei : (tree) according to the Ling-wai tai-ta it is like a low small mulberry bush.
See COTTON, p. 496.
chi-pei : « cotton »; it is mentioned as a product of the Li in the Ling-wai tai-ta.
See COTTON, p. 496.
chi-pei : its importance in Ch'iung (= Hai-nan) is confirmed in the Sung shih.
See COTTON, p. 497.
chi-pei : Chao Ju-kua mentions it in Hai-nan, which was the principal source of the export of cotton towards Fu-chien. See COTTON, p. 498.
chi-pei : according to the Wênch'ang tsa-lu and the Pochai pien, it is the name of the cloth made from mu-mien in Kuang-tung and Fu-chien. See COTTON, p. 498.
chi-pei : Wang Chêng says that it is another name of mu-mien. See COTTON, p. 502.
chi-pei : (..brocade) it is distinguished from po-tieh by a 14th cent. author.
See COTTON, p. 504.
chi pei hua : « chi-pei flowers », said to be the same as the tzü-hua of Lu-sung.
See COTTON, p. 464.
chi-pei hua pu : is perhaps the designation of only one product. See COTTON, p. 448.
chi-pei pu : equivalent of chi pei; was perhaps abbreviated as chi pu.
See COTTON, p. 455.
Chi-pin : (Kashmir and Gandhàra) Chih-mêng saw Buddha's bowl « in this country », not in Ch'isha.
See CASCAR, p. 202.
Chi-pin : first designation in Chinese for Kashmir.
See CHESCEMIR, p. 242.
Chi-pin : (probably still Kashmir) Hsüan-ying mentions there mu-mien, as a tree.
See COTTON, p. 491.
CM-pin : Kashmir.
See FEMELES (ISLAND OF WOMEN), p. 689.
chi pu : quality of cotton cloth mentioned by Chao Ju-kua. See COTTON, p. 455.
chi pu : it may be a misreading for chi-pei or chi-pei pu, or an abbreviation.
See COTTON, p. 455.
chi pu : (« chi cloth », abbreviated from chi-pei pu) given by Wang Chêng as one of the names of cotton cloth.
See COTTON, p. 503.
Chi-shên : (*Tsiak-zn) this occurs for the name of the Su-shên in texts prior to the Christian era. See CIORCIA, p. 380.
Chi-shih : (the island of Kg) was described by Chao Ju-kua in 1225.
See CHISCI, p. 244.
Chi-shih-chou : (unidentified) attacked by Chinghiz-khan in the spring of 1227 ( YS).
See CINGHIS, p. 310.
Chi-ssü to-ni : (read Ku-ssü-to-ni) on the Chinese map of c. 1330; this is Kostantinyah, Mussulman name of Constantinople. See CONSTANTINOPLE, p. 407.
chi-to : woollen textile of the Ai-lao Barbarians mentioned in the Hou-Han shu.
See COTTON, p. 444.
Chi-tz'ü ni : probably Ghazni, where « camel-hair satin of all colours » was made, according to Chou Ch' ü-fei.
See CAMLET, p. 144.
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