Archaeology award: interactions that changed China

Policy 24 Jan 11 The Oxford Centre for Asian Archaeology, Art and Culture, based in Oxford University's School of Archaeology, has received its first major research award since its launch in October last year. The Leverhulme Trust has awarded a grant of almost half a million pounds for the research project 'China and Inner Asia (1,000-200 BC): Interactions that changed China'. The project, led by Dame Jessica Rawson, Professor of Chinese Art and Archaeology at the University of Oxford, will look at how the early Chinese societies made use of different foreign materials and technologies. Researchers will track how the Chinese, with their highly organised, relatively dense population, were able to react fast and on a large scale. Bright red carnelian beads found in tombs of the early Chinese states (circa 850-650BC) are telling signs of major interactions between the Chinese elite of the day and the peoples further west in present-day Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Siberia. Nearest comparisons are fine beads found in Iraq and other areas of the Middle East in tombs of the third and second millennium BC. Carnelian beads are not the only materials that the Chinese borrowed and then copied and developed in their own contexts.
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