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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CHA-CHR |
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CHENG , TsdHENG or TSCHIANG (Ger. Scheng), an ancient Chinese wind instrument , a primitive organ, containing the principle of the free reed which found application in the accordion , concertina and harmonium. The cheng resembles a tea-pot filled with bamboo pipes of graduated lengths. It consists of a gourd or turned wooden receptacle acting as wind reservoir, in' the side of which is inserted an insufflation tube curved like a swan's neck or the spout of a tea-pot. The cup-shaped reservoir is closed by means of a plate of horn pierced with seventeen round holes arranged round the edge in an unfinished circle, into which fit the bamboo pipes. The pipes are cylindrical as far as they are visible above the plate, but the lower end inserted in the wind reservoir is cut to the shape of a beak, somewhat like the mouth-piece of the clarinet, to receive the reed. The construction of the free reed is very simple: it consists of a thin plate of metalgold according to the Jesuit missionary Joseph Amiot,' but brass in the specimens brought to Europeof the thickness of ordinary paper . In this plate is cut a rectangular flap or tongue which remains fixed at one end, while at the other the tongue is filed so that, instead of closing the aperture, it passes freely through, vibrating as the air is forced through the pipe (see FREE-REED VIBRATOR). The metal plate is fastened with wax longitudinally across the diameter of the beak end of the pipe, a little layer of wax being applied also to the free end of the vibrating tpngue for the purpose of tuning by adding weight and impetus. About half an inch above the horn plate a small round hole or stop is bored through the pipe, which speaks only when this hole is covered by the finger
instrument with illustrations showing the construction, states that in the great Chinese encyclopaedia Eulh-ya, articles Yu and Ho, the Yu of ancient China was the large cheng With nineteen free reeds (twenty-four pipes), and the Ho the small cheng with thirteen reeds or seventeen pipes described in this article. The compass of the latter is given by him as the middle octave with chromatic intervals, the thirteenth note giving the octave of the first. Mahillon gives the compass of a modern cheng as follows:14 25 7 5 14 4 or 8 3 2 or 6 12 II 10 13 E. F. F. Chladni,' who examined a cheng sent from China to Herr Muller, organist of the church of St Nicholas, Leipzig
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1 Memoire sur la musique des Chinois (Paris, 1779), pp. 78 and 82, pl. vi., or Memoire sur les Chinois, tome vi. pl. vi. 2 Catalogue descriptif, vol. ii. ( Ghent
3 " Weitere Nachrichten von dem . chinesischen Blasinstrumente Tscheng odor Tschiang," in Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung ( Leipzig
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4 It Costume anticho e moderno (Milan, 1816), pl. 66, vol. i. Paris.' Grenie's invention, perfected by Alexandre and Debain about 184o, produced the harmonium. Kratzenstein (see under HARMONIUM) of St Petersburg
CHEN-HAI [CHINHAI],a district town of China, in the province of Cheh-kiang, at the mouth of the Yung-kiang, 12 M. N.E. of Ningpo, in 29 58' N., 1 21 45' E. It lies at the foot of a hill on a tongue of land, and is partly protected from the sea on the N. by a dike about 3 M. long, composed entirely of large blocks of hewn granite. The walls are 20 ft. high and 3 M. in circumference. The defences were formerly of considerable strength, and included a well-built but now dismantled citadel on a precipitous cliff, 250 ft. high, at the extremity of the tongue of land on which the town is built. In the neighbourhood an engagement took place between the English and Chinese in 1841. End of Article: CHENG If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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