English: A design for a citizenship education board game, published in Liangyou on 1927-06-30. It is played by a group of children. Each takes a turn rolling a six-sided dice. A one indicates being selfish, and the player's token must move one step back. Two indicates corruption, and the player token moves three steps back. Three means one is exercising due diligence, and no movement is made. Four means showing patriotism, which is rewarded with one step forward. Five shows service to one's country, allowing two steps forward. A six is a worthy sacrifice, allowing three steps forward.
Date
Source
Liangyou, 1927-06-30, p 33 (retrieved 27 December 2024)
Author
Youth Drawing Association (製繪會協年青)
Licensing
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
This image is now in the public domain in China because its term of copyright has expired.
According to copyright laws of the People's Republic of China (with legal jurisdiction in the mainland only, excluding Hong Kong and Macao), amended November 11, 2020, Works of legal persons or organizations without legal personality, or service works, or audiovisual works, enter the public domain 50 years after they were first published, or if unpublished 50 years from creation. For photography works of natural persons whose copyright protection period expires before June 1, 2021 belong to the public domain. All other works of natural persons enter the public domain 50 years after the death of the creator.
According to copyright laws of Republic of China (currently with jurisdiction in Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen, Matsu, etc.), all photographs and cinematographic works, and all works whose copyright holder is a juristic person, enter the public domain 50 years after they were first published, or if unpublished 50 years from creation, and all other applicable works enter the public domain 50 years after the death of the creator.
Important note: Works of foreign (non-U.S.) origin must be out of copyright or freely licensed in both their home country and the United States in order to be accepted on Commons. Works of Chinese origin that have entered the public domain in the U.S. due to certain circumstances (such as publication in noncompliance with U.S. copyright formalities) may have had their U.S. copyright restored under the Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA) if the work was under copyright in its country of origin on the date that the URAA took effect in that country. (For the People's Republic of China, the URAA took effect on January 1, 1996. For the Republic of China (ROC), the URAA took effect on January 1, 2002.[1])
To uploader: Please provide where the image was first published and who created it or held its copyright.
You must also include a United States public domain tag to indicate why this work is in the public domain in the United States.
Note that this work might not be in the public domain in countries that do not apply the rule of the shorter term and have copyright terms longer than life of the author plus 50 years. In particular, Mexico is 100 years, Jamaica is 95 years, Colombia is 80 years, Guatemala and Samoa are 75 years, Switzerland and the United States are 70 years, and Venezuela is 60 years.
Public domain works must be out of copyright in both the United States and in the source country of the work in order to be hosted on the Commons. If the work is not a U.S. work, the file must have an additional copyright tag indicating the copyright status in the source country. Note: This tag should not be used for sound recordings.PD-1923Public domain in the United States//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citizenship_education_board_game,_Liangyou,_1927-06-30.jpg
Uploaded a work by Youth Drawing Association (製繪會協年青) from ''[https://archive.org/details/liangyou-1927.06.30/page/n35/mode/2up Liangyou]'', 1927-06-30, p 33 (retrieved 27 December 2024) with UploadWizard