the australian national unl'v'ersitv faculti/ of asian

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"' 5/1987 : 1 THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNl'v'ERSITV FACULTI/ OF ASIAN STUDIES ASIAN HISTORV CENTRE ANNUAL REPORT 1966 1. GENERAL COMMENTS continue to be the largest Centre of the Faculty in terms of student enro 1 rnents, whi eh have in fact increased this yeeir. In terms of staff, h0\'\ 1 ever, we said a nurntier of farevv·ells this year-. The death of Erneritus Professor Basham in Cal cut ta on 27 ,.JBnuary 1986, was cornmernornted at a Faculty gathering on Tuesday, 11 March . Professor Basham was the foundation Professor of the Departrnent of Asian Civilizations, the ancestor of the Asian Hi story Centre. His unique scholarly distinction brought lustre to the Faculty of Asian Studies and to the University as a whole, and his warmth and generosity rnached out beyond the boundaries of ege, status, nationality end religion. No one can replace him, but the portrait on the Vv'all opposite his office reminds us of the special qualities whi eh have enriched our 1 i ves . We would like to offer our tt1cmks to retiring rnernbers of the university and Centre: We are sad to say good-bye to Dr Rizvi, a sadness tempered by the expectation tr1at he wi 11 continue to be as productive as ever and to spend much of his time in Canberra . He has been a cheerful and indefatigable memt1er of the Centre (ori gi na 11 y of t1·1e Department of Asian Ci vi 1 i zat ions) for hvo decades even in the 1 ast few months ·when r1e trnd to contend "Nith serious illness, \·vhi eh we hope ·will soon be a thing of the past. 'we can on 1 y wish him tr1e cont i nu at ion of the unflagging physical and intellectual energy which have been his trade- mark for us. The Centre would also like to extend its heartfelt thanks and good wishes to Professor Wang Gangwu, who has resigned his professorship in Far Eastern History to take up the Vice-Chancellorship of the University of Hong

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5/1987 : 1

THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNl'v'ERSITV

FACULTI/ OF ASIAN STUDIES

ASIAN HISTORV CENTRE

ANNUAL REPORT 1966

1. GENERAL COMMENTS

~ve continue to be the largest Centre of the Faculty in terms of student enro 1 rnents, whi eh have in fact increased this yeeir. In terms of staff, h0\'\1ever, we said a nurntier of farevv·ells this year-.

The death of Erneritus Professor Basham in Cal cut ta on 27 ,.JBnuary 1986, was cornmernornted at a Faculty gathering on Tuesday, 11 March.

• Professor Basham was the foundation Professor of the Departrnent of Asian Civilizations, the ancestor of the Asian Hi story Centre. His unique scholarly distinction brought lustre to the Faculty of Asian Studies and to the University as a whole, and his warmth and generosity rnached out beyond the boundaries of ege, status, nationality end religion. No one can replace him, but the portrait on the Vv'all opposite his office reminds us of the special qualities whi eh have enriched our 1 i ves.

We would like to offer our tt1cmks to retiring rnernbers of the university and Centre:

We are sad to say good-bye to Dr Rizvi, a sadness tempered by the expectation tr1at he wi 11 continue to be as productive as ever and to spend much of his time in Canberra. He has been a cheerful and indefatigable memt1er of the Centre (ori gi na 11 y of t1·1e Department of Asian Ci vi 1 i zat ions) for hvo decades even in the 1 ast few months ·when r1e trnd to contend "Nith serious illness, \·vhi eh we hope ·will soon be a thing of the past. 'we can on 1 y wish him tr1e cont i nu at ion of the unflagging physical and intellectual energy which have been his trade­mark for us.

The Centre would also like to extend its heartfelt thanks and good wishes to Professor Wang Gangwu, who has resigned his professorship in Far Eastern History to take up the Vice-Chancellorship of the University of Hong

5/1987

Kong. Professor v·/ang taught the course History of t /le Soll t /le est A si8n Chinese for many years, and student reports - unsolicited! - invariably reflected the quality of his teaching and the enthusiasm he generated. The F t'.lculty owes much to Professor Wt'.lng; this university's loss is Hong Kong's gein. We know that Professor Wang will cope splendidly with the challenges of his new position, and hope be finds much to enjoy in them.

Professor El-Eri an, \h/ho has been a Visiting Fe 11 ow to the Faculty si nee lst August 1952, and · ... vho has taught /ntroo't1ctfon to ls/01nfc fJlest Asio in this Centre together with Arabic and other courses for the Faculty, leaves us at the end of the year with our thanks and best wishes for an active retirement.

2. UNDERGRADUATE TEACHING

Our first-year teaching owes much to the following scholars who are not regular members of staff: Professor El-Erian once agein taught the full­year introductory course on West Asia; Dr Rajapatirana of the Soutt1 & V·/est Asia Centre assisted with the teaching of Cl8ssfcol L itero·ttlre of l.oo'.io-, Dr Jennifer Brewster tutored for Dr Mason's Eerly ...lapan course; Dr Aat Vervoorn tutored both semester· courses in the f i rst-yeer Chinese courses, enci ent and modern; t1r Harjot Oberoi tutored the South Asia component of the fir·st-year course lilat ionoifs-ln al·1o' Socio-/ Cl1t.''1nge ill As-io~ and Mr Richtird Stanley and Mr Michael Comans tutored for Dr Jordens' Cl8ssic8l Litero-t11re of /lJO'i8

course. Y.le would part i cul arl y 1 i ke to thank Dr Jennifer Cushman for her interest as well es for her tremendous contribution to our students in teaching the course Hi story of the Southeast Asian Chinese this year.

3. ENROLMENTS AND EXAMINATION RESULTS

The results, in abt1revi sled form, are sho"vvn in Appendices 1 and 2.

4. STUDENT PARTICIPATION

The fol towing students were elected to tt·1e Centre Commit tee in 1966:

Mr M. Donohue t1s A. Faulkner Ms A. Joedi eke Mr G. Joseph ( 1 st term only) Mr G. Martin

Mr R. Munro Mr 11. Pantofl i cek Ms M. Patay Ms S. Pearson Ms J. Po 11 ard

Mr Keith Elwe11-Gavins was again elected Asian History Centre Representative on the Faculty Committee and the Faculty Education Committee; and Mr T.E. Behrend was the Gradw~te Students' Representative for the Centre. We thank all these students for giving up their time to undertake this work.

5/1987

Ut1ernee-r1useum in Bremen and the Musee Guirnet and the Ecole Franceise crExtreme-Ori ent in Peri s.

Dr Mtison visited the University of Melbourne in September to give two lectures to the East Asian Studies I course.

Dr Gardiner left on 4th October for a l'vvo-vveek study trip to Japan, which he combined with his four \1\1eeks ennuel leeve. In Japen he visited the Jimbun Kagaku Kenkyu-jo library in Kyoto, and renewed academic contacts with col1eegues both in Kyoto and Tokyo universities. He was able to visit a special exhibition on Koguryo Culture organised by North Korean groups. In Germany he visited the University of Tubingen, end et the invitation of Professor Eichermeyer, head of the Korean Studies programme, he gave two lectures, one on the historical role of Koguryo, and tt"1e other on the period of transHion from Silla to Koryo, 887-935.

Dr Cai ger spent ten months from the end of ,.January 1986 as a Vi sit i ng Fellow in the Department of Far Eastern History, RSPacS, where he pressed on with a set of eight historical essays on the general subject "The Japanese and the Sea".

Dr Kumar wes invited to present a paper at tr1e conference organized by the Social Science Research Council on The Cotl'lp8rot i¥8 St 110~1 of l'/11sl in1 Societies held in New Vork in April.

Dr Ter-wiel was on outside studies leave from mid-June to mid­December.In June he gave a paper on Thai intellectual history for the Thai Hi stori ce 1 Association in Bangkok, and in August he et tended the XXX 11 International Congress for Asian and North African Studies in Hamburg, during which he Chaired one panel and presented a paper entitled Acceptance r...9/'Jd

Reject ion: The First lnoc11J..9t ion and VeccinBt ion Csmpo1/;ns in Thtdl6"17d In early December he presented a paper A Sh8n As-trologicel Oocwnent in the Anthropological Museum, Breda; and at the Sorbonne in Paris he presented a paper entitled Les Textes T8i et Rec/Jerc/Je kc;t/d-est Asiot iqt1es.

Dr ,..Jeffcott returned from outside study in Japan in February.

9. RESEARCH

Dr Rizvi revised The f·Jlono'er tl18t J·V8S lno'i8Vol.ll, on which he and Professor Basham had been working for the lest few years, and submitted the completed volume to the publisher. He continued his work on Islamic proselytization in lndie, for which he received a Fecu1ties Reseerch Fund grant and which will be completed by 1987, and his work on urbanization in medieval India, whi eh wi 11 be ready by 1987 and possibly pub 1 i shed the f o 11 owing year.

7. STAFF

Head of Centre Readers

Senior Lecturers

Lecturnrs

A.L. Kumar, BA (Oriental Studies), Pt1D S.A.A. Rizvi, t1A, PhD, Dlitt. (Agra), FAHA H.H.E. Lo of s-Wi ssowa, Di pOrlang. (Paris), Dr Phil ( Fri b.), C hev. Pa 1 mes A ea de mi q ues J.T .F. Jot-dens, lie. en Philos., PhD ( louvai n), Di pEd.( Mel b.) R.H.P. Meson, MA (Cantab.), PhD

K.H.J. Gardiner, BA, PhD ( Lond.) J.G. Caiger, BA (Syd. & lond .), PhD B.J. Terwiel, drs Utrecht (Anthropolog•J), PhD C.A. ,Jeff cot t, BA ( N.Z.), BA(Oxon), PhD U1. Proudfoot, BA(Oriental Studies), PhD

Associate members of our Centre are Dr Virginia Matheson and Dr Raf e de Crespigny.

6. STAFF MOVEMENTS

Dr Jot-dens Bt tended the I nternat i ono 1 Conf ernnce for the Unity of the Sciences at \vashington, D.C. in November, where he presented a paper on "The Classical Indian approach to tr1e study of u·1e psyche". He also attended the planning meeting for that conference in April in Kyoto. During the May vacation he et tended the A.S.A.A. Conf ere nee at Sydney University, and in July he attended the yearly conference of tt1e Academy of the Humanities of Australia in Hobart.

Dr Rizvi returned from outside studies leove at the end of J(jnuary. He attended the XXX II I nternat i ona 1 Congress for Asian end North African Studies (ex-Orientalists' Congress) held in Hamburg, West Germany in August at which he presented e paper on Tile Role of St1fis tmd St1ff K/Jonqol1s in the Llrft{f,.7fze/jo/J [If h'edie¥al llidfe. He spent a few weeks on fieldwork in India during August.

Dr Loofs-Wissowa attended the same XXXI I International Congress for Asi (jn and North African Studies, (jt whi eh he presented a paper in the Archaeology section entitled Tl1e Rise and F8/I of Earl!J Bronze in Tho"iltlnd. This communication of the results of Dr Loofs- vlissov\'·a·s research on early metallurgy in Southeast Asia and the refutation of erroneous, if unfortunately already widely accepted, theories about a sensationally high antiquity of bronze in northeastern Thailand, attracted the special attention of some journalists covering the congress. As an office-bearer of the IUPPS, he is now involved in organizing the Xlth Congress to be held in Mainz, \.Yest Germany in August 1987. After the Homburg Congress, he spent four weeks in Germemy and France doing research at the Kunstgewerbe Museum in Hemburg, the

5/1987

T~1e Centre Cornrni t tee rnet once in each term.

5. \.I/ORK OF GRADUATE STUDENTS

Mt- Scott Bamber (PhD), who transferred from t1A to PhD in ,.January, has spent nearly the whole of 1986 on fieldwork in Th ail and, and should return by Christmas.

Mr Scot Barme (MA) returned from field"ivork in Thailand in early September, having spent nine months in Bangkok co 11 ect i ng data from 1 i brari es and interviews for his thesis, and gave a lecture for 'Hi story of the Southeast Asian Chinese'.

Mr Tim Behrend (PhD) returned in January following twelve months of work in manuscript collections in Indonesia and the Netherlands to continue work on his thesis and the translation of the 5er8t .. 18t iSH'8ra. Three articles have been submitted for publication.

Mr Ian Cal dwell (PhD) transferred in December from the Department of Hi story, F fJculty of Arts, to the Centre to comp 1 ete his thesis. He is at present undertaking field work in Indonesia.

Mr Jarni e Fennessy (Pt1D) is st i 11 working as a tutor in the Japanese Department, University of Tasmania. He continues his research on peace education in posl'war Japan.

Dr John Gardiner-Garden tool( up a post-doctoral Fellowship at the University of California flt Berkeley until mi d-1987, hevi ng been adrni tted to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in June.

Dr Ho Hon-wai was admitted to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in May and has recently taken up a post at Academia Sinica in Taiwan.

Mr .John Jorgensen (PhD) r-eturned in July from a temporary lecturership in the Department of East Asian Languages, University of Californie, Los Angeles, and gave e seminflr in September entitled In 5e'"-rrch of the Indian Roots of Ch'en.

Mr Stev1art Lone (PhD) arrived in September from England to study Katsura Taro and Japanese East Asian Policy, 1900-1911 .

Father Christopher Myers (MA) is continuing his reseerch on e study of the life and thought of Bishop Hinsuke v~shiro.

5/19~

Mr Harjot Oberoi (Pt1D) continued r1is research on the Sikhs in 19th century India, and tutored during third term in the first-year course 'Nationalism and Social Change in Asia'.

Mr Peng Hong (f1A) arrived in March to study 'Po 1 i ti cs, Government and Public Policy of the Late Qing Dynasty', end gave a seminar in December entitled jling Li11 Poi and its r8lotio11 JoJ"ith Yan hl11 Poi (J.JIBstBrnizotion group) ond fJlei )/in Pof (reform gro11p) in lo-!8 ClJ"ng dynBsty.

Mr Bill swan (PhD) submitted his thesis entitled • ..ltJp1Jnese Econ(Jmic Re lot ions J·vith SitJm: Aspects of their flistorictJ/ Development /8J4 to 1942 in July end is now in Japan.

In November, Mr Iqbal Syed (PhD) submitted his thesis on Newab Mohsin-ul-f1ulk. In September he gave a seminar entitled The RBligjm1s Jdeos of A'tn·J"8D. /'/a/Jsin-111-/'/tllk

Mr Xiong Cunrui (PhD) gave seminars in May and ,.June in Fer Eastern History. The first on f'tJct iontJ/ism in Chinese Arcl!t1eolog~1; the second on The St1i-TtJng Cities and in Asian Studies in .July Te/too fv'oro's atlo' Avoidance Stra·tegies in the St'1i-Ttlll!l OjpltJsties. Two articles will be put•lished next year.

6. VISITORS •

Professor M.A. El-Erian·s paper Beyond Toleret1ce: h'llSlfms 1/1

At1stroli8 was given at the Australian National University Public Affairs Conference ' lslem: Current implications for Australie ' in June.

Dr B.M. Bodart-Bail ey is a visiting f e 11 ow in the Centre from October until February 1987. She has presented a paper A Blt18pri11t for Re·yo/11! jon1Jry C!Jo1Jge in Se¥elJ/8enth-cent11ry .. !open in the Department of Far Eastern History.

Professeur Denys Lombard from the Ecole des Hautes Eludes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, visited the Centre for 6 few weeks in October.

Professor D.A. LO'v\I was a visiting fellow in the Centre from 4 July to December. We welcome our former Vice-Chancellor back for a period of quiet research.

Mrs Vehom Buragohain and Mr Nabin Shyarn, Research Officers of the Deportment of Historical and Antiquarian Studies of Assam, Guwahati, spent the months of Apri 1 and May working with Dr T erwi e 1 ond Dr Di 11 er on their ARGS research project.

5/1987

Dr Loofs-vvissowa continued t1is research on the origin and spread of metallurgy in Asia, as well as on two dictionary projects: the Vietnamese Archaeological Glossory and the Oict ion11aire o'e ltJ Preliistoire (Presses Uni versi tai res de France). The Southeast Asian section of the latter, for whi eh he vvas ori gi na 11 y comrni ssi oned, had al ready been l'rnnded in at the tiegi nni ng of the year, but the untimely death of the Gener-al Editor of the Dfctfannoire, Prof.Andre Leroi-Gourhan, revealed trial the \'v'hole of south and eest Asia still needed to be done - a ·job with which Dr Loofs-V·/issowa 'ttas landed unexpectedly. Those two sections are now also completed and the Oic/iL71717tJire will go to press shortly. Research on the possible survival of Archanthropi ans or Pol aeoeinthropi ans in the centra 1 high l einds of Vi etneirn and cer-tein other parts of southeast Asia has also prngressed, although reliable _ material is very hard to come tiy and the whole topic is fraught with the most surprising difficulties.

Dr Mason continued his research on tt1e Shinlrnkinsh(l poems.

This year Dr Gardiner spent the second semester on relei:ise from tee chi ng, preperi ng his trnns 1 eti on of the anne 1 s of Koguryo f rorn the Se.n;-gtll:­

sogi for eventual publication. His only putrlications tr1is year \·Vere a dozen or so entries on early end mediaeval Korea for the American Encpclope·dio- of Asion History.

Dr Caiger completed the first of eigr1t historical essays on the ,.Japanese and the sea for publication and brougM the remaining series to tt1e point where each is out 1 i ned.

Dr Kumar continued her research on 1 Bth century ,..Jave whi eh is suppor-ted by an ARGS grant.

Dr Terwiel received an ARGS grant and Feculties Research Fund grant for tt1e trnnslati on of earl y-19th-century Tt1ai documents on whi eh he worl(ed with Dr Diller. V•lhile on study leave, he wrote tt1e final draft of a new book on early-19th-century Thai history, entitled Throt1g/J Trevellers · E1,1es. He also wrote tin tirticle on the 'Sangha end Education in Thailend' for the In t erl'Ja t ion a I Encyc I opeeo'ie t1 f E o'tlcrd /011.

Dr Jeff colt hes continued working on urban history of the Song dynasty, and completed a survey of some general points of interpretation in this field, to be published in the Journal of the International Christian University in Tokyo. He is currently preparing a manuscript on commercial taxation.

Dr Proudf oat continued his work on early Maley book pub 1 i shi ng.

5/19£9

10. STAFF ACTIVITIES

This year the Asian History Centre held its first seminar series, organized by the previous Head of Centre, Dr John Cai ger. The theme ctwsen "Asia - A Sense of Place" gave rise to interesting papers snd productive comparisons. The series was inaugurated in Marcr1 with a seminar by Dr Terwtel entitled /"Ill ·ang Thai and the fJ1orld: cho-r1gf11g perspect Ives o'tlring the Third Reign ( 1824-1851), end continued with Mr Oberoi's Fron,? Pllnjab to K/Jalistan: Territoriality and !"/etacommentarf/. follov'fed in June by Dr Vervoorn's Ctlltt1rt1l 5trtJt8 of the Ht1a Sllt!IJ., the Hol.!/ tlot1ntt1in of the fJlest .. 5()() 8.C.-l9l15 AD. In July - Dr Gardiner: 11'1,,:;.;-·s frolil Tc1-C/J 'n. Cont o·ct J."'let JoJ>'BBn Chino· 8nd the Rom8tl fJlest in tl1e lirst three ce11t 11ries AD . In August Dr Ungar end Mrs Caiger gave a joint paper entitled People Bild ot/7er pieces: Exile ill £est AsitJ.. end in September Dr Caiger presented Teo-ching ..lo-panese Children J.Jlorld 5eogr'-9php: Ft1A't12'tJJoJo'8 Ytlkiclli ·s 5e .. ~'8f Kt1nizt1kt1sh/. 1869 8nd the tlinistr~1 of Edt1cation~t:\ ..lin/d 5/Jdg_aJ:J:d Chir1: /9<19-/(J. Owing to Dr Rizvi's illness, the Octotrer seminar was cencelled, end Dr· Kurneir· presented the Novernber seminar entitled: Tl1e Exploro·lio11 a11d Description of .. lava (c. / 7-!9t/? ce-11t t1ries): t H"O o'isC:{lttrses of discavB·ry. We have prorni ses of further contributions from Faculty staff and visitors and there is a prospect of publication.

Dr Loofs-Wissowa continued as Secretary-General of the Commission for Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory and Protohi story, Uni on lnternationale des Sciences Prehistoriques et Prntohistoriques; as Chairmen of the Indochina Languages Panel, National Accreditation Authority for Translators and Interpreters; and as Editorial Advisor to East Asio11 Civilizations. He a 1 so continued to serve on the University Commit tee on Public Affairs and Continuing Education (COPACE); end on the lnternBtional Area Consultative Committee, Centre for Continuing Education. During first semester he gave a course at .the Centre for Continuing Education on Buddha figures in southeast Asia, in conjunction with the National Gallery, which attracted a considerable number of students and deepened interest in Asian studies in general in the Canberra community.

Dr Mason continued to serve as Chairman of the Faculty's Japan Area Committee and as Honours advisor in the Japanese field. He continued to be a committee member of tt1e Japanese Studies Association of Australia, and edited the September issue of the Nen"s/etter. He was final judge in the third Austrnlia-Japan Re1ations E-ssay Contest for secondary school students for the second consecutive year.

5/1987

Dr Gar-diner presented a serninar in September in Hie Depertrnent of Far Eastern Hi story, ent it 1 ed ih7rOlrJol7C ing t fie St one: Interpret a· t ions of t lle KJ·vanggaet 'o Stele.

Dr Caiger presented seminars in May and October for the Department of Far Eastern History, the first entitled His·torlc8/ Essaj/S 011 .Jop8nese and tile Ses.- sn 011tlf11e.: and the second entitled ,.:.J f·Jt'Bstert1 Observer all tl1e Coast of ...lape1·1 in 1855,. and fJl/Jelh1g interests il'J tl1e opening ll;.'? of tile CC'tllltry to tile J.v'est. He also pr-esented a public lecture for the • .Japan Foundation entitled Learning fro1n JaP8l'J: Pro.Olerf'Js and Prospects in Edt1ccrt ion.

Dr Kumar was a member of the Publications Committee; Course co­ordinator, Integrated Diploma/M.A. Course in Southeast Asian Studies; Member of the Intermediate Av1ards Committee; and a member of the Selection Commit tee for Research Fe 11 owshi p, Department of Pacific and Southeast Asian History. St1e ct1aired a session of tt1e planning conference on So11t/Jeest Asie in tl1e / Stll- I 7tfl Ce11t11rfesat the ANU in October.

Dr Proudfoot he 1 d the chair of the ~;outheeist Asi e Area Studies Committee, and continued his work es Faculty Puttlications Officer. He was a member of Urn Student Matters Comrnit tee, the Honours Cornrnit tee, and tt·1e Faculty Adrnissi ons Commit tee. He was also a memtier of the ACT Schools Authority Asian Studies Accreditation Panel.

10. PUBLICATIONS

Choe-'We 11, V.H.; 'The Si no-Korean Poetic Tradition of the Late 16th Century·, PaQers on Far Eastern History, ANU, March 1986, 21 pp.

Jordens, ,.J.T.F.; 'Prakriti and the Collective Unconscious; Purusha and Self', in H. Coward .Jung and Eastern Thought, S.U.N.Y. Press, 1985, pp.169-186.

Jordens, J.T.F.; 'Gandhi end the Bhegavadgita ', in R. Minor Modern lnten;;1ret.ers of the Bhagavadgita, S.U.N.V. Press, 1986, pp.88-109.

Kumar, A.; "Opening a life'. .. ", ASAA Review, vol. 10, no.2 (Nov.66), pp.2-9.

Loofs-Wissowe, H.H.E.; 'The.True end the Corbel Arch in Mainland Southeest Asian Architecture of tr1e 9th-14th Centuries A.O. - some considerations· in D.G. Merr & A.C. Milner (eds)

5/19,

Southeast Asia in the 9th to 14th Cent.uri es, Canberra: Research School of Pacific Studies, ANU., pp.239-253, illus.

Mt1son, R.H.P.; (Editor) ,Japan Studies Association of Austrnlia News 1 etter, vo 1.6 no.3, Sept. 1986.

Proudfoot, I.; 'Pre-war t1alay Periodicals', Kekal Abadi, vol.4, no.4 ( 1985) I pp. 1-28.

Proudfoot, I.; 'A Formative Period in Malay Book Publishing·, ,Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, vo 1.59, no.2 ( 1986), pp. 1O1-132.

Proudf oat, I.; ·'AHAD' [a Mackintosh Pascal appllcation which interactively converts V>/estern and t1uslim dates], released through ANU Apple Consortium.

Rizvi, S.A.A.; A Socio-Intellectual History of tt1e lsna 'Ast·1ari Sr1i'is in India, vol.I, Ma'rifat Publishing House, Canberra, 1986, 455 pp.

Rizvi, S.A.A.; A Soci o-1nte11 ectua l Hi story of U-1e I sna 'Ashari Shi 'is in India vol.11, Ma'rifat Publishing House, Canberra, 1986, 460 pp.

Terwiel, B.J.; 'Kan Mun Tua Khong Nak', Ruarnbotkhwarn Prawalisah, vol.8, February 1986, pp.137-72.

. I I ' A.PPENDJX 1 :5/1987 I' THE AU STP.tl-..LIA.N NA TIONi·.L UNIVEP.SITf e ASIAN HI:)TORY CENTRE: A.NAJ..YSIS OF STUDENT PERFORMANCE

:Humber Enrolled Humber Sitting 2 'j 4 5 6 7 0 9 10 11 ,_) u

Subject or unit Effecth:oe Sitting Did not sit Sat HD D CR p N Enrolments (Tot3l) V·!as1ag:e Fail(P..E S11N) Failure No. No. No. No. Ho.

Die Movement for Che.nge in M:oden-1 China( 1) 27 26 2 3 3 2 3 7 8 3 Early Chinese Thought &. Institutions(2) 58 51 7 6 3 1 9 10 15 3 Early Japan 35 25 10 3 2 4 2 6 8 2 Nationalism and Social Change in t..sia 30 31·1 0 7 1 2 6 5 9 1 Introduction to I318mic Vo/est P..sia 6 5 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 I"'leiji-Tai3ho Politics 6 7·12 ":> 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 ,_)

Hist.my of Feurl~l J;:1.pari 12 l Jd.3 2 0 0 0 3 3 2 0 Early Korea( 11 9 8 1 0 1 0 2 1 4 1 Hi.stnry of Muslims in South t..sia, 7th cent. AD-1857 4 4 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 Religion and Art in Islam.le South ~.sia 3 4 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 West /.l.sia 213B: Colonialism, Part-l3L3mi3m, Ne.tiDri..ill3m! 1) 5 C' ..,

0 0 0 2 1 0 0 ,_) "' Classical Li~rature of India 4 3 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 Civilizations of :Mi;in1..'U.1d Southe8.st A3ia 6 6'i 0 0 0 0 2

'? 0 0 ..,)

ln1ionesia:Politic3 mi SocietyC 1l t:6 26 0 1 2 (I 7 13 3 ? ... I ruj on.esie.:Devel.opment Issu.e3(2) 25 32 0 .., .... 3 7 6 11 1 Hi.story Coi the Southe~t A.:::liru.1 Chine3e 22 16'1 6 0 0 0 3 7 s 0 Moder.cl ~'.ourheri.st A.!lien Hi3~ory LISTED UNDER HISTORY DEPARTMENT (HIST 2013) H i.3 to riog rn.p hy 2 2 0 (I 0 1 1 0 0 0 Reierence VtorJr...s tmd Document.s 2 2 0 (I 0 1 1 0 I) 0 Southee.st Asian Hiztotic;:tl Text 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

' {

, /

APPENDIX 2 :511987

THE AUSTRALIAN NATIOHPJ... UNIVERSITY ASIAN HISTORY CENTRE: ANALYSIS OP STUDENT PERFORMANCE

. Enrolled

Graduate Diploma in Southee,:,t A!li.an Studies:

MA in Southe~t A!lie.n Studies:

B e.chelor of Letters:

M~ters Degree:

Doctor of Philosophy Degree:

:mbmitted

4

2

9

10

12

4

2

8

Still on course

Still on course

Still on course

? still on course

6 still on course I 2 of! course 2 awarded degrees/ Z