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Ding Wenjiang

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Ding Wenjiang

Template:Chinese name Ding Wenjiang (Chinese: 丁文江; March 20, 1887 - January 5, 1936), courtesy name Zaijun, was a Chinese geologist and social activist. In his own time, his name was transcribed as either V.K. Ting, or Ting Wen-chiang.

Ding was born into a wealthy family in Taixing, Jiangsu Province. He went to study in Japan in 1902, and later studied in Britain, majoring in zoology and geology. In 1911, Ding graduated from University of Glasgow. After returning to China, he taught at Nanyang Public School (now Shanghai Jiao Tong University) in Shanghai. In 1913, Ding became the geological section chief in Mining Administrative Bureau of Ministry of Industry and Commerce, and went to Shanxi and Yunnan, conducting geological and mineral exploitation. In 1921, he became the general manager of the Beipiao Mining Company, and founded Chinese Geological Society. He served as vice president of the society, and was the editor-in-chief of "Chinese Palaeobiology". He published a paper, "Mythology and Science", in 1923, arguing with Zhang Junmai on science and philosophy, in which he fought against the view that "science is irrelevant to human philosophy". In 1925, Ding was appointed as the director of Shanghai Commercial Bureau. He represented Jiangsu provincial government to negotiate with foreign delegates to Shanghai. They signed "The Temporary Regulation on Reclamation of Juridical Rights in Shanghai by China" on August 1, 1926. In 1931, Ding became a professor of geology at Peking University. Together with Weng Wenhao and Zeng Shiying, he edited and published "New Geographic Map of the Republic of China", and "Provincial Maps of China". In June, 1934, Ding served as the chief staff of Academia Sinica. When he was exploiting a coal mine in Hunan in 1936, he was intoxicated by the coal gas. Fu Sinian came from Beijing to take care of him. On January 5, Ding died in Xiangya Hospital in Changsha. Following his will, he was buried on Yuelu Mountain.

Ding authored The Textbook of Zoology. His geological exploitation materials were compiled into Mr. Ding Wenjiang's Geological Investigation Report, and published in 1947. Ding was also the first Chinese scholar to systematically study the written words of Yi ethnicity. Hu Shih wrote Biography of Ding Wenjiang, and commented that he is "a most europeanized Chinese, and a most scientifically styled Chinese." (Hu Shih: The Guy Called Ding Wenjiang).

See also

  • Furth, Charlotte. _Ting Wen-chiang: Science and China's New Culture_. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1970.

(This comprehensive biography focuses on Ding's scientific and political career, but almost entirely omits Ding's role in the creation of modern Chinese archaeology. A Chinese version was published in 1987: Ding Wenjiang—kexue yu zhongguo xin wenhua 丁文江—科学与中国新文化, translated by Ding’s niece, Ding Zilin, Jiang Yijian, and Yang Zhao. Changsha: Hunan Kexue jishu chubanshe, 1987)

  • Fiskesjö, Magnus and Chen Xingcan. _China Before China: Johan Gunnar Andersson, Ding Wenjiang, and the Discovery of China’s Prehistory / 中国之前的中国:安特生,丁文江,和中国史前史的发现_. Bilingual edition, in English and Chinese. A companion volume for the new exhibit at the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities. Numerous archival illustrations. Stockholm: MFEA monographs no. 15, 2004. ISBN 91-970616-3-8.

(Monograph that describes the dramatic beginnings of Neolithic archaeology in China in the 1920s, through the collaboration of Swedish scholar Johan Gunnar Andersson who worked at China's National Geological Survey from 1914 to 1925, with its founder-director, Ding Wenjiang. )

  • Fiskesjö, Magnus. "Science across borders: Johan Gunnar Andersson and Ding Wenjiang." In: Stevan Harrell, Charles McKhann, Margaret Swain and Denise M. Glover, eds., _Explorers and Scientists in China's Borderlands, 1880-1950_. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2011, pp. 240–66. ISBN 9780295991177. (In-depth discussion of Ding Wenjiang's life and career, as it intersected with the birth of modern archaeology in China.)

Note: These several sources (Furth 1970; Fiskesjö & Chen 2004; Fiskesjö 2011) should be consulted for the correct titles of the Chinese-language works by Hu Shih and other writers, most of which are quoted incorrectly or mistranslated in English, in the entry text above (thus potentially misleading the readers of this entry).

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