Female, Shanxi Changzhi, lecturer. He graduated from the History Department of Nankai University and received bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in history in 2000, 2003 and 2006. From 2006 to 2009, he was a postdoctoral fellow in the history department of Peking University. In July 2012, he entered the History College of Hebei University and taught courses in world history, history, English history, and Byzantine history. His research interests include the history of the Middle Ages, the history of Byzantine, and the modern history of Greece.
From October 2004 to July 2005 and March to May 2008, he went to Greece to study and exchange twice; in July 2007, he went to Princeton University to study and exchange. Proficient in English and familiar with modern Greek.
Research funding:
2015-present: National Social Science Fund Project, “Roman-Byzantine Empire Change and Silk Road”, hosted;
2015-present: The horizontal topic, hosted by "World Ancient History (Several Chapters of the Middle Ages)";
2014-present: Major project of the National Social Science Fund, “Byzantine History and Cultural Studies”, participation;
In 2017, invited by the Rome Archaeological and Theoretical Seminar and funded the conference, entitled “Classification of Byzantine Gold Coins and Imitations Found in China”;
2008, "The Earth War of 1897", the postdoctoral fellowship of the Greek Ministry of Education;
In 2007, "The Earth War of 1897", the Summer Study Scholarship of the Greek Research Center of Princeton University;
2004-2005, "Research on Byzantine Gold Coins Discovered in China", Greek Onassis Foundation Scholarship
major outcomes:
"Thinking about the burial customs of the Turpan area in Xinjiang", "The Study of Turfan Studies: Proceedings of the 4th International Symposium on Turfan Studies", Shanghai People's Publishing House, March 2015.
"On the six gold coins of the Byzantine period discovered in China", "Chinese Coins", No. 1, 2015.
"On the "Money" of the Turfan stocks in Xinjiang," Journal of Chinese and Western Cultural Exchanges, December 2014.
"The Influence of the Sassan Persian Empire in the East Passing of the Byzantine Gold Coin", Anhui History, No. 4, 2008.
"Analysis of Two Byzantine Gold Coins Imitations", Archaeology and Cultural Relics, No. 3, 2008.
"The Reasons for the Failure of Justinian's Religious Policy", "History Teaching", No. 11 of 2005; Taiwan's "Historical Monthly", No. 3, 2007.
"A Study of the Byzantine Gold Coins Discovered in China", Nankai Journal, 2001 Supplement, 12-16 pages.
"A General Overview of Byzantine Coins & Their Imitations Found in China", EIRENE (STUDIA GRAECA ET LATINA) XLI, 2005, pp. 23−47. (Sponsored by the Czech Academy of Social Sciences)
"Summary of the Study of Byzantine Gold Coins Found in China", "Chinese Coins", No. 4, 2007.
"A Supplement to the Imitation of Gold Coins Unearthed from the Tomb of the King of the Northern Zhou Dynasty in Xi'an", Wenbo (1000-7954), No.6, 2007.
"Analysis of the Byzantine Gold Coins Unearthed in Xianyang, Shaanxi Province", Wenbo, No. 12, 2004.
Translation:
"Greece: The Modern Process, from 1821 to the Present", Shanghai People's Publishing House, October 2008