Friday, January 28, 2011

12: 5 ways your bank spies on you

Chances are, you don't feel close to your bank.
Banks tend to be big and imposing, which can make you feel like a faceless, anonymous number -- just one among the multitudes who deposit and withdraw money there.
But you're not going unnoticed. In fact, your bank is keeping an ever-closer eye on you these days. Tighter credit standards, new ways to combat fraud and an ever-growing pile of monitoring services offered by credit bureaus and other analytics companies means that banks know, or guess, more about you than ever before.
Here are just some of the ways they're tracking you.

1. Transaction scores

Every time you swipe your credit or debit card, the transaction is scored to gauge the risk of fraud, said John Ulzheimer, the president of consumer education at Smart Credit.com and the author of "You're Nothing But a Number." Where you're shopping, how much you're spending and how that compares with your usual patterns are noted and analyzed. Atypical or high-risk spending patterns can result in a call from the bank's fraud department, a hold on the transaction or even the temporary shutdown of your card.
What seems like innocent behavior to you can be highly suspicious to the bank's software. If, for example, you top off your car's gas tank and then head over to Target to stock up, you might trigger a red flag. That's because credit card thieves often try using a card at a gas pump to see if it's active. If it is, they may barrel over to a retailer to use the purloined account to buy electronics and other easily fenced items.
Of course, thieves change their tactics all the time, and bankers constantly tweak their software, so it's hard to predict what could set off a fraud alert. To keep disruptions to a minimum, give your bank plenty of ways to contact you. Make sure it has your current cell number and consider signing up for e-mail or text alerts that can let you know when a problem occurs. Call your bank when you plan to be out of the country and consider giving it a heads-up when you're off to buy electronics of high value, such as a new television or computer system.

2. Behavior scores

Credit scores gauge how a person handles a variety of credit accounts. Behavior scores, by contrast, look at how a person handles an individual financial account. Behavior scores got a bad name a couple of years ago when American Express told an Atlanta businessman his credit line was being cut in part because of where he shopped.
"Other customers who have used their card at establishments where you recently shopped have a poor repayment history with American Express," AmEx's letter to Kevin Johnson said, which led to headlines like "AmEx hates Wal-Mart shoppers." American Express quickly dropped behavior scores from the tools it uses to determine credit lines.
But behavior scores still are widely used as risk-evaluation and marketing tools. On credit accounts, behavior scores look at where and how you spend your money, as well as how you pay your account. (Do you pay in full? Minimum payment only? Sometimes carry a balance, sometimes not? Often late, but never by more than a few days?)
Card issuers can use the scores to, for example, guess whether a missed payment is an anomaly that can be ignored or the start of a default that might trigger them to start calling you daily about when you're going to pay. A sudden switch in spending -- such as starting to take cash advances or spending a lot of time in casinos -- may also send up red flags. Additionally, lenders use behavioral scoring to help target marketing efforts such as who gets low-rate balance transfer offers.
Bankers can use similar scores to monitor how you handle your bank accounts. What the scores tell them may help determine how long you have to wait before you can access deposits (known as "deposit holds"), whether a customer-service representative can waive a fee you don't like and what other products the bank may try to sell you.
Fair Isaac, the creator of the leading FICO credit score, works with banks to create custom behavior scores that monitor bank balances, withdrawal activity and the source of deposits, said Debb Gordon, a senior principal consultant for the company.


Tuesday, January 25, 2011

11:Lahore and Karachi suicide blasts: Shias targeted

Police suspect the suicide bomber may have been a teenage boy

At least nine people taking part in a Shia Muslim procession in the Pakistani city of Lahore have been killed by a suicide bomb, police say.
Three policemen were said to be among the dead, while 50 other people were injured, including women and children.
Meanwhile, a suicide motorcycle bomber killed two policemen near a Shia march in the southern city of Karachi.
The blasts happened despite beefed up security for gatherings by members of the country's minority Shia community.
The bomber in Lahore struck as Shias marked the end of their holy month, Muharram, which commemorates the martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad's grandson.
Sectarian hatred Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah told the BBC he expected the death toll to rise following the explosion near the Bhatti gate in central Lahore.
TV pictures showed the injured crying in pain, or in silent shock as they were carried away by emergency service workers.
At the scene of the Lahore attack, a senior police official told reporters: "A young boy tried to rush in and throw a bag into the crowd. When he was stopped, he blew himself up."

The bomber was a 13-year-old boy, Lahore police chief Aslam Tarin told Reuters news agency.
Another senior police official, Rao Sardar, told the AFP news agency that the attacker was a 16-year-old boy.

Investigators are trying to cordon off the area to collect evidence.
Details are still emerging from the suicide motorcycle bombing in eastern Karachi.
Two policemen were killed and several casualties were said to be in a critical condition.
A police official said the bomber had tried to ram a bus carrying Shia devotees.
The attacker targeted a police Jeep instead after it blocked his way.
Pakistan has seen bombings almost every week in recent years, many of them linked to al-Qaeda and the Taliban, or the allied Lashkar-e-Jhangvi group.
A number of such attacks have occurred in Punjab province, and in particular Lahore.
Sectarian violence has also persisted among hardline elements of Pakistan's Shia and majority Sunni communities, says the BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Karachi.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

10 Your wife doesn't understand you because you are too close, study suggests

Your wife doesn't understand you because you are too close, study suggests

Psychologists believe that when two people know each other too well they assume too much shared knowledge and their language becomes dangerously ambiguous.
This "closeness communication bias" can lead to long term misunderstandings, rows and even relationship problems, they believe.
The research by University of Chicago and Williams College in Massachusetts found that often couples and good friends communicate with each other no better than they do with strangers.
Sometimes they are clearer with strangers because they assume no common knowledge.
But in contrast to Oscar Wilde's remark that "the proper basis for a marriage is mutual misunderstanding", the phenomenon could cause problems.
"People commonly believe that they communicate better with close friends than with strangers," said Prof Boaz Keysar, co-author.

"That closeness can lead people to overestimate how well they communicate. Your language can become so ambiguous. The brain becomes lazy.
"But it can backfire and the misunderstanding can lead to rows in the future."
Prof Keysar, who said he carried out the work to demonstrate to his wife that some things she thinks are clear are not always clear, and the team tested the theory on 24 married couples.
The spouses sat in chairs with their backs to each other and tried to discern the meaning of each other's ambiguous phrases.
The researchers used phrases common in everyday conversations to see if the spouses were better at understanding phrases from their partners than from people they did not know.
The spouses consistently overestimated their ability to communicate, and did so more with their partners than with strangers.

Prof Keysar's colleague Prof Kenneth Savitsky said: "A wife who says to her husband, 'it's getting hot in here,' as a hint for her husband to turn up the air conditioning a notch, may be surprised when he interprets her statement as a coy, amorous advance instead.
"Some couples may indeed be on the same wavelength, but maybe not as much as they think. You get rushed and preoccupied, and you stop taking the perspective of the other person, precisely because the two of you are so close."
A similar experiment with 60 Williams College students showed that the phenomenon also applies to close friends too.

"Our problem in communicating with friends and spouses is that we have an illusion of insight. Getting close to someone appears to create the illusion of understanding more than actual understanding," said co-author Prof Nicholas Epley.
Prof Savitsky said it was always important to bear in mind the point of view of others – no matter how close to them you are.
The research is published in the journal of Experimental Social Psychology.

 

09 Photographs of the World's First Aircraft Carrier

Photographs of the World's First Aircraft Carrier

On November 14, 1910, Eugene Ely became the first pilot to successfully launch a plane from a stationary ship. The Curtiss pusher airplane, one of the first models in the world to be built in any significant quantity, flew for two miles before Ely landed on a beach. Using the same aircraft, Ely landed on the USS Pennsylvania on January 18, 1911, while the ship was anchored at the San Francisco waterfront. He had to use a braking system made of ropes and sandbags, but he was able to quickly turn around and take off once again, proving that ideas proposed in Clement Ader's 1909 L'Aviation Militaire could work.








These rare photographs of the USS Birmingham, an armored cruiser considered to be the world's first aircraft carrier, were recently resurfaced by TechEBlog. The Birmingham, which launched on May 29, 1907, was commissioned several times before being used to patrol the northeast coast of the United States after the American entrance into World War I. On June 14, 1917, she escorted the first American troops to France and then was used as an escort between the British Isles, Gibraltar, and France. After several more trips that included tours of the eastern Mediterranean, Central America, and South America, the USS Birmingham was decommissioned on December 1, 1923, and sold for scrap seven years later.

 

08 Parents Television Council Calls for Federal Investigation Into MTV's Skins

Parents Television Council Calls for Federal Investigation Into MTV's Skins

 

The group is also urging people to contact the show's sponsor, Taco Bell, in protest.

One day after it was reported Viacom executives ordered producers to tone down its racy teen drama, the Parents Television Council has announced it's urging the Department of Justice and U.S. Senate and House Judiciary Committees to open an investigation.
"In addition to the sexual content on the show involving cast members as young as 15, PTC counted 42 depictions and references to drugs and alcohol in the premiere episode," the group wrote in a letter to the government organizations.
"It is clear that Viacom has knowingly produced material that may well be in violation of [several anti-child pornography laws]," added the PTC, which earlier called the show "the most dangerous program ever for children."
The group is also urging a boycott of Taco Bell, one of the show's sponsors.
The New York Times reported that a number of executives met on Tuesday over concerns the show could violate pornography laws.
While MTV did not confirm that, a rep for the network said, "Skins is a show that addresses real-world issues confronting teens in a frank way. We review all of our shows and work with all of our producers on an ongoing basis to ensure our shows comply with laws and community standards. We are confident that the episodes of ‘Skins’ will not only comply with all applicable legal requirements, but also with our responsibilities to our viewers.”

 

07 BEAUTIFUL GIRLS

                                           BEAUTIFUL GIRLS












Friday, January 21, 2011

06 World welcomes New Year with parties, fireworks‎

World welcomes New Year with parties, fireworks‎
 Fireworks have exploded over the London Eye in the British capital and Paris' Eiffel Tower has been covered in glittering lights as Europe became the latest continent to welcome in 2011. Around 50,000 revellers gathered in Madrid, the Spanish capital, after a break in the rain to take part in a ritual known as "The Grapes," during which people eat a grape for each of the 12 chimes of midnight.
LONDON - Revelers across the Pacific Islands, Asia, Africa, and Europe have welcomed 2011 with celebrations and fireworks displays, and crowds are already gathering across the Americas to mark the start of the new year there.
US revellers cheered the traditional ball drop in New York's Times Square to mark the start of 2011.

The tiny Pacific island nation of Kiribati was the first to ring in 2011.

London hosted one of Europe's biggest celebrations, on the banks of London's River Thames. Around a quarter of a million people gathered to watch fireworks as the famous Big Ben at Parliament chimed in the new year.
In Dubai, the world's tallest building was awash in fireworks from the base to its needle-like spire nearly a half-mile (828-meters) above. Sparkling silver rays shot out from the Burj Khalifa in a 10-minute display.
In France, police were on alert for terror attacks and for celebrations getting out of hand. Rampaging youths typically set fire to scores of vehicles on New Year's Eve. Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux said 53,820 police officers were mobilized, 6,000 more than usual.
France has been extra vigilant following threats from al-Qaida and the kidnapping of five French citizens in Niger.
In Spain, crowds also gathered in Madrid's Puerta del Sol square to take part in "Las Uvas" (The Grapes), a tradition in which people eat a grape for each of the 12 chimes of midnight.
In Scotland, the four-day Hogmanay festival began Thursday night with a torch-lit procession through the streets of Edinburgh. Around 25,000 people took part, marching to the top of a hill to watch the burning of a model Viking ship. Hogmanay is derived from the winter solstice festival celebrated by the Vikings.
For Estonia, the New Year also marked the switch from the former Soviet state's cherished kroon to the euro, becoming the 17th member state to adopt the European single currency.
In the Americas, some two million people gathered on Rio de Janeiro Copacabana beach beach for a fireworks and music show, and the country's logo for the 2016 Olympics was unveiled.
In the US, meanwhile, New York's municipal authorities and warmer weather combined to clear the streets following the snowstorm which blanketed the city this week, allowing hundreds of thousands to gather for the famous Times Square ball drop at midnight.

Earlier on the other side of the world, New Zealanders welcomed 2011 with a spectacular firework show in Auckland and celebrations elsewhere, while in Sydney, Australia, at least 1.5 million people gathered for the annual fireworks show on the Harbour Bridge.  
New Year's day comes as the world experiences extreme weather conditions, including heat waves and floods in the south Pacific.
Extreme, 43 degrees Celsius heat brought the risk of wildfires near the southern Australian city of Adelaide, while celebrations in the country's north were muted by floods that left vast swathes of land underwater and forced thousands to leave their homes.
In Seoul, South Korea, more than 80,000 people celebrated by watching a traditional bell ringing ceremony and fireworks, while North Korea on Saturday welcomed the new year with a push for better ties with its neighbor, warning that war "will bring nothing but a nuclear holocaust."
In Hong Kong, hundreds of thousands of people gathered along Victoria Harbour to watch fireworks explode from the roofs of the city's most prominent buildings.
At the Zojoji temple in central Tokyo, Japan, monks chanted as visitors packed in to count down until midnight. Thousands released a mass of silver balloons carrying notes with their hopes for the future.
And in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan, fireworks formed the shape of a dragon spiralling up the tallest skyscraper.

China's president Hu Jintao addressed his country on New Year's Eve, pledging peaceful international relations while pushing for a transformation of the country's export-driven economy.
In the Philippines, safety officials urged caution after firecrackers injured at least 245 people in recent days. According to tradition, many believe noisy celebrations drive away evil and misfortune.
In Burma, however, the military government has banned all fireworks and said severe action would be taken against anyone using them.
Political activist Aung San Suu Kyi, who was released from house arrest in November, called for the Burmese people "to struggle together with new strengths, new force and new words in the auspicious new year". 
In Vatican City, Pope Benedict held a prayer service at St. Peter's Basilica. He is scheduled to hold a Mass on New Year's Day.

Source TOE and agencies

05 Spain bans smoking in bars,restaurants

               Spain bans smoking in bars,restaurants


MADRID, SPAIN (TOE) -- Spain has introduced a tough new anti-smoking law that prohibits lighting up in bars and restaurants as well as outside hospitals, schools and at children's playgrounds.

Spain has become the latest Western European country to ban smoking inside bars and restaurants.

The law, which went into effect Jan. 2, is opposed by the country's hotel and restaurant federation, which estimates a 10-percent drop in hospitality business and more job losses at a time when Spain's economy is already suffering.

Britain, Ireland, France and Italy passed similar laws several years ago. Supporters of indoor smoking bans say they do not end up hurting business.

Those caught smoking indoors or even in some open spaces like playgrounds will now have to pay a 30 euro ($40) fine and as much as 100,000 euros ($134,000) after being caught three times. Restaurant and bar owners failing to impose the new law will pay between 60 euros ($80) and 100,000 euros for each violation.

The new legislation bans smoking from playgrounds and outside schools and hospitals. It also makes it illegal to smoke at airports, nightclubs and casinos.

Hotels are still allowed to reserve 30 percent of their rooms for smokers.

About 30 percent of Spain's population smokes cigarettes.

Many Spaniards are happy about the change, given the country's reputation for smoke-filled tapas bars.

Bar and restaurant owners, who are against the law, claim that sales will drop and jobs will go as a result of the new law, however health workers welcome the legislation saying it will help people quit and reduce the high rate of annual cigarette-related deaths.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

04 Swiss arrest ex-banker for giving data to WikiLeaks

Swiss arrest ex-banker for giving data to WikiLeaks .
ZURICH -- Just hours after being found guilty of breaching Swiss bank privacy laws, Rudolf Elmer, a former banker, has been arrested over the leaking of details of rich and famous alleged tax evaders to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.
Elmer was taken into custody on Wednesday evening, having been found guilty by a Zürich court of sharing private client data and of threatening an employee at Julius Baer, his former firm, earlier in the day.

He was arrested on fresh charges of breaching secrecy laws.
"The state prosecutor's office is checking to see whether Rudolf Elmer has violated Swiss banking law by handing the CD over to Wikileaks," the Zürich cantonal (state) police and state prosecutor said in a joint statement.
At a news conference on Monday, Elmer handed data on hundreds of offshore bank accounts to Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder.

Prosecutors allege that he stole the information after being fired from his job.

Elmer previously helped to bring WikiLeaks to prominence three years ago when he handed over secret client information to the website.

At Wednesday's trial, Elmer admitted sending confidential bank data to tax authorities, but he denied charges of blackmail and a bomb threat against Julius Baer, as alleged by prosecutors.
He also denied taking payments in return for the secret data.

Elmer said he wanted to expose widespread tax evasion by rich businesspeople and politicians when he sent confidential banking files to tax authorities, media and later to WikiLeaks.
"I am a critic of the system and want to tell society what happens in these murky oases," Elmer, who ran the Cayman Islands branch of the Swiss bank, told a news conference before the verdict.

Judge Sebastian Aeppli rejected prosecution demands to give Elmer an eight-month prison sentence for breaching the bank secrecy laws and instead the court sentenced him to a fine of 7,200 Swiss francs ($7,505), suspended for two years
The trial drew broad media attention and about a dozen protesters gathered in front of the court building.
"We think those who expose the distasteful side of Swiss finance need our support," Walter Angst, one of the protesters, said.
Several Swiss banks including UBS, AG and Credit Suisse Group have suffered embarrassing data leaks in recent years, some at the hands of disgruntled employees.
Source: TOE and agencies

03 Colombia police catch drug-smuggling pigeon.

Qadri’s Link To grenade blast being probed.

Police are investigating the link of Governor Salman Taseer’s assassin Malik Mumtaz Qadri with a grenade blast, which took life of another cop last year in the same vicinity where Qadri’s family resides, The News has learnt reliably.

The additional station house officer, Sadiqabad Police Station, Rawalpindi, first confirmed that the police visited the grenade blast place on 5th January 2011 again after the death of Governor Salman Taseer and have interrogated the people again but latter he ate his words and denied having said anything about Qadri and the grenade blast site.

According to details, two persons, including a policeman, were killed in a hand grenade blast in a shop in Sadiqabad area of Rawalpindi on January 3, 2010, exactly one year before Taseer’s assassination. The blast occurred in a shop ‘Al-Ghaus Property Adviser’ located in Muslim Town (Sadiqabad) and Sadiqabad Police Station Constable Asad Naseem died in the blast. Sources close to Malik Mumtaz Qadri’s family told ‘The News’ that Asad Nadeem was closely associated with Mumtaz Qadri and the whole lot of friends, mostly in police; and used to sit on the same shop where blast had occurred. The shop is said to be in front of the house of Qadri.
Police are investigating the link of Governor Salman Taseer’s assassin Malik Mumtaz Qadri with a grenade blast, which took life of another cop last year in the same vicinity where Qadri’s family resides, The News has learnt reliably.

The additional station house officer, Sadiqabad Police Station, Rawalpindi, first confirmed that the police visited the grenade blast place on 5th January 2011 again after the death of Governor Salman Taseer and have interrogated the people again but latter he ate his words and denied having said anything about Qadri and the grenade blast site.

According to details, two persons, including a policeman, were killed in a hand grenade blast in a shop in Sadiqabad area of Rawalpindi on January 3, 2010, exactly one year before Taseer’s assassination. The blast occurred in a shop ‘Al-Ghaus Property Adviser’ located in Muslim Town (Sadiqabad) and Sadiqabad Police Station Constable Asad Naseem died in the blast. Sources close to Malik Mumtaz Qadri’s family told ‘The News’ that Asad Nadeem was closely associated with Mumtaz Qadri and the whole lot of friends, mostly in police; and used to sit on the same shop where blast had occurred. The shop is said to be in front of the house of Qadri.

Sources held that before the occurrence of grenade blast it was known in the area that few cops carry two grenades with them that was the reason an elderly woman in Qadri’s house died of shock after the blast when she heard that a policeman has died in a grenade blast deeming him to be Qadri.

Sources said that because of the involvement of police in the grenade blast, a story was manufactured that someone from outside had hurled a grenade in the shop; however, all and sundry in the vicinity knew that the ‘a few policemen’ living in the area use to carry the grenades as a posture of pride.

Sources also said that the constable who died in the grenade blast lived near to Qadri’s house and he was a friend of Qadri since childhood, as known to the whole vicinity. “The police kept on finding the second grenade but could not recover it,” said the sources.

The Additional Station House Officer of Sadiqabad Police Station, Riaz Bajwa, first confirmed that police have visited the grenade blast place again and have interrogated the people with reference to Qadri. He also said that so far no link could be established between Qadri and the grenade blast. He mentioned that the constable who died in the grenade blast lived in another street than that of Qadri’s house. However, latter the same policeman denied all what he had said earlier and gave a new statement that he dose not know anything about grenade blast and neither he has any information to share.

It is worth mentioning here that the security agencies investigating the assassination of Punjab Governor Salman Taseer are trying to explore Qadri’s links with Dawat-e-Islami.

Born in Rawalpindi in 1985, Qadri was recruited in the Punjab Police in 2002 and was elevated to the Elite Force in 2007. He was made a part of the Elite Force police squad deployed for security of Taseer almost seven months ago. On January 4, 2011, he killed Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer in Islamabad’s Kohsar Market. Reports say that he was not part of the governor’s squad on the fateful Tuesday but he requested for his duty with the governor. He was also declared unfit for posting on VIP security by police high-ups.

Sources held that before the occurrence of grenade blast it was known in the area that few cops carry two grenades with them that was the reason an elderly woman in Qadri’s house died of shock after the blast when she heard that a policeman has died in a grenade blast deeming him to be Qadri.

Sources said that because of the involvement of police in the grenade blast, a story was manufactured that someone from outside had hurled a grenade in the shop; however, all and sundry in the vicinity knew that the ‘a few policemen’ living in the area use to carry the grenades as a posture of pride.

Sources also said that the constable who died in the grenade blast lived near to Qadri’s house and he was a friend of Qadri since childhood, as known to the whole vicinity. “The police kept on finding the second grenade but could not recover it,” said the sources.

The Additional Station House Officer of Sadiqabad Police Station, Riaz Bajwa, first confirmed that police have visited the grenade blast place again and have interrogated the people with reference to Qadri. He also said that so far no link could be established between Qadri and the grenade blast. He mentioned that the constable who died in the grenade blast lived in another street than that of Qadri’s house. However, latter the same policeman denied all what he had said earlier and gave a new statement that he dose not know anything about grenade blast and neither he has any information to share.

It is worth mentioning here that the security agencies investigating the assassination of Punjab Governor Salman Taseer are trying to explore Qadri’s links with Dawat-e-Islami.

Born in Rawalpindi in 1985, Qadri was recruited in the Punjab Police in 2002 and was elevated to the Elite Force in 2007. He was made a part of the Elite Force police squad deployed for security of Taseer almost seven months ago. On January 4, 2011, he killed Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer in Islamabad’s Kohsar Market. Reports say that he was not part of the governor’s squad on the fateful Tuesday but he requested for his duty with the governor. He was also declared unfit for posting on VIP security by police high-ups.
 

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

02 Colombia police catch drug-smuggling pigeon.

Colombia police catch drug-smuggling pigeon.

Colombian police say they have captured a carrier pigeon that was being used to smuggle drugs into a prison.
The bird was trying to fly into a jail in the north-eastern city of Bucaramanga with marijuana and cocaine paste strapped to its back, but did not make it.
Police believe the 45g (1.6 ounce) drug package was too heavy for it.
The bird is now being cared for by the local ecological police unit, officers said.
"We found the bird about a block away from the prison trying to fly over with a package, but due to the excess weight it could not accomplish its mission," said Bucaramanga police commander Jose Angel Mendoza.
"This is a new case of criminal ingenuity."
The pigeon is thought to have been trained by inmates or their accomplices.
Police said carrier pigeons had been used in the past to smuggle mobile phone Sim cards into the jail.

 

01 History of China

English names

The word "China" is derived from Cin (چین), a Persian name for China popularized in Europe by Marco Polo.[13][14] The first recorded use in English dates from 1555.[15] In early usage, "china" as a term for porcelain was spelled differently from the name of the country, the two words being derived from separate Persian words.[16] Both these words are derived from the Sanskrit word Cīna (चीन),[16] used as a name for China as early as AD 150.[17]
There are various scholarly theories regarding the origin of this word. The traditional theory, proposed in the 17th century by Martin Martini, is that "China" is derived from "Qin" (秦, pronounced chin), the westernmost of the Chinese kingdoms during the Zhou Dynasty, or from the succeeding Qin dynasty (221 – 206 BC).[18] In the Hindu scriptures Mahābhārata (5th century BC)[19] and Laws of Manu (2nd century BC), the Sanskrit word Cīna (चीन) is used to refer to a country located in the Tibeto-Burman borderlands east of India.[20] Another theory is that this word is derived from Yelang, an ancient kingdom in what is now Guizhou whose inhabitants referred to themselves as 'Zina'.[21]


Chinese names

The official name of China changed with each dynasty or with each new government, the imperial governments referred to themselves as the Empire of the Great Qing, Empire of the Great Ming, etc. However, the common name remained as Zhōngguó (simplified Chinese: 中国; traditional Chinese: 中國, Mandarin pronunciation: [tʂʊ́ŋkwɔ̌]) through dynastic changes. This translates traditionally as "Middle Kingdom," or as "central country."
The name Zhōngguó first appeared in the Classic of History (6th century BC), and was used to refer to the late Zhou Dynasty, as they believed that they were the "center of civilization,"[nb 1] while peoples in the four cardinals were called Eastern Yi, Southern Man, Western Rong and Northern Di respectively. Some texts imply that "Zhōngguó" was originally meant to refer to the capital of the sovereign, to differ from the capital of his vassals.[nb 2] The use of "Zhōngguó" implied a claim of political legitimacy, and "Zhōngguó" was often used by states who saw themselves as the sole legitimate successor to previous Chinese dynasties; for example, in the era of the Southern Song Dynasty, both the Jin Dynasty and the Southern Song state claimed to be "Zhōngguó."[nb 3]
Zhōngguó was used as a common name for the Republic of China (Zhonghua Minguo) after its establishment in 1912. After the Communists took over control of China in 1949, they established the People's Republic of China (PRC). As a result, the PRC is now commonly known as "China" or "Zhōngguó". The Republic of China nowadays is commonly known as "Taiwan".[n