Taipei

The Taipei Centre, Taiwan

The Taipei Centre

Head : Frank Muyard
Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient
Insititute of History and Philology
Academia Sinica, Nankang 11 529
Taipei, Taiwan
Tel.: + 886 22 652 31 77, 2782 9555 ext. 275
Fax: + 886 22 785 20 35
frank.muyard@efeo.net

L'École française d'Extrême-Orient (EFEO-French School of Asian Studies), was established in 1900 in Hanoi, Vietnam to undertake interdisciplinary research on Asian civilizations and cultures, from India to Japan.

The EFEO Taipei Centre is located on the Academia Sinica campus. First hosted by the Institute of Modern History from 1992 to 1996, it moved in 1996 to the Institute of History and Philology (IHP) under a new cooperation agreement signed that year. This agreement covers joint research programmes and exchanges of researchers and documentation (databases) between the two institutions.

The Centre's research mandate includes the coordination of collective and individual projects between the EFEO and the IHP, the organization of regular talks and conferences, and academic support for visiting scholars and students. It hosts and advises EFEO Fellowship students.

Since its establishment, the EFEO Taipei Centre's research projects have centred on China and Taiwan local and cultural history and on the sociology and anthropology of Chinese religions. Philology works, such as the inventory of the Tibetan Collection held at the Institute of History and Philology's Fu Ssu-nien Library, or the cataloguing of a collection of Burmese manuscripts have also been conducted. More recently, the political history of Chinese borders and of Sino-Tibetan relationships, the history of urban administration, study of Tibetan Buddhism in Taiwan, maritime history, and the history of Taiwanese archaeology have been the focus of the main research programs.

Current research program:

  • Analysis of the central civil administration under the Qing dynasty (1664-1911) and the first decade of the Republic (1930s)
  • History of Borders
  • Chinese Urban History in the Late Imperial Period
  • Maritime Knowledge in China Seas
  • Historical Sociology of Buddhism in Taiwan
  • Social History of Taiwanese Archaeology
  • Austronesian Prehistory Migrations in and out of Taiwan

The Centre has also an active collaboration with the National Palace Museum through a scientific research program focused on Asian art and cultural history. Conferences, scholarly exchanges, workshops, exhibitions, and international joint projects are organized to develop the Museum research staff's knowledge in Asian art.

The Centre is also cooperating on specific projects and lectures with a series of Taiwanese universities (National Taiwan University, National Cheng-Kung University, National Taiwan Normal University, National Tsing Hua University, National University of Technology, Tamkang University, National Central University) and with the French Research Centre on Contemporary China (CEFC)'s Taipei Office. Some of these activities receive the financial support of the French Office in Taipei.

From 2012 to 2015 the research project "Practice of Tibetan Buddhism in Taiwan" led by Fabienne Jagou was awarded a 4-year research grant from the Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation. In 2014, two joint projects between the EFEO Taipei Centre and the Institute of History and Philology, Academia Sinica, were financed by the French and Taiwanese national research agencies. The first project, Maritime Knowledge for China Seas, under the leadership of Paola Calanca and Chen Kuo-tung, received a 4-year research grant from the France-Taiwan ANR/MOST program. The second project, Taiwan Maritime Landscapes from Neolithic to Early Modern Times, organized by Paola Calanca, Liu Yi-ch'ang and Frank Muyard was selected by the French-Taiwanese PHC Orchid Program and resulted in an international conference held in Paris in November 2015.

The Taipei centre
Head: Frank Muyard

École française d'Extrême-Orient
Institute of History and Philology
Academia Sinica, Nankang 11529
Taipei
Taiwan
Tel: +886 2 2652 3177 / 2782 9555 #275
Fax: +886 2 2785 2035
frank.muyard@efeo.net


11529 台北市南港中央研究院歷史語言研究所706室
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News from the Taipei centre
CNRS-EFEO: International Workshop
02 APRIL 24 International WorkshopAsia-Pacific Indigenous Archaeology: Emergence and PerspectivesOrganized by Bérénice BELLINA (CNRS, UMR8068) & Frank MUYARD  ... Read more
Seminar IV: Alain ARRAULT
26 MARCH 24 IHP-EFEO TalkSpeaker:Prof. Alain ARRAULTFrench School of Asian Studies (EFEO)Title:From the “Body of Flesh” to the Body of Statues, from Sanctuary to  ... Read more
Conférence III: Alain ARRAULT
26 MARCH 24 Speaker:Prof. Alain ARRAULTFrench School of Asian Studies (EFEO)Title:The First Latin Translation of a Chinese CalendarDate:Friday, April 12, 2024 at 2:20 pmVenue:C205,  ... Read more
EFEO News
Launch of ANR program
France, Lyon, 20 January 2011
From January 20 to 22 Luca Gabbiani and Wu Chun-huei (Taipei Center) are taking part in a meeting held to launch the ANR program "Régir l'espace chinois [Governing the territory of China]" (IAO, ISH, EFEO) in Lyons, in the premises of the Ecole normale supérieure (LSH).
Lecture on Japanese popular paintings
Taiwan, Taipei, 16 December 2010
On December 16 Christophe Marquet is talking on "Les peintures populaires japonaises d'Ôtsu: de la piété à la parodie [Ôtsu's Japanese popular paintings: from piety to parody]" at the National Palace Museum.
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Graduate seminar
Taiwan, Taipei, 03 December 2010
Ten French or French-speaking MA and doctoral students present their research at a seminar jointly organized by the Taipei branch of The Center for French Studies on Contemporary China and the EFEO's Taipei Center.
Conference on urban Daoism
Taipei, 13 November 2010
Talk by Marianne Bujard "The temples of Peking: epigraphy and oral sources the social history of an imperial capital" presented at the international conference on The Modern History of Urban Daoism, Taiwan. November 13-14.

Talk on Korean art collections overseas
Tapei, 25 October 2010
Élisabeth Chabanol presents a talk on “Korean Collections Kept Overseas: The Case of the Korean Pavilion at the Paris Exposition of 1900.”
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