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  13. <TITLE>The Tang Dynasty -- 618 - 907 AD -- Bibliography</TITLE>
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  21. The Tang Dynasty</font><font size=+1><br><br>618 - 907 AD</font></font>
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  31. <A HREF='bibtxt2.html'>Bibliography Index</A></h5></center>
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  40. Abramson, Marc Samuel.&nbsp; <i>Deep eyes and high noses:</i>&nbsp; <i>Constructing ethnicity in Tang China (618--907).</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Princeton University, 2001. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2001.<br><br>
  41. Adshead, Samuel Adrian M.&nbsp; <i>T'ang China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the rise of the East in world history.</i>&nbsp; Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire; New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.<br><br>
  42. Amthor, Brigitte.&nbsp; <i>Meng Chih-hsiang (874-935), der erste Kaiser von Hou-Shu:</i>&nbsp; <i>die Entstehung und Grundung des Reiches Hou-Shu 925-934.</i>&nbsp; Wurzburger Sino-Japonica, Bd. 12. Frankfurt am Main; New York: Peter Lang, c1984.<br><br>
  43. <i>Ancient Chinese calligraphic rubbings.</i>&nbsp; Catalog of an exhibition held at The Art Museum, The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2001. English captions. Beijing: Beijing University Library, 2001.<br><br>
  44. <i>Autumn willows:</i>&nbsp; <i>poetry by women of China's golden age.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Chow, Bannie; Cleary, Thomas). Ashland, OR: Story Line Press, 2003.<br><br>
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  47. Backus, Charles.&nbsp; <i>The Nan-Chao Kingdom and T'ang China's Southwestern Frontier.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982.<br><br>
  48. Benn, Charles D.&nbsp; <i>Daily life in traditional China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Tang dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2003.<br><br>
  49. Benn, Charles D.&nbsp; <i>Daily life in traditional China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Tang dynasty.</i>&nbsp; The Greenwood Press "Daily life through History" Series. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2002.<br><br>
  50. Benn, Charles D.&nbsp; <i>Daily life in traditional China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Tang dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Westport: Greenwood Press, 2002.<br><br>
  51. Benn, Charles.&nbsp; <i>China's Golden Age:</i>&nbsp; <i>Everyday Life in the Tang Dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.<br><br>
  52. Bernstein, Richard.&nbsp; <i>Ultimate journey:</i>&nbsp; <i>retracing the path of an ancient buddhist monk who crossed Asia in search of enlightenment.</i>&nbsp; New York: A.A. Knopf, 2001.<br><br>
  53. Bielenstein, Hans.&nbsp; <i>Diplomacy and Trade in the Chinese World, 589-1276.</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston; Bedfordshire: Brill, 2005.<br><br>
  54. Bingham, Woodbridge.&nbsp; <i>The founding of the Tang dynasty:</i>&nbsp; <i>The fall of Sui and rise of Tang, a preliminary survey.</i>&nbsp; Studies in Chinese and Related Civilizations, No. 4. Reprint of Baltimore: Waverly Press, 1941. New York: Octagon Books, 1975.<br><br>
  55. Bol, Peter K.&nbsp; <i>This culture of ours:</i>&nbsp; <i>intellectual transitions in T'ang and Sung China.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1994.<br><br>
  56. Brooman, Josh.&nbsp; <i>Imperial China:</i>&nbsp; <i>From the First Emperor to Kublai Khan.</i>&nbsp; White Plains, NY: Longman Publishing Group, 1991.<br><br>
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  59. <i>The Cambridge History of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Sui and T'ang China: 589-906 A.D.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Twitchett, Denis C.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979.<br><br>
  60. Capon, Edmund.&nbsp; <i>Tang China:</i>&nbsp; <i>vision and splendour of a golden age.</i>&nbsp; Echoes of the Ancient World. London: Macdonald Orbis, 1989.<br><br>
  61. <i>Chan Buddhism in ritual context.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Faure, Bernard). RoutledgeCurzon studies in Asian religion. London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.<br><br>
  62. Chen, Jack Wei.&nbsp; <i>Denying imperial bodies:</i>&nbsp; <i>Tang Taizong and the politics of sovereignty.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D., Dept. of Comparative Literature)--Harvard University, 2002. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2003.<br><br>
  63. Chen, Jo-Shui.&nbsp; <i>The dawn of Neo-Confucianism Liu Tsung-yuan and the intellectual changes in Tang China, 773-819.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) --Yale University. New Haven, CT: Yale University, 1987.<br><br>
  64. Chen, Jo-Shui.&nbsp; <i>Liu Tsung-yuan and Intellectual Change in T'ang China, 773-819.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992.<br><br>
  65. Chen, Jo-Shui.&nbsp; <i>The dawn of Neo-Confucianism Liu Tsung-yuan and the intellectual changes in Tang China, 773-819.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) --Yale University, 1987. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms International, 1991.<br><br>
  66. <i>Chinese national treasures of painting and calligraphy from the Jin, Tang, Song and Yuan dynasties.</i>&nbsp; English Introduction and Notes. Catalog of an exhibition held at Shanghai Museum Dec. 2002-Jan. 2003. Shanghai: Shanghai Shuhua Chubanshe, 2002.<br><br>
  67. <i>Chinese Women in the Imperial Past:</i>&nbsp; <i>New Perspectives.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Zurndorfer, Harriet T.). Sinica Leidensia Series, 44. Boston: Brill Academic Publishers, 1999.<br><br>
  68. Chiu-Duke, Josephine.&nbsp; <i>To Rebuild the Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>Lu Chih's Confucian Pragmatist Approach to the Mid-T'ang Predicament.</i>&nbsp; Series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2000.<br><br>
  69. Chua, Amy.&nbsp; <i>Day of Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance--and Why They Fall.</i>&nbsp; Harpswell, Maine: Anchor, 2009.<br><br>
  70. Clark, Hugh R.&nbsp; <i>Community, Trade, and Networks:</i>&nbsp; <i>Southern Fujian Province from the Third to the Thirteenth Centuries.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  71. <i>Classical Chinese Literature:</i>&nbsp; <i>An Anthology of Translations: From Antiquity to the Tang Dynasty.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Minford, John; Lau, Joseph S. M.). Classical Chinese Literature; An Anthology of Translations Series, Vol. 1. Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  72. Clements, Jonathan.&nbsp; <i>Wu:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Chinese empress who schemed, seduced and murdered her way to become a living god.</i>&nbsp; Stroud: Sutton Publishing: 2007.<br><br>
  73. Collets Staff.&nbsp; <i>Guide to the Silk Road.</i>&nbsp; New York: State Mutual Book &amp; Periodical Service, Limited, 1991.<br><br>
  74. <i>The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum:</i>&nbsp; <i>Porcelain of the Jin and Tang Dynasties.</i>&nbsp; Beijing: Commercial Press, 1996.<br><br>
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  77. De Meyer, Jan.&nbsp; <i>Wu Yun's Way:</i>&nbsp; <i>Life and Works of an Eighth-Century Daoist Master.</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston; Bedfordshire: Brill, 2005.<br><br>
  78. De Pee, Christian.&nbsp; <i>The writing of weddings in middle-period China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Text and ritual practice in the eighth through fourteenth centuries.</i>&nbsp; Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2007.<br><br>
  79. DeBlasi, Anthony.&nbsp; <i>Reform in the balance:</i>&nbsp; <i>the defense of literary culture in mid-Tang China.</i>&nbsp; Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002.<br><br>
  80. Dien, Dora Shu-Fang.&nbsp; <i>Empress Wu Zetian in Fiction and in History.</i>&nbsp; Commack, NY: Nova Science Publishers, 2005.<br><br>
  81. Drompp, Michael R.&nbsp; <i>Tang China and the Collapse of the Uighur Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Documentary History.</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston; Bedfordshire: Brill, 2005.<br><br>
  82. Drompp, Michael Robert.&nbsp; <i>Tang China and the collapse of the Uighur Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>a documentary history.</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2005.<br><br>
  83. Dudbridge, Glen.&nbsp; <i>Religious Experience and Lay Society in T'ang China:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Reading of Tai Fu's Kuang-i Chi.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  86. Ebrey, Patricia Buckley.&nbsp; <i>The Aristocratic Families in Early Imperial China:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Case Study of the Po-ling Ts'ui Family.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2009.<br><br>
  87. Eva Shan Chou.&nbsp; <i>Reconsidering Tu Fu:</i>&nbsp; <i>Literary Greatness and Cultural Context.</i>&nbsp; (contr. Hightower, James R.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  90. Fang, Cheng-Hua.&nbsp; <i>Power structures and cultural identities in imperial China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Civil and military power from late Tang to early Song dynasties (A.D. 875--1063).</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Brown University, 2001. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2001.<br><br>
  91. Fitzgerald, C. P.&nbsp; <i>Barbarian Beds:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Origin of the Chair in China.</i>&nbsp; Canberra: Austrialian National University; London: Cresset, 1965.<br><br>
  92. Fitzgerald, C. P. (Charles Patrick).&nbsp; <i>Son of heaven:</i>&nbsp; <i>A biography of Li Shih-Min, founder of the T'ang dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1933.<br><br>
  93. Fong, Wen C.&nbsp; <i>Beyond representation:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese painting and calligraphy, 8th-14th Century.</i>&nbsp; New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1992.<br><br>
  94. Fontein, Jan.&nbsp; <i>Han and T'ang murals:</i>&nbsp; <i>discovered in tombs in the People's Republic of China and copied by contemporary Chinese painters.</i>&nbsp; Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, [1976].<br><br>
  95. Forte, Antonino.&nbsp; <i>Political propaganda and ideology in China at the end of the seventh century:</i>&nbsp; <i>Inquiry into the nature, authors and function of the Tunhuang document S.6502, followed by an annotated translation.</i>&nbsp; Istituto Universitario Orientale. Series Minor, 2. Napoli: Istituto universitario orientale, Seminario di studi asiatici, 1976.<br><br>
  96. Forte, Antonino.&nbsp; <i>Political Propaganda and Ideology in China at the End of the Seventh Century.</i>&nbsp; Boston, MA: Cheng & Tsui Company, 2007.<br><br>
  97. Fraser, Sarah Elizabeth.&nbsp; <i>Performing the visual:</i>&nbsp; <i>the practice of Buddhist wall painting in China and Central Asia, 618-960.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2004.<br><br>
  98. Fung, Sydney S. K.&nbsp; <i>25 T'ang poets:</i>&nbsp; <i>index to English translations.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1984.<br><br>
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  101. Gernet, Jacques; Verellen, Franciscus.&nbsp; <i>Buddhism in Chinese Society:</i>&nbsp; <i>An Economic History from the Fifth to the Tenth Centuries.</i>&nbsp; New York: Columbia University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  102. <i>The glory of the Silk Road:</i>&nbsp; <i>art from ancient China.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Li, Jian; Hansen, Valerie). Published on the occasion of an exhibition held at the Dayton Art Institute, Feb. 8-May 11, 2003, and at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, June 7-Aug. 3, 2003. Dayton, Ohio: Dayton Art Institute, 2003.<br><br>
  103. Gordon, Stewart.&nbsp; <i>When Asia was the world.</i>&nbsp; London: Yale University Press: 2008.<br><br>
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  106. Hamar, Imre.&nbsp; <i>A religious leader in the Tang:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chengguan's biography.</i>&nbsp; Studia Philologica Buddhica. Occasional Paper Series, 12. Tokyo: International Institute for Buddhist Studies, 2002.<br><br>
  107. Hansen, Valerie.&nbsp; <i>Negotiating Daily Life in Traditional China:</i>&nbsp; <i>How Ordinary People Used Contracts, 600-1400.</i>&nbsp; Princeton, NJ: Yale University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  108. Hartman, Charles.&nbsp; <i>Han Yu and the Tang search for unity.</i>&nbsp; Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986.<br><br>
  109. Heng, Chye Kiang.&nbsp; <i>Cities of aristocrats and bureaucrats:</i>&nbsp; <i>The development of medieval Chinese cities.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1999.<br><br>
  110. Heng, Chye Kiang.&nbsp; <i>Cities of Aristocrats and Bureaucrats:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Development of Medieval Chinese Cityscapes.</i>&nbsp; Singapore: Singapore University Press Proprietary, Limited, 1999.<br><br>
  111. Hirth, F.&nbsp; <i>China and the Roman Orient:</i>&nbsp; <i>Researches into Their Ancient and Mediaeval Relations As Represented in Old Chinese Records.</i>&nbsp; (Originally published 1885). Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing, LLC. 2007.<br><br>
  112. Ho, Richard M. W.&nbsp; <i>Ch'en Tzu-ang:</i>&nbsp; <i>Innovator in T'ang Poetry.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  113. Ho, Richard M. W.&nbsp; <i>Ch'en Tzu-Ang:</i>&nbsp; <i>innovator in T'ang poetry.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1993.<br><br>
  114. Holdsworth, May.&nbsp; <i>Women of the Tang Dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Genius of China Close-Up Guides. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2000.<br><br>
  115. Hong Kong Art Museum.&nbsp; <i>Archaeological Finds from Jin to Tang Periods in Guangdong.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1985.<br><br>
  116. Hopkirk, Peter.&nbsp; <i>Foreign devils on the Silk Road:</i>&nbsp; <i>the search for the lost cities and treasures of Chinese central Asia.</i>&nbsp; Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1984.<br><br>
  117. Hung, Eva.&nbsp; <i>Paradoxes of Traditional Chinese Literature:</i>&nbsp; <i>An Analysis of Literary Works from the Tang Dynasty to the Late Qing.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1997.<br><br>
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  120. <i>An index of early Chinese painters and painting:</i>&nbsp; <i>T'ang, Sung and Yuan.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Cahill, James). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1980.<br><br>
  121. <i>Interaction between Indian and central Asian science and technology in medieval times.</i>&nbsp; Indo-Soviet Joint Monograph Series. New Delhi: Indian National Science Academy, c1990.<br><br>
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  124. Jia, Jinhua.&nbsp; <i>Hongzhou school of Chan Buddhism in eighth- through tenth-century China.</i>&nbsp; Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2006.<br><br>
  125. Johnson, Steven R.&nbsp; <i>Where the world does not follow:</i>&nbsp; <i>Buddhist China in picture and poem.</i>&nbsp; (ed. trans. O'Connor; photo. Johnson, Steven R.). Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2003.<br><br>
  126. Joseph, Adrian Malcolm; Moss, Hugh M.; Fleming, S. J.&nbsp; <i>Chinese pottery burial objects of the Sui and Tang dynasties:</i>&nbsp; <i>An exhibition with special reference to the scientific testing of pottery wares, and the works of the forger.</i>&nbsp; London, Hugh M. Moss Ltd., 1970.<br><br>
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  129. Karetzky, Patricia Eichenbaum.&nbsp; <i>Arts of the Tang Court.</i>&nbsp; Images of Asia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  130. Kirkland, J. Russell.&nbsp; <i>Taoists of the high Tang:</i>&nbsp; <i>An inquiry into the perceived significance of eminent Taoists in medieval Chinese society.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Indiana University, 1986. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms International, 1987.<br><br>
  131. Knapp, Keith Nathaniel.&nbsp; <i>Accounts of filial sons:</i>&nbsp; <i>Ru ideology in early medieval China.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of California, Berkeley, 1996. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International, 2000.<br><br>
  132. Kohn, Livia.&nbsp; <i>Monastic life in medieval Daoism:</i>&nbsp; <i>a cross-cultural perspective.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2003.<br><br>
  133. Kroll, Paul W..&nbsp; <i>Essays in Medieval Chinese Literature and Cultural History.</i>&nbsp; Surrey, United Kingdom: Variorum, 2009.<br><br>
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  137. Lai, Swee Fo.&nbsp; <i>The military and defense system under the Tang dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Princeton University. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University, 1986.<br><br>
  138. Lee, Don Y.&nbsp; <i>The history of early relations between China and Tibet:</i>&nbsp; <i>From Chiu Tang-shu, a documentary survey.</i>&nbsp; Bloomington, IN: Eastern Press, 1981.<br><br>
  139. Levy, Dore J.&nbsp; <i>Chinese narrative poetry:</i>&nbsp; <i>the tradition in Shih from the late Han through T'ang dynasties.</i>&nbsp; Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  140. Liu, Xinru.&nbsp; <i>Ancient India and ancient China:</i>&nbsp; <i>trade and religious exchanges AD 1-600.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  141. Liu, Xinru.&nbsp; <i>The silk road:</i>&nbsp; <i>overland trade and cultural interactions in Eurasia.</i>&nbsp; Washington, D.C.: American Historical Association, 1998.<br><br>
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  147. Mackerras, Colin.&nbsp; <i>The Uighur Empire According to the T'ang Dynastic Histories:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Study in Sino-Uighur Relations, 744-840.</i>&nbsp; (ed. trans. Mackerras, Colin). Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1972, 1973.<br><br>
  148. Mahler, Jane Gaston.&nbsp; <i>The Westerners among the figurines of the T'ang dynasty of China.</i>&nbsp; Serie orientale Roma; vol.20. Issued also in microfilm by Columbia University Press. Rome: Instituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente, 1959.<br><br>
  149. Mair, Victor H.&nbsp; <i>Tunhuang Popular Narratives.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984.<br><br>
  150. McMullen, David.&nbsp; <i>State and scholars in Tang China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge Studies in Chinese History, Literature & Institutions. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  151. McNair, Amy.&nbsp; <i>Donors of Longmen:</i>&nbsp; <i>faith, politics, and patronage in medieval Chinese Buddhist sculpture.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2007.<br><br>
  152. Moore, Oliver J.&nbsp; <i>Rituals of recruitment in Tang China:</i>&nbsp; <i>reading an annual programme in the Collected statements by Wang Dingbao (870-940).</i>&nbsp; Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2004.<br><br>
  153. Mowry, Robert D.; Cuno, James; Farrell, Eugene; Rousmaniere, Nicole C.&nbsp; <i>Hare's Fur, Tortoiseshell and Partridge Feathers:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese Brown- and Black-Glazed Ceramics, 400-1400.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Art Museums, 1997.<br><br>
  154. <i>Music from the Tang Court.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Picken, Laurence; Nickson, Noel J.). Vol. 5. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990.<br><br>
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  157. Nickerson, Peter.&nbsp; <i>Taoism, bureaucracy, and popular religion in early medieval China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, M.A.: Harvard University Asia Center, 2007.<br><br>
  158. Nielsen, Bent.&nbsp; <i>A companion to Yi jing numerology and cosmology:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese studies of images and numbers from Han (202 BCE-220 CE) to Song (960-1279 CE).</i>&nbsp; Chinese and English. London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.<br><br>
  159. Ning, Qiang.&nbsp; <i>Art, religion, and politics in medieval China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Dunhuang cave of the Zhai Family.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu: University of Hawai? Press, 2004.<br><br>
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  239. Zheng, Yunfeng.&nbsp; <i>The ancient Tangbo Road:</i>&nbsp; <i>Princess Wen Cheng's route to Tibet.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Hong Kong China Tourism Press, 1994.<br><br>
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  243. </font>
  244. </blockquote>
  245. <HR>
  246. <P><FONT SIZE=-1>To contribute to the bibliography, please send e-mail to:<BR>
  247. Marilyn Shea<BR>
  248. Department of Psychology<BR>
  249. University of Maine at Farmington<BR>
  250. <A HREF='mailto:mshea@maine.edu'>mshea@maine.edu</A>
  251. <P> Please format your contributions to match the entries above.</P>
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