![]() |
|
![]() |
#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Macau
Posts: 294
|
![]() Quote:
Actually I am convinced that the region of Long Quan was the craddle to Chinese steel swords. It would be of great interest to study Chinese swords, not in books but in physical terms, for the jia-gang (sandwiched steel) and other forms existed in China. Why it has not been kept so alive is something I am still to understand in depth. However I may found a natural-cultural reason. The Chinese were not expansionists by nature.Their concept of Zhong Guo (The Middle Kingdom) was much more important. Only the Yuan Dynasty and Qin (Ching) Dynasty were respectively Mongol and Manchu, perhaps a reason that the self enclosure did not rely on any paramount legend about the sword. Overculture, on another aspect of your post, seems to be unstoppable. Uniformization is the word of the day which carries benefits, if we see it as a way (not being carried out) to redistribute wealth to the less developped countries (which is more utopic then doable in a willing way). But it does have these lost things. The issue in the end is that the overculture is so full of its political righteousness that it is like a tsunami... ![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|