The 'École française d'Extrême-Orient' (EFEO) is a
French institute dedicated to the study of Asian societies. Translated into English, it approximately means the 'French School of the Far East'. It was founded in
1900 to study the civilization of Saigon (now
Ho Chi Minh City) in what was then
French Indochina. Its headquarters are now in
Paris. Its main fields of research are
archaeology and the study of modern Asian societies.
EFEO romanization system
During the
19th century, a
romanization system for
Mandarin was developed by the EFEO. It shares a few similarities with
Wade-Giles and
Hanyu Pinyin. In modern times, it has been superseded by Hanyu Pinyin.
The differences between the three romanization systems are shown in the following table:
| IPA | EFEO | WG | Pinyin |
|---|
| p | p | p | b |
| pʰ | p' | p' | p |
| t | t | t | d |
| tʰ | t' | t' | t |
| k | k | k | g |
| kʰ | k' | k' | k |
| ts | ts | ts | z |
| tsʰ | ts' | ts' | c |
| tʂ | tch | ch | zh |
| tʂʰ | tch' | ch' | ch |
| tɕ | k/ts | ch | j |
| tɕʰ | k'/ts' | ch' | q |
| ɕ | s/h | hs | x |
| w | ou/w | w | w |
| j | i/y | y | y |
| ɤ | ö/é | o/ê | e |
| ər | eul | êrh | er |
| z̩ | eu | û | i |
| i | e | ih | i |
| y | u | ü | ü/u |
| u | ou | u | u |
| ən | en | ên | en |
| ɤŋ | eng | êng | eng |
| iɛ | ie | ieh | ie |
| iɤʊ | ieou/iou | iu | iu |
| iɛn | ien | ien | ian |
| uo | ouo | o/uo | o/uo |
| uaɪ | ouai | uai | uai |
| ueɪ | ouei | ui | ui |
| uan | ouan | uan | uan |
| uən | ouen | un | un |
| yɛ | iue | üeh | üe/ue |
| yɛn | iuen | üan | üan/uan |
| yn | iun | ün | ün/un |
| yʊŋ | ioung | iung | iong |
The Centers of the École
★ Siège : Maison de l’Asie,
Paris
★
Pondicherry in
India
★
Rangoon in
Burma
★
Chiang Mai in
Thailand
★
Kuala Lumpur en
Malaysia
★
Jakarta in
Indonesia
★
Phnom Penh and
Siem Reap to
Cambodia
★
Vientiane in the
Laos
★
Hanoi in
Vietnam
★
Hongkong and
Peking in
China
★
Taipei in China Republic (
Taiwan)
★
Seoul in
South Korea
★
Kyoto and
Tokyo in
Japan
The Directors
★ 1900:
Louis Finot
★ 1905:
Alfred Foucher
★ 1908:
Claude-Eugène Maitre
★ 1920:
Louis Finot
★ 1926:
Léonard Aurousseau
★ 1929:
George Cœdès
★ 1947:
Paul Lévy
★ 1950:
Louis Malleret
★ 1956:
Jean Filliozat
★ 1977:
François Gros
★ 1989:
Léon Vandermeersch
★ 1993:
Denys Lombard
★ 1998:
Jean-Pierre Drège
★ 2004:
Franciscus Verellen
See also
EFEO chinese transcription
External links
★
Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient
★
Writing in western European languages that deal with China