Sino-Western Cultural Exchange as Seen through the Archaeology of the First Emperor's Necropolis

IF 0.6 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Du Qingbo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Several cultural features found by archaeologists at the First Emperor of Qin's necropolis did not have roots in East Asian cultures but were inspired by cultural exchange with the civilizations of West Asia along the various “Silk Roads.” Examples considered in this article include terracotta figures of soldiers and horses, long-pole acrobatics, terraced architecture for tombs, bronze chariots, bar-shaped bricks, and technology for casting and repairing bronze statuary. Within Qin culture more broadly, there are several other cultural features which were probably brought from West Asia, including iron metallurgy, gold-working, trough-form pan tiles for roofing, stone inscriptions and stone sculpture, elliptical cocoon-form flasks, and possibly the transmission of Zoroastrianism and Buddhism. Furthermore, non-material elements of political and economic culture from the Persian Empire and Hellenistic kingdoms were also brought eastward alongside these materials. They were part of a coherent system that inspired the political and cultural revolutions of the First Emperor.
从始皇帝墓地考古看中西文化交流
摘要考古学家在秦始皇墓地发现的一些文化特征并非源于东亚文化,而是受到了与西亚“丝绸之路”沿线文明交流的启发,青铜战车、条形砖以及铸造和修复青铜雕像的技术。在更广泛的秦文化中,还有其他一些文化特征,可能是从西亚带来的,包括铁冶炼、黄金加工、槽形瓦屋顶、石刻和石雕、椭圆茧形烧瓶,以及可能的琐罗亚斯德教和佛教的传播。此外,来自波斯帝国和希腊化王国的政治和经济文化的非物质元素也与这些材料一起被带向东方。它们是一个连贯系统的一部分,这个系统激发了第一代皇帝的政治和文化革命。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
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