蒙古多尔诺德省的一座前蒙古时期的精英墓葬

IF 0.9 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Amartuvshin Chunag , Gideon Shelach-Lavi , William Honeychurch , Batdalai Byambatseren , Orit Shamir , Uuriintuya Munkhtur , Daniela Wolin , Shuzhi Wang , Nofar Shamir
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在蒙古高原,人们对从契丹帝国崩溃(约公元 1125 年)到蒙古帝国崛起(公元 1206 年)这段时间的了解仍然很少。虽然许多历史资料都记载了成吉思汗建立蒙古国之前发生的事件,但这些记载往往是从一个已经成熟的帝国的角度来回顾过去几十年甚至几百年的历史。考古学为我们提供了一条更好地了解契丹帝国崩溃、女真金国和蒙古国兴起时的环境、人民和政体的途径。根据考古学的物质记录,蒙古高原东部地区可以说明这些事件。自 2018 年以来,蒙古-以色列-美国考古项目沿蒙古东北部的契丹边境 "长墙 "进行了调查和发掘。我们的一个偶然发现是,在一个契丹时代边塞的围墙内发现了一座装饰考究的墓葬。对该墓葬的分析表明,它很可能是在堡垒使用之后发现的,并提供了有关公元 12 世纪当地社区、其网络和组织的重要信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An elite grave of the pre-Mongol period, from Dornod Province, Mongolia

On the Mongolian plateau, the period between the collapse of the Kitan Empire (c. 1125 CE) and the rise of the Mongol empire (1206 CE) is still poorly understood. Although events leading up to the rise of Chinggis Khan's initial Mongol state are recorded in a number of historical sources, these accounts often look backwards over decades or even centuries from the perspective of a mature empire already made. Archaeology provides one path towards a better understanding of the circumstances, people, and polities contemporaneous with the collapse of the Kitan Empire and emergence of the Jurchen Jin and Mongol states. The eastern reaches of the Mongolian plateau is a region that can speak to these events based on the material record of archaeology. The Mongol-Israeli-American Archaeological Project has surveyed and excavated along Kitan frontier ‘long-walls’ in the northeast of Mongolia since 2018. One of our fortuitous discoveries was a well-furnished burial interred within the enclosure wall of a Kitan era frontier fortress. Analysis of this grave reveals that it likely postdates the use of the fortress and provides important information about local communities, their networks, and organization during the 12th century CE.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
13.30%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: Archaeological Research in Asia presents high quality scholarly research conducted in between the Bosporus and the Pacific on a broad range of archaeological subjects of importance to audiences across Asia and around the world. The journal covers the traditional components of archaeology: placing events and patterns in time and space; analysis of past lifeways; and explanations for cultural processes and change. To this end, the publication will highlight theoretical and methodological advances in studying the past, present new data, and detail patterns that reshape our understanding of it. Archaeological Research in Asia publishes work on the full temporal range of archaeological inquiry from the earliest human presence in Asia with a special emphasis on time periods under-represented in other venues. Journal contributions are of three kinds: articles, case reports and short communications. Full length articles should present synthetic treatments, novel analyses, or theoretical approaches to unresolved issues. Case reports present basic data on subjects that are of broad interest because they represent key sites, sequences, and subjects that figure prominently, or should figure prominently, in how scholars both inside and outside Asia understand the archaeology of cultural and biological change through time. Short communications present new findings (e.g., radiocarbon dates) that are important to the extent that they reaffirm or change the way scholars in Asia and around the world think about Asian cultural or biological history.
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