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Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)
1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date of Death | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Material Type | Image |
Object | Textbook |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
Textbooks from a traditional private school (2)
Jianben Shijing (Book of Odes, Jianben version)1910s-1920s
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of History
The traditional sishu (private schools) employed private teachers (tutors). The students, who were not divided into classes, were mostly taught the Confucian classics and canonical works by other Chinese scholars. The curriculum began with the "enlightenment phase", during which students learned to read by reciting elementary textbooks such as the Three Character Classic and Baijiaxing (Hundred Family Surnames). Senior students studied such works as the Four Books and the Five Classics in order to prepare for the Qing civil service examinations.
Date | 1910s to 1920s |
Object | Textbook |
Material Type | Image |
Collection | Hong Kong, Benevolent City: Tung Wah and the Growth of Chinese Communities |
Source | Hong Kong Museum of History. Image Reference No.: E2000.447.1 |
Repository | Hong Kong Museum of History |
Note to Copyright | Permission for use in Hong Kong Memory is given by Hong Kong Museum of History |
Accession No. | lcs-twgh-0386 |
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