File:Qingshou Temple pagodas.jpg
原始檔案 (962 × 648 像素,檔案大小:166 KB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg)
摘要
描述Qingshou Temple pagodas.jpg |
English: The twin pagodas of Qingshou Temple in Beijing. The pagodas were demolished in 1954. |
日期 |
約1900年~1911年間 date QS:P,+1950-00-00T00:00:00Z/7,P1319,+1900-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1326,+1911-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 |
來源 | Mail Online 14 April 2015 |
作者 | 未知Unknown author |
授權條款
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
本圖像現時因在中國著作權保護條款過期而處於公有領域
根據中華人民共和國(司法管轄區為中國大陸,不包括香港和澳門)的著作權法,法人或者非法人組織的作品,職務作品及所有視聽作品,首次發表50年後或自創作之日起50年未發表,進入公有領域;著作權保護期於2021年6月1日前屆滿的自然人攝影作品,屬於公有領域;其他自然人作品,則在作者死亡後50年後進入公有領域。 根據中華民國(目前司法管轄區為台澎金馬地區)的著作權法,所有攝影作品,以及所有著作權持有者為法人的作品,在首次發表50年後,或者從創作之日起50年未發表,即進入公有領域。其他適用作品則在作者死亡後50年進入公有領域。 致上傳者:請提供該圖像的首次發表時間及其作者或著作權持有者姓名。 你必須增加美國公有領域標籤顯示為何這個作品在美國屬於公有領域。 請注意這個作品在不適用較短期限法則的國家可能並不屬於公有領域,並有超過作者逝世後50年的著作權期限。其中,墨西哥為100年,牙買加為95年,哥倫比亞為80年,瓜地馬拉與薩摩亞為75年,瑞士和美國為70年,委內瑞拉為60年。
čeština ∙ Deutsch ∙ English ∙ português ∙ română ∙ slovenščina ∙ Tagalog ∙ Tiếng Việt ∙ македонски ∙ русский ∙ മലയാളം ∙ ไทย ∙ 한국어 ∙ 日本語 ∙ 简体中文 ∙ 繁體中文 ∙ +/− |
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
|
檔案歷史
點選日期/時間以檢視該時間的檔案版本。
日期/時間 | 縮圖 | 尺寸 | 使用者 | 備註 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
目前 | 2015年6月27日 (六) 09:30 | 962 × 648(166 KB) | BabelStone | User created page with UploadWizard |
檔案用途
下列頁面有用到此檔案:
全域檔案使用狀況
以下其他 wiki 使用了這個檔案:
- en.wikipedia.org 的使用狀況
- id.wikipedia.org 的使用狀況
詮釋資料
此檔案中包含其他資訊,這些資訊可能是由數位相機或掃描器在建立或數位化過程中所新增的。若檔案自原始狀態已被修改,一些詳細資料可能無法完整反映出已修改的檔案。
簡稱 | "Selfies" 100 Years Ago |
---|---|
作者 | Europics, Europics |
版權所有人 | EuroPics[CEN] agency accepts no liability for any damages, loss or legal action resulting from the use of images supplied. The publication of images supplied in any format is solely at your (the publishers) discretion & risk. Copyright always remains with EuroPics[CEN] ©. Minimum Repro Fee in the UK is £ 150.00. All Fees must be agreed before publication with EuroPics[CEN] or with EuroPics[CEN] approved agents abroad. All Rights Reserved. Publication of any images is acceptance of these terms and conditions. For reproduction rights contact [email protected], +43 1 812 12 87 21 |
影像標題 | Pic shows: One of the photographs from between 1900-1910 in China's capital Beijing.
The trend for taking "selfies" shows no sign of letting up and is popular with pop stars, politicians and even members of the Royal Family these days. But these extraordinary pictures show the craze actually started more than 100 years ago. We unearthed this collection of incredible personal snaps taken in Beijing, China’s capital city between 1900 and 1911 during the Qing Dynasty and they clearly show the ancient equivalent of a decent selfie. What the great Chinese leaders of the past may have thought of these humorous pictures taken all over the city at revered ancient monuments is open to debate, but we can be certain of one thing – the subjects and the cameraman were having fun. The selection shows tourists and locals smiling and posing at famous historical sites like the Ming Tombs, Beijing Summer Palace and the famous Bridge of Nine Turnings. Other pictures show a member of the same family cheekily posing by stone statues of a lion, a camel and a horse. The humour in the pictures is easy to see and so different from the normal formal posed family shots that you used to see in that era. As you would expect all the pictures are in black and white and give us an enchanting glimpse into China’s last imperial era which ended in 1911. We don't know what happened to the happy chappy in many of the shots but we are sure he is still smiling. Some notable sites are: 01 + 02: Temple of Heaven 06: Memorial archway, today known as Beihai Park. 07: Nine-dragon wall in Beihai Park 08: Jingshan Park 09: Pavilion next to the Church of the Savior. 10: Beijing Ancient Observatory 11: Shiqikong Bridge in Beijing's Summer Palace 12: Kunming Lake in Beijing's Summer Palace 13, 14, : Summer Palace, Beijing 15: Foreign tourist stands at the foot of Beijing's Yuquan Mountain 17: Beijing's Yonghe Temple 18: Guozijian, Beijing's imperial college used throughout the three last Chinese dynasties 20, 21: Ming tombs 22, 23: Western Qing tombs 27: Beijing's bridge of nine turnings (ends) |