COLLECTED BY
Organization:
Internet Archive
The Internet Archive discovers and captures web pages through many different web crawls.
At any given time several distinct crawls are running, some for months, and some every day or longer.
View the web archive through the
Wayback Machine.
The seed for Wide00014 was:
- Slash pages from every domain on the web:
-- a list of domains using Survey crawl seeds
-- a list of domains using Wide00012 web graph
-- a list of domains using Wide00013 web graph
- Top ranked pages (up to a max of 100) from every linked-to domain using the Wide00012 inter-domain navigational link graph
-- a ranking of all URLs that have more than one incoming inter-domain link (rank was determined by number of incoming links using Wide00012 inter domain links)
-- up to a maximum of 100 most highly ranked URLs per domain
The seed list contains a total of 431,055,452 URLsThe seed list was further filtered to exclude known porn, and link farm, domainsThe modified seed list contains a total of 428M URLs
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20160401171255/http://onmarkproductions.com/html/niochina_20.html
|
NIO STATUES FROM CHINA - PHOTO TOUR
|
tang-period-caves-longmen-china-sept-2008-NIO-4C
|
Longmen Grottoes é¾éç³çª, China. Above = Tang period carving.
Nio Statues at the Longmen Grottoes é¾éç³çª in China, plus a few others from different locations. Over the centuries, many of the statues were seriously damaged in domestic anti-Buddhism campaigns. In modern times (1907 to 1938), the caves suffered another wave of destruction together with massive looting by Chinese and foreigners alike. Many pieces are still at museums in Germany, France, England, America, and Japan. The Chinese government continues to petition these nations and their museums for the return of said artifacts, but to no avail. The Longmen complex is a wonder to behold, with many surviving pieces of unrivaled beauty stretching from the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534 AD) into the Tang period (618-907 AD).
Some of the main caves are listed below:
- Binyang Middle Cave (Northern Wei Dynasty 386-534 AD); statues carved between 500 AD to 523 AD.
- Binyang South Cave (Sui Dynasty 581-618 AD)
- Binyang North Cave (Tang Dynasty 618-907 AD)
- Wanfo Caves of 10,000 Buddha ä¸ä½æ´ (Tang Dynasty 618-907 AD)
Leigutai Caves æé¼å°; also known as Dawanwufo-dong 大ä¸ä¼ä½æ´ (Tang Dynasty 618-907 AD)
- Lord Huangfu Cave çç«å
¬çª (Northern Wei Dynasty 386-534AD)
Fengxian Temple Carvings å¥å
寺 (Tang Dynasty 618-907 AD; carving began in 672, completed circa 672 - 675)
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|