2008
Local Administration in Ming China: The Changing Roles of Magistrates, Prefects, and Provincial Officials
By Thomas G. Nimick
University of Minnesota, 2008

The most detailed account of local Ming government available in English, Local Administration in Ming China traces the origins and evolution of the lowest level of administrative offices over the course of the dynasty. It starts with the Ming founder’s experiments with using members of the local elite to collect taxes and goes on to the increased reliance on magistrates and prefects sent out from the center. The story concludes with the fiscal problems at the end of the dynasty.
2008
Long Live the Emperor! Uses of the Ming Founder Across Six Centuries of East Asian History
Edited by Sarah Schneewind
University of Minnesota, 2008

The founder of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), Zhu Yuanzhang, was one of the most colorful rulers in China’s long imperial history. His rise from poverty, participation in a millenarian movement, expulsion of the Mongols, unification of the empire, three decades of tumultuous rule, paranoia, and bloody purges are all the stuff of legend. Long Live the Emperor! brings together twenty essays examining how his stormy career has been interpreted in politics, the arts, outside of China, and in our own time.
2006
Ming Taizu and His Times
Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006
Principal Investigator(s): Chu Hung-lam, Chinese University of Hong KongThis conference examined the personality and career of Zhu Yuanzhang, founder of the Ming dynasty, posthumously known as Ming Taizu. Many political and social institutions as well as governmental practices introduced during his reign influenced the five remaining centuries of imperial China. Historians from China, England, France, Hong Kong, Korea, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, and the United States presented papers. A selection of them were published in 2010 by the Chinese University Press as Ming Taizu’s Ideas on Statecraft and Their Implementation.
2006
Proceedings of the International Conference on Ming Taizu and His Times
Edited by Chu Hung-lam
Centre for Chinese History, Department of History, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2006
This bound, photocopied, bilingual volume records the proceedings of the international conference held at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in March 2006. Supported by the Geiss Hsu Foundation, the conference examined the personality and career of Zhu Yuanzhang, founder of the Ming Dynasty. It features 31 thematically-related articles, eleven of which were later published by the Chinese University Press as Ming Taizu’s Ideas on Statecraft and Their Implementation.
2004
Colorful Lanterns at Shangyuan (Interactive CD)
By Ina Asim
University of Oregon, 2004
This project digitized and enhanced a Ming scroll depicting a street in Nanjing during the Lantern Festival marking the end of Lunar New Year. Users zoom in to examine details that were unrecognizable prior to digital enhancement, and click on hotspots to learn more information.
2003
Ming Court Culture
Princeton University, 2003
Principal Investigator(s): Princeton University, 2003Papers discussed at this conference, the first the Geiss Hsu Foundation supported, were published in Culture, Courtiers, and Competition: The Ming Court (1368–1644). Ed. David M. Robinson. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 2008.