Quantum redactiones paginae "Mawangdui" differant
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Linea 17: | Linea 17: | ||
== Bibliographia == |
== Bibliographia == |
||
[[Fasciculus:Mawangdui Lacquer 2.jpg|thumb|Instrumentum domesticum in sepulcro no. 1 repertum]] |
[[Fasciculus:Mawangdui Lacquer 2.jpg|thumb|Instrumentum domesticum in sepulcro no. 1 repertum]] |
||
* A. Gutkind Buller, "The Guide of the Souls picture at the western Han tomb in Ma-wang-tui near Ch'ang-sha" in ''Oriental Art'' vol. 20 (1974) pp. 158-173 |
|||
* Eti Bonn-Muller, "[http://archive.archaeology.org/online/features/mawangdui/ China's Sleeping Beauty]" in ''Archaeology: online features'' (Aprilis 2009) |
* Eti Bonn-Muller, "[http://archive.archaeology.org/online/features/mawangdui/ China's Sleeping Beauty]" in ''Archaeology: online features'' (Aprilis 2009) |
||
* David D. Buck, "Three Han Dynasty Tombs at Ma-Wang-Tui" in ''World Archaeology'' vol. 7 (1975) pp. 30-45 |
* David D. Buck, "Three Han Dynasty Tombs at Ma-Wang-Tui" in ''World Archaeology'' vol. 7 (1975) pp. 30-45 |
||
* Donald J. Harper, ''Early Chinese Medical Literature: The Mawangdui Medical Manuscripts''. Londinii, 1997 |
|||
* Minao Hayashi, "The twelve gods of the Chan-kuo period silk manuscript excavated at Ch'ang-sha" in N. Barnard, ed., ''Early Chinese art and its possible influence in the Pacific Basin'' (Novi Eboraci, 1972) vol. 1 pp. 123-186 |
|||
* ''Noble Tombs at Mawangdui: Art and Life of the Changsha Kingdom, Third Century BCE-First Century CE''. Novi Eboraci, 2009 |
|||
* Eugene Wang, "[https://www.academia.edu/5892198/Why_Pictures_in_Tombs_Mawangdui_Once_More Why Pictures in Tombs? Mawangdui Once More]" in ''Orientations'' (Martii 2009) |
* Eugene Wang, "[https://www.academia.edu/5892198/Why_Pictures_in_Tombs_Mawangdui_Once_More Why Pictures in Tombs? Mawangdui Once More]" in ''Orientations'' (Martii 2009) |
||
* Wu Hung, "Art in a Ritual Context: Rethinking Mawangdui" in ''Early China'' vol. 17 (1992) pp. 1-24 |
|||
== Nexus externi == |
== Nexus externi == |
Emendatio ex 19:18, 12 Februarii 2017
Situs Mawangdui urbisque Changsha in Serica meridiana
Mǎwángduī seu litteris Sinicis 馬王堆 est locus archaeologicus intra limites urbis Changsha provinciae Hunan in Sinis iacens. Ibi reperta sunt sepulcra nobilium aevi Han, picturis muralibus ornata, rebus luxuosis cibisque variis et libris manuscriptis plena. Tria sepulcra inter annos 1972 et 1974 effossa sunt:
- Sepulcrum Han no. 1: sepultura uxoris Li Cang, primum "domina Dai" ab archaeologis nuncupatae sed nomine vera Xin Zhui, post annum 168 a.C.n. mortuae
- Sepulcrum Han no. 2: sepultura marchionis Li Cang, anno 186 a.C.n. mortui
- Sepulcrum Han no. 3: sepultura filii seu cognati Li Cang, anno 168 a.C.n. mortui
Bibliographia
- A. Gutkind Buller, "The Guide of the Souls picture at the western Han tomb in Ma-wang-tui near Ch'ang-sha" in Oriental Art vol. 20 (1974) pp. 158-173
- Eti Bonn-Muller, "China's Sleeping Beauty" in Archaeology: online features (Aprilis 2009)
- David D. Buck, "Three Han Dynasty Tombs at Ma-Wang-Tui" in World Archaeology vol. 7 (1975) pp. 30-45
- Donald J. Harper, Early Chinese Medical Literature: The Mawangdui Medical Manuscripts. Londinii, 1997
- Minao Hayashi, "The twelve gods of the Chan-kuo period silk manuscript excavated at Ch'ang-sha" in N. Barnard, ed., Early Chinese art and its possible influence in the Pacific Basin (Novi Eboraci, 1972) vol. 1 pp. 123-186
- Noble Tombs at Mawangdui: Art and Life of the Changsha Kingdom, Third Century BCE-First Century CE. Novi Eboraci, 2009
- Eugene Wang, "Why Pictures in Tombs? Mawangdui Once More" in Orientations (Martii 2009)
- Wu Hung, "Art in a Ritual Context: Rethinking Mawangdui" in Early China vol. 17 (1992) pp. 1-24
Nexus externi
Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Mawangdui spectant. |
- "Excavated texts: Mawangdui" apud Chinese Text Project
- Moonsil Lee, "Dietary conditions and differential access to food resources among the various classes during the Han period" (dissertatio magistralis, 2001)
- Fosco Lucarelli, "The Three Mawangdui Maps: Early Chinese Cartography" (2010) apud Socks Studio