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Laozi. Dao de jing (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Laozi. Dao de jing
Used for/see from:
  • Earlier heading: Lao-tzu. Tao te ching
  • Laozi. Dàodéjīng
  • Laozi. Dōtokukyō
  • Laozi. Laozi
  • 老子. 道德經
  • Laozi. Tao teh king

Non-Latin script references not evaluated.

Laozi zhu jie, 1982: pref. (道德經 = Dao de jing, by Laozi [老子])

Laozi xian tan, 1982: t.p. (Laozi)

Ci hai, 1979: p. 2827 (book entitled Laozi; also known as Dao de jing)

The spirit of Lao Tsu, 2001: t.p. (Dōtokukyō)

Wikipedia, July 29, 2008 (The Tao Te Ching or Dao De Jing (traditional Chinese: 道德經; simplified Chinese: 道德经; pinyin: Dàodéjīng), originally known as Laozi or Lao tzu (Chinese: 老子; pinyin: Lǎozǐ), is a Chinese classic text; according to tradition, it was written around the 6th century BC by the Taoist sage Laozi (or Lao Tzu, "Old Master"))

Đức đạo kinh, 1994.

Laozi. Tao teh king, 1992?: t.p. (Tao teh king, by Lao Tzu) p. 4 of cover (Tao-te-ching) p. 72 (the date 570 B.C. has been traditionally accepted as the birth date of Lao Tzu; some recent scholars judge it to be as late as the 4th century; although the authorship of Tao teh king is still controversial, the established practice of crediting it to Lao Tzu will be followed) p. 73 (King (ching, jing) means book; the Tao teh king is a book about Tao -- the most basic concept in Chinese philosophy -- and Teh)

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