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Subject Motifs and Recurrences
of Eurasian Cultures
Vitaly L. Ivanov, Irina G. Ivannikova
There are subject (besides ornamental ones) motifs in gold and silver
ware common for the most Eurasian cultures. These are in particular
a pomegranate flower, woman’s contours, Buddha in lotus, etc.
Also there is certain cyclic recurrence in human genesis accordingly
with which for instance woman in different periods of her life
should have different sets of jewelry. These sets may be called
wedding jewelry.
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National Research Institute for Cultural Properties
in Japan - working title
Susumu MORIMOTO,
National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Nara
National Research Institute for Cultural Properties
in Japan has engaged in cooperative research and conservation work
in the Bamiyan Valley, Afghanistan, with the Afghan authorities
since 2003. This
work is a part of the safeguarding project of the Bamiyan site funded
by the UNESCO/Japanese Funds-in-Trust.
There are regions in the world in which no
detailed topographical maps exist for archaeological survey. Bamiyan is such a place. For Bamiyan,
a satellite image is the only choice for field research. In
Bamiyan Valley, several field surveys depend on such satellite imagery.
A geo-tiff image has coordinate data in the
file and can easily be put into GIS, but the coordinate data deviates
from the precise measurements made through a GPS. To solve
this problem one has to re-measure the key points in each satellite
image. On-site measurement requires much time and money, so provisional
use of the coordinate data of the satellite image is also permissible.
National Research Institute for Cultural Properties
in Japan has excavated 3 areas in the valley. All the features are recorded with the exact coordination. Before
the excavation, we performed the geo-physical survey using a ground-penetrating
radar system. This data will be integrated in GIS for further
study.
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Monies, Markets
and Finance in China and East Asia, 1600-1900: Local, Regional,
National and International Dimensions: Cartography and GIS-based
Analyses
Hans-Joachim Rosner, Department of Geography,
University of Tuebingen
In the research group "Monies, Markets and
Finance in China and East Asia, 1600-1900: Local, Regional, National
and International Dimensions," a massive amount of archival
documents concerning mining and transport of monetary metals
will be analysed. The creation of a database containing data
on mining areas, mainly in Yunnan and Sichuan
(copper, zinc, tin) and Guizhou (zinc, copper) and on transport
of metals to the capital and provincial mints throughout the
Qing Empire was started in 2004. The quantity of data calls for
cartographic and statistical analysis. The information on mining,
refining, and transport of the metals yields sufficient data
for electronic analyses by way of Geographic Information Systems
(GIS) to be used. This will help to analyse and visualise the
transport process in general and to make component maps for individual
provinces, transport routes, and river segments both in spatial
and temporal terms. By this means our understanding of the integral
transportation process and further analysis of the sources will
be substantially enhanced.
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Source Study Aspect
of Mapping the Monuments of Old Turkic Script Steppe Zone
Dimitry D. Vasilyev
Old Turkic runic
inscriptions on stone facilities in Central Asia and South Siberia
being both written and archaeological monuments give opportunity
to use different methods of their study. In general methods of
text study of any epigraphical study coincides with a study of
any other written source. At the same time the monumental character
of installations bearing epitaphs allow the scholar to localize,
map and date them, to compare these data with those of the texts
of a single inscription or of a group of inscriptions.
There were few cases of historical
and philological interpreting of groups of ancient Turkic sources
that could be spatially united. However generalizations and correlations
of texts of short inscriptions permit to use them as a source in
a more complete way. The most of the known monuments bearing Old
Turkic epitaphs at the moment are concentrated in the museums collections.
Data of the museum certificates and editions pointed at the circumstances
and places of finding of each monument. In the process of localizing
these data certain groups of monuments could be defined that could
be ascribed to the certain burial ground, certain valley or some
other zone that had distinct natural boundaries. Mapping the monuments
with epitaphs was complicated by the fact that they joined the
museum collections within the whole century, were carried often
by amateur students of local lore hence there was no exact data
on places of their finding.
Stereotyped base of Old Turkic epitaphs
permits to use for their study the method of formalization of written
monuments of mass type.
The texts of Old Turkic epitaphs
were rare analyzed by means of mutual comparison as a group of
sources united in chronological and geographical ways. More often
the data about a certain event were obtained from one – two
sources and these data were compared with that by foreign authors.
Thus the main part of the data of the inscriptions themselves remained
beyond the limits of source criticism.
The field archaeographic studies
permitted to determine for the South Siberian epitaphs which of
them could be united in groups on territorial ground. Textual study
of these groups gave additional base for their integration. Thus
mapping Old Turkic stone inscriptions permitted to group texts
containing complementary historical data on chiefs of Turkic tribes
inhabiting the periphery of nomadic empire that ranged in 6 – 8
centuries from Pacific till Eastern Europe. |