< Wikipedia talk:Naming conventions (Chinese)
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All encyclopedia entries whose title is a Chinese names SHOULD include the Chinese characters and Pinyin representation for that name in the first sentence.
Chinese characters on the English Wikipedia should be encoded using HTML entities with Unicode numbers. Big5 and GB encoded characters are acceptable as a draft for people who have no other means of entering characters but be converted to Unicode in HTML character entities when it is possible. After a Chinese text has been converted to Unicode, the Big5 or GB versions should be removed.
Romanization Main discussion: Talk:Transcription of Chinese
Romanization presents some difficult issues in that it is a highly political issue. The most often used romanization is pinyin. Though many outside of the People's Republic of China dislike it because of its association with that government, pinyin is the most correct known way of romanizing Mandarin Chinese words.
In general, Chinese entries should be in pinyin except when there is a more popularly used form in English (such as Taoism) or when the subject of the entry is likely to object to romanization in pinyin. When an entry is not in pinyin form, there should be a link to the article from the pinyin form.
Chinese names, unlike Western names, presents family/clan name first. Unlike other instances were this occurs, it is standard practice in English to also present a Chinese name last name first (i.e. Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping). Chinese names should be in pinyin unless there is a more common name used in English (i.e. Chiang Kai-shek, Sun Yat-sen) or when the subject of the article is likely to prefer a non-pinyin phonetization as is likely the case with personages from Taiwan (i.e. Lee Teng-hui).
The encyclopedia should reference the name more familar to most English readers. For most historical figures the means that encyclopedia entry should reference the Chinese name rather than the English name (Soong Chu-yu rather than James Soong for example), with a redirect from the English name. However, there are exceptions for figures whose English name is more familar (Confucius, Koxinga) and for figures who were raised in non-Chinese societies and whose Chinese names are unfamilar (Vera Wang, Michelle Kwan and Maya Lin).
Another special case is for a figure whose Chinese name is familar but used in English ordering (e.g. Wen Ho Lee[?]). In this case, the primary entry should be under the English ordering with a redirect from the Chinese ordering.
In Chinese societies greatly influenced by western culture (e.g. Hong Kong), people tend to give themselves Christian names in addition to the names given by their parents. For example, Cheung Kwok Wing is also known as Leslie Cheung and his full name is written as "Leslie CHEUNG Kwok Wing" in official or legal documents. Such convention is not accepted in wikipedia and the family name would be ambiguous in "Leslie Cheung Kwok Wing".
When using pinyin for a Chinese name, pinyin spacing and capitalization conventions should be used. This includes keeping the last name separate and the given name capitalized with the different characters not indicated by spacing, hyphenization, or capitalization.
The main entry for a Chinese group should be under the name most familar to English speakers. In some cases, this will be the translated name (e.g. Chinese Communist Party). In other cases, this will be the transliterated name (Kuomintang and Falun Gong). When the name is transliterated, the name should use the spelling conventionally used by English speakers (e.g. Kuomintang). Where this is not the pinyin transliteration there should be a link from the article from the pinyin name.
When a group uses a translated name, the Chinese characters should be included if the Chinese characters cannot be unambiguously derived from the English name or if providing the characters would provide any extra information. For example, the entry for President of the People's Republic of China should include Chinese characters because the name used for President (zhuxi) is not the standard term used for President, whereas including the Chinese characters for President of the Republic of China is redundant because it can be derived unambigiously derived from the English term.
Similarly Chinese characters should be included for the Democratic Progressive Party because the standard term used for the party (min-jin-dang) is a contraction of the full name (min-zhu jin-bu dang). Characters should also be included for National People's Congress because there are a number of different Chinese terms to translate Congress, and the entry should identify which one is used.
Names of Emperors Discussion on a convention is underway on the bottom of this page.
The general principle is to use the name which is most familar to Chinese readers. This violates the Wikipedia principle that the name most familiar to English readers should be used, because English readers are not usually familiar with any of the emperors.
1) Emperors before the Tang dynasty: use posthumous names. eg. Han Wu Di[?].
2) Emperors between Tang dynasty and Ming dynasty: use temple names eg. Tang tai zong[?].
3) Emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasty: use era names (same as reign names) eg. Kangxi[?].
4) If there is a more common convention than using posthumous, temple or era names, then use it. eg. Cao Cao instead of Wei wu di. Or Sima Yi[?] instead of Jin xuan di. This is often the case with founders of dynasties and the special case of Puyi.
Because these are reign names are not personal names, the correct phrasing for emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasty is the "Kangxi Emperor" rather than "Emperor Kangxi".
Wikipedia entries should avoid taking sides on issues such as the status of Taiwan and Tibet. In particular the word China should not be used to be synonymously with areas under current administration by the People's Republic of China or with Mainland China. The term "Mainland China" is a non-political term to be can used when a comparison is to be made with Taiwan, and "China proper" is a non-political term which can be used when making a comparison with Tibet. Although the used of the term "Manchuria" is considered by some to be somewhat objectionable when used in Chinese, it is largely considered a non-political and non-objectionable term when used in English.
A decision was made after extended discussion on Talk:China to use China as the title of the article on mainland China (People's Republic). Fred Bauder 12:39 Nov 8, 2002 (UTC)
Taiwan should not be described either as an independent nation or as a part of China. When it is necessary to describe the political status of Taiwan, special note should be made of Taiwan's complex political status.
Also note that there are potential landmines when using the term Chinese. In particular, some find a distinction between "Chinese" and "Tibetans" or between "Chinese" and "Taiwanese" to be objectionable and the terms "[[Han Chinese"]]/"Tibetans" and "Mainland Chinese"/"Taiwanese" are more politically neutral.
The term "Mainlander" poses some issues. It is sometimes ambiguous whether this is refering to a resident of Mainland China or a member of the group that fled with the KMT to Taiwan in 1949. In refering to the latter group, the name is mildly objectionable when used in English and strongly objectionable when translated literally in Chinese. Preferred unambigous names for the two groups are "Mainland Chinese" and "wai sheng ren".
Hakka is the preferred name for that group even though the Mandarin word for that is something completely different phonetically.
In general, one should avoid using the term "Chinese" to be synonymous with the spoken Mandarin Chinese.
Excellent ideas on naming conventions! --maveric149
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All entries with Chinese names should have the Chinese characters for the name included in unicode.
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One must have a Chinese Communicator installed on a PC to do so. When the document was typed on computers of public domains which only offers IME (like Microsoft IME that doesn't convert Chinese characters in Unicode), presenting every single character in unicode is a tiresome work since typers have to search for them. I'm against this proposal. By the way while using Pinyin romanization, readers who don't know Chinese characters at all can search for the them if they have a Communicator or dictionary handy. -- Ktsquare
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Chinese characters on wikipedia should be encoded using HTML entities with unicode numbers. Use of either 8-bit characters or non-unicode encodings such as big5 or gb should be discouraged. Unicode is preferably because it has the highest available and also avoids political issues.
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As I said earlier, typing every character in unicode is tiresome. Although I agree that big5 and gb encoding may invoke political issue simply because of Traditional and Simplified Chinse, readers who are proficienct in Chinese will feel more comfortable typing more. If one doesn't know Chinese characters at all, the typers can just list the Pinyin romanization without accompanied by any sort of Chinese encoding, saving time for both the typers and readers. Then anyone knowing the correct Chinese character should then do the encoding, avoiding any confusion. Ktsquare
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Names of Emperors
Emperors before the Ming dynasty should be refered to by the posthumous temple name rather than by reign name. Where there is any ambiguity, the temple name should be preceded by the name of the dynasty.
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Okay.... I partially agree on what you have said but let's make it more clear. Emperors before the Tang dynasty should be referred to by the posthumous name. Temple name should be used for emperors between Tang dynasty and Ming dynasty. There is a difference between temple names and posthumous names. See the guide on Chinese sovereign for the difference. But if you were saying emperors before Ming should be referred using posthumous AND temple name, that's plain wrong. An exmaple, give me the temple name of Han Wu Di. Nobody would use it except those wrote Hanshu like Ban gu and his disciples. Or give me the posthumous name (not the temple name) of Tang Gao Zu. Ktsquare
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Personal names for emperors should not be used except to refer to the founders of dynasties who used personal names before becoming emperor (e.g. Liu Bang) and except for the special case of the last emperor Puyi whose reign name and temple name are unfamiliar.
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The overall idea is going by the most common convetion which is pretty fimilar to those accustomed Chinese. The most common convention is use the name which is most familar to Chinese readers. This violates the Wikipedia principle that the name most familiar to English readers should be used, because English readers are not usually familiar with any of the emperors.
1) Emperors before the Tang dynasty: use posthumous names. eg. Han Wu Di 2) Emperors between Tang dynasty and Ming dynasty: use temple ames eg. Tang tai zong 3) Emperors of the Ming and Qing dynasty: use era names (same as reign names) eg. kangxi 4) If there is a more common convention than using posthumous, temple or era names, then use it. eg. Cao Cao instead of Wei wu di. Or Sima Yi instead of Jin xuan di. Ktsquare
Suggested rule: Those who do not know any Chinese MAY ignore this rule when starting a new article; however, they SHOULD ask for help in the Summary: field when submitting the text. --Damian Yerrick
See Talk:China for a discussion on whether to use simplified or traditional Chinese characters. Fred Bauder 12:39 Nov 8, 2002 (UTC)
I like the last option (Replace by pinyin and leave the old one into brackets?) Vera Cruz
however my browser isnt reading pinyin and it would be nice if someone told me what i could do to change that. Vera Cruz
Regarding choice of Romanization
I do not quite agree on what is written about Romanization: I think we should always aim for using Pinyin words in articles, regardless if it's the popular spelling in the West or not. The nice thing is that we can still have a redirect and an explanation of the popular term - included in the article or in a seperate one - which will avoid confusion when people search for the popular term; but when we write the main article I think that the Pinyin term should be used in all cases: both in the article text and in its title.
It's true that some might at first be confused when seeing this term being used instead of the popular one, but as long as the popular one is included as well, and an explanation that the one used in the article is the Pinyin version (with a link to Pinyin) it only avoids confusion, and makes the process of creating new articles of Chinese topics easier, as everyone know they should use Pinyin Romanization. In my opinion, this is a very suitable choice for an encyclopedia, and I admit that if other informative websites I've visited would have done so from the beginning, I would not have felt so confused the first years before I began studying basic Chinese.
- Wintran 12:30 Feb 17, 2003 (UTC)
Trouble is that most of the people reading, searching for or linking to the articles will only be familiar with the term most commonly-used in English. That is why we have Wikipedia:naming conventions (anglicization) and Wikipedia:naming conventions (common names) (read those pages to learn why those conventions are important). Those two naming conventions are general ones and no specific naming convention can violate a general naming convention. But in this case there is no specific naming convention for Chinese (at least not yet). Only a talk page talking about naming issues for Chinese subjects. --mav 12:55 Feb 17, 2003 (UTC)
Sorry, I just learned that there's already a huge discussion on this topic in m:Use pinyin not Wade-Giles. I will continue the discussion there.
- Wintran 22:16 Feb 18, 2003 (UTC)
3 choices for Emperor Tang Tai Zong of China:
Also, which of the following form should we use ?
I preferred "Emperor Taizong of Tang China", which includes the Chiniese reference but it assumed the reader knows that "Tang" is a dynasty. However the dynasty reference can be introduced in the article. Combining with what Lorenzarius introduced,
Emperor XXXYYY of (name of dynasty) China for monarch before Ming Dynasty, while XXXXXX Emperor of (name of dynasty) Chinais used for monarch of Ming and Qing Dynasty
examples:
Kangxi Emperor of Qing China.
Emperor Wu of Han China
Hongwu Emperor of Ming China.
Just a side note, some sinologists still use the Wade-Giles convention, for instance, Yung-lo or Hsien-ti; however these names neither specify that they were emperors, nor refer to their specific dynasties. The information was assumed in the content. -- kt2
Emperor XXXYYY of (name of dynasty) China for monarch before Ming Dynasty, while XXXXXX Emperor of (name of dynasty) Chinais used for monarch of Ming and Qing Dynasty is in my view a good idea. I have two observations about problems that might cause, based on my experience on drawing up the naming conventions on western monarchs.
The trouble is that people who think the correct form is wrong often don't seem to enter the page to find out the reason for the name before renaming. In contrast people who do know the correct form tend to look at the text or go to the talk page, where they can find an explanation, often with a See Wikipedia:Naming conventions (names and titles) link. There are many many more such examples of this problem. I have found that the best solution is to go for maximum accuracy combined with consistency and user-friendliness through the list. If that means being 90% accuracy rather than 100% accuracy, it is worth it if it avoids endless renaming as someone (often a newbie) finds what they think is a mistake and corrects it. Where less than 100% accuracy is used in the title, then the full correct version can be used in the text, with an explanation of why it is correct.
BTW, (I am not an expert or anything like it on Chinese emperors so I may be wrong in this) is it necessary to use the word emperor at all in the title? In western titles, we don't use regal or imperial titles, merely Albert II of Belgium, Juan Carlos of Spain, etc. That way, where we see a {name} of {country} it usually indicates a monarch or late spouse of a monarch. Would simply saying [[{x} of {name of dynasty} China]] produce any problems? Would it cause confusion? Would other non-imperial Chinese figures be written that way? It might be a way of avoiding any confusion over the location of the word emperor in the title, and so avoid naming wars.
Two final (and very quick!) points:
Chinese rulers had vastly different legitmacies of their reigns - some were de facto emperors of all China, some occupied a region and others self-declared emperors while only taking over a scrap of land. I agree that emperor can be (and for consistency, should be) dropped from the title. For the sake of accuracy only the de facto emperors deserved such an title. However some wikipedians would then argue "why would emperor A is called an emperor and ruler B isn't?", which will in turn lead to editing wars as FearÉÍREANN has sugguested. I sugguested XXX of (name of dynasty) China.
Discrepancy between Pinyin (py) and Wade-Giles (wg) lies in the XXX of the title. Significant amount of scholastic works in the area still employed the wg convention; however these work are mostly from English speaking researcher. Pinyin convention has creeped in many English works by non-English speaking historians. The choice of convention is primarily a perspective of the author (and there is a bunch to say about this). Most sinologists are familiar with both systems. As far as wikipedia is concerned, we can always create two titles, one in py another in wg, which then lead us to another question - which title should be the primary and the other degenerates to redirects. Any thought? kt2 - 01:43 26 May 2003
This is a pretty misleading statement, and I don't think number of hits alone means that much. One ought to also look at quality of hits. The early hits for "K'ang-hsi" all relate specifically to the Chinese Emperor, and many are encyclopedia entries. The early results for "Kangxi" are frequently odd, many/most are not in English, and some don't seem to refer to the Emperor. Many of the better results for "Kangxi" are actually articles which principally refer to the Emperor as "K'ang-hsi". Also, the idea that Pinyin somehow is a more sensible transliteration ought to be dispelled just by learning of the "Qin Dynasty", which is surely further from the actual sound than anything in Wade-Giles. In the end, I don't think it matters that much, so long as people are dutiful about redirects. I'd say that for Communist figures the Pinyin should definitely be used, and for locations, etc. But for historical figures, I'm not sure. English scholarship does seem to be predominantly Wade-Giles... john 08:22 26 May 2003 (UTC)
I would like to stress my point, we shall always use the form, py or wg or any other system one suggests, of the name most familiar to English readers for Emperors of China. kt2
Era Name Emperor
Kt2, why are Ming, Qing emperors' English names are era+"emperor"? Is it because era names are adjectival? --Menchi 22:23 26 May 2003 (UTC)
Taken from meta page:
We should better include Penkyamp transliteration for Cantonese as Hong Kong grows increasingly conscious about its differing identity from Beijing.
Maybe one day Taiwanese[?] will also be included to give a genuine multicultural feel to the Han language and culture.
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