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Albert Terrien de Lacouperie

Albert Étienne Jean-Baptiste Terrien de Lacouperie (23 November 1844 – 11 October 1894)[2][3] was a French orientalist, specialising in comparative philology. He published a number of books on early Asian and Middle-Eastern languages, initially in French and then in English. Lacouperie is best known for his studies of the Yi Ching and his argument, known as Sino-Babylonianism, that the important elements of ancient civilization in ancient China came from Mesopotamia and that there were resemblances between Chinese characters and Akkadian hieroglyphics.

Albert Terrien de Lacouperie
Born
Albert Étienne Jean-Baptiste Terrien de Lacouperie

23 November 1844[1][2]
Died11 October 1894(1894-10-11) (aged 49)[3]
Fulham, London, England[3]
Scientific career
FieldsOriental studies, specialising in philology

The American sinologist E. Bruce Brooks writes that Lacouperie "gained a sufficiently accurate view of the Spring and Autumn period that he realized, half a century before Chyen Mu and Owen Lattimore, that the 'Chinese' territory of that period was in fact honeycombed with non-Sinitic peoples and even states." Brooks concluded that the "whole trend of Lacouperie's thought still provokes a collective allergic reaction in Sinology and its neighbor sciences; only now are some of the larger questions he raised, and doubtless mishandled, coming to be hesitantly askable."[4]

Early life and name edit

Biographical detail on Terrien is scant, some notices drawing on Royal Asiatic Society records and prefaces. He was born in November 1844[1][5][4] in Ingouville, Le Havre, Normandy. He was a descendant of the Cornish family of Terrien, which emigrated in the 17th century during the English Civil War, and acquired the property of La Couperie in Normandy. Some bibliographies append "Baron" to his name[6] and it appears he published under the name Albert Étienne Jean-Baptiste Terrien de Lahaymonnais Peixotte de Poncel, Baron de La Couperie,[7][8] but there is no record of the family being ennobled. His father was a merchant, and Albert received a business education.

Career edit

In early life he settled at Hong Kong, where he soon turned his attention from commerce to the study of oriental languages, and he acquired an especially intimate knowledge of the Chinese language. In 1867, he published a philological work, Du Langage, Essai sur la Nature et l'Étude des Mots et des Langues (Paris, 8 volumes), which attracted considerable attention. Soon after, his attention was attracted by the progress made in deciphering Babylonian inscriptions, and by the resemblance between the Chinese characters and the early Akkadian language hieroglyphics.

The comparative philology of the two languages occupied most of his later life, and he was able to show an early affinity between them. In 1879, he went to London, was elected a fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society, and began to write works in English. In 1884, he became professor of comparative philology, as applied to the languages of South-Eastern Asia, at University College, London.

In the 1880s, he was also employed on several short-term contracts to work on the East-Asian coin collection at the British Museum.[9] In 1892, he published his Catalogue of Chinese Coins from the VIIth Century BC to AS 621 including the Series in the British Museum, for which the Académie des Inscriptions, France, awarded him the Stanislas Julien Prize, worth 1,500 French francs, "for the best work relating to China".[10][11]

His last years were largely occupied by a study of the I Ching, or Book of Changes. Its meaning had long proved a puzzle both to native and to foreign scholars. Terrien demonstrated that the basis of the work consisted of fragmentary notes, chiefly lexical in character, and noticed that they bore a close resemblance to the syllabaries of Chaldaea. In 1892, he published the first part of an explanatory treatise The Oldest Book of the Chinese (London, 8 volumes), in which he stated his theory of the nature of the I Ching, and gave translations of passages from it. The treatise, however, was not completed before his death.

In recognition of his services to oriental study he received a Doctor of Letters degree from the University of Leuven. He also enjoyed for a time a small pension from the French government, and after that had been withdrawn an unsuccessful attempt was made by his friends to obtain him an equivalent from the English ministry. He was twice awarded the prix Stanislas Julien by the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres for his services to oriental philology.

Death edit

Terrien died in London at his residence, 136 Bishop's Road, Fulham, leaving a widow.[3]

Evaluations of Lacouperie's theories edit

Lacouperie's translations and Sino-Babylonian theories that the origins of Chinese civilization lay in Mesopotamia impressed the public but were criticised or dismissed by sinologists then and in following years. James Legge, whose translations of the Chinese Classics appeared at the same time as Terrien's and are still considered standard, questioned Terrien's sinological competence. Legge's review of Lacouperie's translation of the I Ching charged that only "hasty ignorance" could have led to the mistakes, which included failing to consult the basic reference, the Kangxi Dictionary. Another reviewer at the time labelled Terrien a "specious wonder-monger." But the final decline of Lacouperie's comparativist theories of the origins of Chinese civilisation was marked by the attacks of University of Leiden sinologist, Gustav Schlegel. Schlegel and following Orientalists insisted on the independent origin and growth of Chinese civilisation. In particular, these scholars pointed out that monosyllabic Chinese characters could not be equated to polysyllabic Chaldean words; that in any case, Assyriological knowledge was "dangerously uncertain" and too unreliable to make such claims; and that it had not even been established that Babylonian civilization was earlier than Chinese.[12]

Lacouperie's theory on the Babylonian origins of the sixty year ganzhi cyclical calendar system has fared little better, as the two systems differed both in concept and function: the Babylonian decimal system was used to count up to 60, where the cycle started again, while the Chinese system combined a cycle of twelve and a cycle of ten.[13]

Lacouperie's ideas received attention from some Chinese intellectuals and nationalists such as Liu Shipei (in his book of expulsion (攘書, rangshu)), Zhang Binglin (in his book, book of raillery (訄書, qiushu)) and Huang Jie (黃節, in his book yellow history (黃史)), in support of anti-Manchu racist theories (founded on those of Herbert Spencer and the Yellow Book (huangshu, 黃書) by chinese historian Wang Fuzhi) that were current at the beginning of the 20th century.[14] His theory of a Western origin of Chinese civilization had reached Japan around the same time, the academic refutation did not stop it becoming a prevalent and populist notion.[15]

The idea for a mythical script, native to Formosa, was founded on a formulation of the author, though he also noted the paucity in quality of information from that region.[16]

A more durable contribution to scholarship was Lacouperie's identification of the ancient names of the Indian Brahmi and Kharosthi scripts from research in Chinese sources.[17]

Works edit

Besides the works mentioned, Terrien was the author of:

  • Early History of Chinese Civilisation, London, 1880, 8vo.
  • On the History of the Archaic Chinese Writings and Text, London, 1882, 8vo.
  • Paper Money of the Ninth Century and supposed Leather Coinage of China, London, 1882, 8vo.
  • Cradle of the Shan Race, London, 1885, 8vo.
  • Babylonia and China, London, 1887, 4to.
  • Did Cyrus introduce Writing into India? London, 1887, 8vo.
  • The Languages of China before the Chinese, London, 1887, 8vo; French edition, Paris, 1888, 8vo.
  • The Miryeks or Stone Men of Corea, Hertford, 1887, 8vo.
  • The Yueh-Ti and the early Buddhist Missionaries in China, 1887, 8vo.
  • Formosa Notes; Mss., Languages and Races, 1887, 8vo.
  • The Old Babylonian Characters and their Chinese Derivates, London, 1888, 8vo. Online at Internet Archive
  • The Djurtchen of Mandshuria, 1889, 8vo.
  • Le Non-Monosyllabisme du Chinois Antique, Paris, 1889, 8vo.
  • The Onomastic Similarity of Nai Kwang-ti of China and Nakhunte of Susiana, London, 1890, 8vo.
  • L'Ère des Arsacides selon les Inscriptions cunéiformes, Louvain, 1891, 8vo.
  • How in 219 B.C. Buddhism entered China, London [1891?], 8vo.
  • Mélanges: on the Ancient History of Glass and Coal and the Legend of Nü-Kwa's Coloured Stones in China [1891?], 8vo.
  • Sur deux Ères inconnus de l'Asie Antérieure, 330 et 251 B.C., 1891, 8vo.
  • The Silk Goddess of China and her Legend, London, 1891, 8vo.
  • Catalogue of Chinese Coins from the VIIth Cent. B.C. to A.D. 621, ed. R. S. Poole, London, 1892, 8vo.[18]
  • Beginnings of Writing in Central and Eastern Asia, London, 1894, 8vo.
  • '* ——— (1894). Western Origin of the Early Chinese Civilisation from 2,300 B.C. To 200 A.D. : Or : Chapters on the Elements Derived from the Old Civilisations of West Asia in the Formation of the Ancient Chinese Culture. London: Asher & Co. Internet Archive

Many of these treatises were reprinted from the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society and other publications. He also edited the Babylonian and Oriental Record from 1886.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "M. Terrien de Lacouperie". Revue internationale de Sinologie (in French). E. J. Brill. V: 428. 1894.
  2. ^ a b Ingouville Birth registry 1844 4E090878 entry no394 Archives 76 online p203
  3. ^ a b c d e Carlyle, Edward Irving (1898). "Terrien De La Couperie, Albert Étienne Jean Baptiste" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 56. London: Smith, Elder & Co. [Journal of the Royal Asiatic Soc. 1895, p. 214; Athenæum, 1894, ii. 531; Times, 15 October 1894.]
  4. ^ a b Brooks, E. Bruce (9 June 2004). . Sinologists (biography project). University of Massachusetts Amherst. Archived from the original on 15 January 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  5. ^ Carlyle, Edward Irving; Ryan, Janette (2005) [2004]. "Terrien De Lacouperie, Albert Étienne Jean Baptiste". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/27143. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Hacker, Edward A.; Moore, Steve; Patsco, Lorraine (2002). I Ching – An Annotated Bibliography. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-415-93969-0.
  7. ^ Subject Index of Modern Works Added to the Library of B.M. in Years 1880-1885 ... 1886. p. 180.
  8. ^ Desmet, Piet (1996). La linguistique naturaliste en France (1867-1922): nature, origine et évolution du langage (in French). Peeters Publishers. p. 26. ISBN 9789068318784.
  9. ^ Wang, Helen. "A History of the Japanese Coin Collection at the British Museum", in Sakuraki et al., Catalogue of the Japanese Coin Collection (pre-Meiji) at the British Museum, British Museum Research Publication 174, 2010 ISBN 978-086159-174-9, pp. 1–12; Wang, Helen. "How did Kutsuki Masatsuna's Coins Come to the British Museum", ibid, pp. 13–16.
  10. ^ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1893 (July), p. 652.
  11. ^ Helen Wang, "A Short History of Chinese Numismatics in European Languages", Early China vols 35-36 (2012-2013). https://www.dartmouth.edu/~earlychina/docs/2012-2013/publorderonline2012-13.html 22 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Norman J. Girardot, The Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002), 388–390. Girardot describes the controversies in detail, pp. 382–393.
  13. ^ Endymion Wilkinson, Chinese History: A New Manual (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013), pp. 497–498.
  14. ^ Charlotte Furth, "Intellectual Change, 1895–1920, in Fairbank, John King; Twitchett, Denis Crispin (1983). "1". The Cambridge History of China: Republican China, 1912–1949. Vol. 12. Cambridge University Press. pp. 355–6. ISBN 978-0-521-23541-9.
  15. ^ Yoshihiro, Ishikawa (2003). "Anti-Manchu Racism and the Rise of Anthropology in Early 20th century China" (PDF). Sino-Japanese Studies. chinajapan.org. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  16. ^ Lubotsky, Alexander; Schaeken, Jos; Wiedenhof, Jeroen (2008). Evidence and Counter-Evidence: Essays in Honour of Frederik Kortlandt. Volume 2: General Linguistics. p. 217. ISBN 978-90-420-2471-7.
  17. ^ Falk, Harry (1993). Schrift im alten Indien: ein Forschungsbericht mit Anmerkungen (in German). Gunter Narr Verlag. pp. 84–85, 106.
  18. ^ "Terrien de Lacouperie: Catalogue of Chinese Coins". Bibliotheca Sinica 2.0. from the original on 11 November 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
Attribution

External links edit

  •   Works by or about Albert Terrien de Lacouperie at Wikisource
  •   Media related to Albert Terrien de Lacouperie at Wikimedia Commons
  • Titles of papers in The Academy, etc. "Bibliography: 'Transmission to the Far East'". Mesopotamian Astronomy & Astrology. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  • "The Metallic Cowries of Ancient China (600 B.C.)" Terrien de Lacouperie The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland New Series, Vol. 20, No. 3 (July 1888), pp. 428–439
  • Warring States Project, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

albert, terrien, lacouperie, theologian, jean, baptiste, terrien, albert, Étienne, jean, baptiste, terrien, lacouperie, november, 1844, october, 1894, french, orientalist, specialising, comparative, philology, published, number, books, early, asian, middle, ea. For the theologian see Jean Baptiste Terrien Albert Etienne Jean Baptiste Terrien de Lacouperie 23 November 1844 11 October 1894 2 3 was a French orientalist specialising in comparative philology He published a number of books on early Asian and Middle Eastern languages initially in French and then in English Lacouperie is best known for his studies of the Yi Ching and his argument known as Sino Babylonianism that the important elements of ancient civilization in ancient China came from Mesopotamia and that there were resemblances between Chinese characters and Akkadian hieroglyphics Albert Terrien de LacouperieBornAlbert Etienne Jean Baptiste Terrien de Lacouperie23 November 1844 1 2 Ingouville Le Havre Normandy FranceDied11 October 1894 1894 10 11 aged 49 3 Fulham London England 3 Scientific careerFieldsOriental studies specialising in philologyThe American sinologist E Bruce Brooks writes that Lacouperie gained a sufficiently accurate view of the Spring and Autumn period that he realized half a century before Chyen Mu and Owen Lattimore that the Chinese territory of that period was in fact honeycombed with non Sinitic peoples and even states Brooks concluded that the whole trend of Lacouperie s thought still provokes a collective allergic reaction in Sinology and its neighbor sciences only now are some of the larger questions he raised and doubtless mishandled coming to be hesitantly askable 4 Contents 1 Early life and name 2 Career 3 Death 4 Evaluations of Lacouperie s theories 5 Works 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and name editBiographical detail on Terrien is scant some notices drawing on Royal Asiatic Society records and prefaces He was born in November 1844 1 5 4 in Ingouville Le Havre Normandy He was a descendant of the Cornish family of Terrien which emigrated in the 17th century during the English Civil War and acquired the property of La Couperie in Normandy Some bibliographies append Baron to his name 6 and it appears he published under the name Albert Etienne Jean Baptiste Terrien de Lahaymonnais Peixotte de Poncel Baron de La Couperie 7 8 but there is no record of the family being ennobled His father was a merchant and Albert received a business education Career editIn early life he settled at Hong Kong where he soon turned his attention from commerce to the study of oriental languages and he acquired an especially intimate knowledge of the Chinese language In 1867 he published a philological work Du Langage Essai sur la Nature et l Etude des Mots et des Langues Paris 8 volumes which attracted considerable attention Soon after his attention was attracted by the progress made in deciphering Babylonian inscriptions and by the resemblance between the Chinese characters and the early Akkadian language hieroglyphics The comparative philology of the two languages occupied most of his later life and he was able to show an early affinity between them In 1879 he went to London was elected a fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society and began to write works in English In 1884 he became professor of comparative philology as applied to the languages of South Eastern Asia at University College London In the 1880s he was also employed on several short term contracts to work on the East Asian coin collection at the British Museum 9 In 1892 he published his Catalogue of Chinese Coins from the VIIth Century BC to AS 621 including the Series in the British Museum for which the Academie des Inscriptions France awarded him the Stanislas Julien Prize worth 1 500 French francs for the best work relating to China 10 11 His last years were largely occupied by a study of the I Ching or Book of Changes Its meaning had long proved a puzzle both to native and to foreign scholars Terrien demonstrated that the basis of the work consisted of fragmentary notes chiefly lexical in character and noticed that they bore a close resemblance to the syllabaries of Chaldaea In 1892 he published the first part of an explanatory treatise The Oldest Book of the Chinese London 8 volumes in which he stated his theory of the nature of the I Ching and gave translations of passages from it The treatise however was not completed before his death In recognition of his services to oriental study he received a Doctor of Letters degree from the University of Leuven He also enjoyed for a time a small pension from the French government and after that had been withdrawn an unsuccessful attempt was made by his friends to obtain him an equivalent from the English ministry He was twice awarded the prix Stanislas Julien by the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres for his services to oriental philology Death editTerrien died in London at his residence 136 Bishop s Road Fulham leaving a widow 3 Evaluations of Lacouperie s theories editLacouperie s translations and Sino Babylonian theories that the origins of Chinese civilization lay in Mesopotamia impressed the public but were criticised or dismissed by sinologists then and in following years James Legge whose translations of the Chinese Classics appeared at the same time as Terrien s and are still considered standard questioned Terrien s sinological competence Legge s review of Lacouperie s translation of the I Ching charged that only hasty ignorance could have led to the mistakes which included failing to consult the basic reference the Kangxi Dictionary Another reviewer at the time labelled Terrien a specious wonder monger But the final decline of Lacouperie s comparativist theories of the origins of Chinese civilisation was marked by the attacks of University of Leiden sinologist Gustav Schlegel Schlegel and following Orientalists insisted on the independent origin and growth of Chinese civilisation In particular these scholars pointed out that monosyllabic Chinese characters could not be equated to polysyllabic Chaldean words that in any case Assyriological knowledge was dangerously uncertain and too unreliable to make such claims and that it had not even been established that Babylonian civilization was earlier than Chinese 12 Lacouperie s theory on the Babylonian origins of the sixty year ganzhi cyclical calendar system has fared little better as the two systems differed both in concept and function the Babylonian decimal system was used to count up to 60 where the cycle started again while the Chinese system combined a cycle of twelve and a cycle of ten 13 Lacouperie s ideas received attention from some Chinese intellectuals and nationalists such as Liu Shipei in his book of expulsion 攘書 rangshu Zhang Binglin in his book book of raillery 訄書 qiushu and Huang Jie 黃節 in his book yellow history 黃史 in support of anti Manchu racist theories founded on those of Herbert Spencer and the Yellow Book huangshu 黃書 by chinese historian Wang Fuzhi that were current at the beginning of the 20th century 14 His theory of a Western origin of Chinese civilization had reached Japan around the same time the academic refutation did not stop it becoming a prevalent and populist notion 15 The idea for a mythical script native to Formosa was founded on a formulation of the author though he also noted the paucity in quality of information from that region 16 A more durable contribution to scholarship was Lacouperie s identification of the ancient names of the Indian Brahmi and Kharosthi scripts from research in Chinese sources 17 Works editBesides the works mentioned Terrien was the author of This literature related list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items February 2012 Early History of Chinese Civilisation London 1880 8vo On the History of the Archaic Chinese Writings and Text London 1882 8vo Paper Money of the Ninth Century and supposed Leather Coinage of China London 1882 8vo Cradle of the Shan Race London 1885 8vo Babylonia and China London 1887 4to Did Cyrus introduce Writing into India London 1887 8vo The Languages of China before the Chinese London 1887 8vo French edition Paris 1888 8vo The Miryeks or Stone Men of Corea Hertford 1887 8vo The Yueh Ti and the early Buddhist Missionaries in China 1887 8vo Formosa Notes Mss Languages and Races 1887 8vo The Old Babylonian Characters and their Chinese Derivates London 1888 8vo Online at Internet Archive The Djurtchen of Mandshuria 1889 8vo Le Non Monosyllabisme du Chinois Antique Paris 1889 8vo The Onomastic Similarity of Nai Kwang ti of China and Nakhunte of Susiana London 1890 8vo L Ere des Arsacides selon les Inscriptions cuneiformes Louvain 1891 8vo How in 219 B C Buddhism entered China London 1891 8vo Melanges on the Ancient History of Glass and Coal and the Legend of Nu Kwa s Coloured Stones in China 1891 8vo Sur deux Eres inconnus de l Asie Anterieure 330 et 251 B C 1891 8vo The Silk Goddess of China and her Legend London 1891 8vo Catalogue of Chinese Coins from the VIIth Cent B C to A D 621 ed R S Poole London 1892 8vo 18 Beginnings of Writing in Central and Eastern Asia London 1894 8vo 1894 Western Origin of the Early Chinese Civilisation from 2 300 B C To 200 A D Or Chapters on the Elements Derived from the Old Civilisations of West Asia in the Formation of the Ancient Chinese Culture London Asher amp Co Internet Archive Many of these treatises were reprinted from the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society and other publications He also edited the Babylonian and Oriental Record from 1886 3 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp History portal nbsp Languages portalList of French people List of sinologists List of University College London people WonderismReferences edit a b M Terrien de Lacouperie Revue internationale de Sinologie in French E J Brill V 428 1894 a b Ingouville Birth registry 1844 4E090878 entry no394 Archives 76 online p203 a b c d e Carlyle Edward Irving 1898 Terrien De La Couperie Albert Etienne Jean Baptiste In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 56 London Smith Elder amp Co Journal of the Royal Asiatic Soc 1895 p 214 Athenaeum 1894 ii 531 Times 15 October 1894 a b Brooks E Bruce 9 June 2004 Albert Terrien de Lacouperie Sinologists biography project University of Massachusetts Amherst Archived from the original on 15 January 2015 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Carlyle Edward Irving Ryan Janette 2005 2004 Terrien De Lacouperie Albert Etienne Jean Baptiste Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27143 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hacker Edward A Moore Steve Patsco Lorraine 2002 I Ching An Annotated Bibliography p 12 ISBN 978 0 415 93969 0 Subject Index of Modern Works Added to the Library of B M in Years 1880 1885 1886 p 180 Desmet Piet 1996 La linguistique naturaliste en France 1867 1922 nature origine et evolution du langage in French Peeters Publishers p 26 ISBN 9789068318784 Wang Helen A History of the Japanese Coin Collection at the British Museum in Sakuraki et al Catalogue of the Japanese Coin Collection pre Meiji at the British Museum British Museum Research Publication 174 2010 ISBN 978 086159 174 9 pp 1 12 Wang Helen How did Kutsuki Masatsuna s Coins Come to the British Museum ibid pp 13 16 Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1893 July p 652 Helen Wang A Short History of Chinese Numismatics in European Languages Early China vols 35 36 2012 2013 https www dartmouth edu earlychina docs 2012 2013 publorderonline2012 13 html Archived 22 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Norman J Girardot The Victorian Translation of China James Legge s Oriental Pilgrimage Berkeley University of California Press 2002 388 390 Girardot describes the controversies in detail pp 382 393 Endymion Wilkinson Chinese History A New Manual Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2013 pp 497 498 Charlotte Furth Intellectual Change 1895 1920 in Fairbank John King Twitchett Denis Crispin 1983 1 The Cambridge History of China Republican China 1912 1949 Vol 12 Cambridge University Press pp 355 6 ISBN 978 0 521 23541 9 Yoshihiro Ishikawa 2003 Anti Manchu Racism and the Rise of Anthropology in Early 20th century China PDF Sino Japanese Studies chinajapan org Retrieved 23 November 2010 Lubotsky Alexander Schaeken Jos Wiedenhof Jeroen 2008 Evidence and Counter Evidence Essays in Honour of Frederik Kortlandt Volume 2 General Linguistics p 217 ISBN 978 90 420 2471 7 Falk Harry 1993 Schrift im alten Indien ein Forschungsbericht mit Anmerkungen in German Gunter Narr Verlag pp 84 85 106 Terrien de Lacouperie Catalogue of Chinese Coins Bibliotheca Sinica 2 0 Archived from the original on 11 November 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Attribution Terrien De La Couperie Albert Etienne Jean Baptiste Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 External links edit nbsp Works by or about Albert Terrien de Lacouperie at Wikisource nbsp Media related to Albert Terrien de Lacouperie at Wikimedia Commons Titles of papers in The Academy etc Bibliography Transmission to the Far East Mesopotamian Astronomy amp Astrology Retrieved 23 November 2010 The Metallic Cowries of Ancient China 600 B C Terrien de Lacouperie The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland New Series Vol 20 No 3 July 1888 pp 428 439 E Bruce Brooks Albert Terrien de Lacouperie 1845 1894 Warring States Project University of Massachusetts Amherst Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albert Terrien de Lacouperie amp oldid 1184775025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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