Archaeology and history of Toraijin : human, technological, and cultural flow from the Korean Peninsula to the Japanese Archipelago c. 800 BC-AD 600

1. Verfasser: Rhee, Song Nai, 1935- , [VerfasserIn]
Aikens, C. Melvin , [VerfasserIn]
Barnes, Gina Lee , [VerfasserIn]
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Oxford : Archaeopress Archaeology, [2021].
Umfang/Format: xii, 226 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
Schlagworte:
Parallelausgabe: Rhee, Song Nai, 1935- :, Archaeology and history of Toraijin. (Online version) | ISSN: 9781789699678
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100 1 |a Rhee, Song Nai,  |d 1935-  |e author  |9 133686 
245 1 0 |a Archaeology and history of Toraijin :  |b human, technological, and cultural flow from the Korean Peninsula to the Japanese Archipelago c. 800 BC-AD 600 /  |c Song-nai Rhee, C. Melvin Aikens ; with Gina L. Barnes. 
264 1 |a Oxford :  |b Archaeopress Archaeology,  |c [2021]. 
264 4 |c ©2021. 
300 |a xii, 226 pages :  |b illustrations, maps ;  |c 25 cm. 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent 
336 |a cartographic image  |b cri  |2 rdacontent 
336 |a still image  |b sti  |2 rdacontent 
337 |a unmediated  |b n  |2 rdamedia 
338 |a volume  |b nc  |2 rdacarrier 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-220) and index. 
505 0 0 |g I  |t Importance of the Subject: Toraijin  |g p. 1 --  |g II  |t Iron, A Case Study  |g p. 4 --  |g III  |t Who were the Toraijin, Where Did They Come from, and What Did They Contribute to the Archipelago?  |g p. 5 --  |g IV  |t Push-Pull Dynamics in Migration  |g p. 7 --  |g V  |t Primary Objectives of This Book: The Seven Questions  |g p. 8 --  |g VI  |t Research Data: Archaeological and Historical  |g p. 9 --  |t Archaeological Data  |g p. 9 --  |t Historical Sources  |g p. 10 --  |g Chapter 1  |t Rice-Bearing Toraijin  |g p. 12 --  |g I  |t Their Historical and Cultural Background: Songguk-Ni Type Culture of the Peninsula's Middle Mumun Society (c. 900-400 BC)  |g p. 12 --  |g 1  |t Pottery of the Songguk-ni-Type  |g p. 15 --  |g 2  |t Settlements  |g p. 15 --  |g 3  |t Agriculture  |g p. 18 --  |g 4  |t Lithic Implements  |g p. 18 --  |g A  |t Industrial and Farming Tools  |g p. 18 --  |g B  |t Ritual Weapon  |g p. 20 --  |g 5  |t Bronze Daggers and Bronze Industry  |g p. 22 --  |g 6  |t Spinning/Weaving Technology  |g p. 22 --  |g 7  |t Symbols of Prestige and Political Power  |g p. 24 --  |g 8  |t Middle Mumun Mortuary Practices  |g p. 26 --  |g A  |t Megalithic Burial Structures ("Dolmens")  |g p. 26 --  |g B  |t Stone Cist Graves  |g p. 29 --  |g C  |t Jar Burials  |g p. 29 --  |g 9  |t Emerging Social Complexity  |g p. 30 --  |g 10  |t Push-Pull Dynamics in the Middle Mumun Society  |g p. 30 --  |g II  |t Rice-Bearing Toraijin Appear in the Archipelago  |g p. 32 --  |g 1  |t New People from the Continent  |g p. 32 --  |g 2  |t New Residential Pattern  |g p. 35 --  |g 3  |t New Mortuary System  |g p. 37 --  |g A  |t Dolmens (Megalithic Burial Structures)  |g p. 38 --  |g B  |t Cist and Jar Burials  |g p. 39 --  |g 4  |t Initial Toraijin Contributions to the Archipelago  |g p. 41 --  |g A  |t Wet-Rice Farming in Northern Kyushu  |g p. 41 --  |g B  |t Pottery  |g p. 42 --  |g C  |t Lithic Implements  |g p. 43 --  |g D  |t Spinning/Weaving Technology  |g p. 44 --  |g 5  |t Issues in Yayoi Chronology  |g p. 45 --  |g 6  |t Other Controversies and General Consensus  |g p. 47 --  |g Chapter 2  |t Bronze-Bearing Toraijin of the Middle Yayoi (c. 350 BC-AD 50)  |g p. 51 --  |g I  |t Their Historical and Socio-Cultural Background: Peninsula's Late Mumun Society (c. 400-50 BC)  |g p. 51 --  |g 1  |t The Slender Bronze Dagger Culture of Early Mahan  |g p. 51 --  |g 2  |t Iron Implements and Iron Tool Production  |g p. 57 --  |g 3  |t Late Mumun Pottery  |g p. 58 --  |g 4  |t Late Mumun Mortuary Practices  |g p. 58 --  |g A  |t Northwest  |g p. 58 --  |g B  |t Southwest: Early Mahan  |g p. 58 --  |g C  |t Southeast  |g p. 60 --  |g 5  |t 'Three Sacred Treasures': Dagger, Mirror, and Comma-shaped Jewel  |g p. 61 --  |g 6  |t Push-Pull dynamics during the Late Mumun Period  |g p. 61 --  |g II  |t A New Group of Toraijin Comes to the Kyushu Island  |g p. 62 --  |g 1  |t New Toraijin Settlements  |g p. 62 --  |g 2  |t New Toraijin Contributions to the Middle Yayoi Society  |g p. 64 --  |g A  |t Bronze Industry  |g p. 64 --  |g B  |t New Mortuary Practices  |g p. 67 --  |g a  |t Wood Coffin Burials (mokkanbo)  |g p. 67 --  |g b  |t Moat-Surrounded Tombs (shukobo)  |g p. 68 --  |g 3  |t Emerging Social Stratification in Northern Kyushu  |g p. 70 --  |g 4  |t Beginnings of Pen/Insular Trade  |g p. 71 --  |g Chapter 3  |t Iron and Glass-Bearing Toraijin of the Late Yayoi/ Early Kofun Period Toraijin (c. 50-350 AD)  |g p. 73 --  |g I  |t Historical and Socio-Cultural Background of the Late Yayoi/Early Kofun Period Toraijin: Sam Han (c. 50 BC-AD 300)  |g p. 73 --  |g 1  |t Sam Han Society according to the Sanguozhi  |g p. 73 --  |g 2  |t Sam Han in Archaeology  |g p. 73 --  |g A  |t Later Mahan Polities  |g p. 73 --  |g B  |t Jinhan Polities  |g p. 79 --  |g C  |t Byeonhan Polities  |g p. 81 --  |g 3  |t LELANG and DAIFANG: Their Influence on SAM HAN (Map 2.1)  |g p. 83 --  |g 4  |t Push-Pull Dynamics during the SAM HAN Period  |g p. 85 --  |g II  |t New Toraijin from Sam Han  |g p. 86 --  |g 1  |t Toraijin from Later Mahan and Their Contributions  |g p. 86 --  |g 2  |t Byeonhan/Early Kaya People in the Archipelago: Byeonhan-Kaya Funerary Rituals, Iron, and Founding Myth  |g p. 89 --  |g 3  |t Political Consolidation in Kyushu and Inter-Polity Warfare  |g p. 93 --  |g 4  |t Emergence of Thriving Pen/Insular Trade: Kyushu/Kinki -- Neuk-do/Kimhae Connections  |g p. 94 --  |g Chapter 4  |t The Middle-Late Kofun Period Toraijin: Imaki no Tehito ("Recently Arrived Skilled Artisans") (c. 350-600 AD)  |g p. 97 --  |g I  |t Their Historical and Socio-Cultural Background: Korea's Early States and Polities (c. 300-700 AD)  |g p. 97 --  |g 1  |t A Brief Survey  |g p. 97 --  |g 2  |t Cultural and Technological Advancements of Paekche, Kaya, and Later Mahan  |g p. 97 --  |g A  |t Religion, Ideology, Art, and Architecture  |g p. 98 --  |g B  |t Iron Technology  |g p. 100 --  |g C  |t Equestrian Culture and Cavalry  |g p. 104 --  |g D  |t Stoneware Pottery  |g p. 108 --  |g E  |t Gold, Gilt-Bronze, and Silver Craftsmanship  |g p. 113 --  |g F  |t The Culture of Swords  |g p. 113 --  |g G  |t Mortuary Architecture  |g p. 116 --  |g H  |t Agriculture and Hydraulic Engineering  |g p. 118 --  |g 3  |t Push-Pull Dynamics: Pen/Insular Crisis  |g p. 119 --  |g A  |t Crisis in the Peninsula  |g p. 119 --  |g B  |t Crisis in the Archipelago  |g p. 121 --  |g II  |t Imaki no Tehito Arrive in the Archipelago  |g p. 123 --  |g 1  |t Late 4th -- Early 5th Century: "The Century of Toraijin"  |g p. 123 --  |g 2  |t Middle 5th-6th Century  |g p. 126 --  |g 3  |t Major Toraijin Settlements  |g p. 129 --  |g A  |t The Kinki Core Region (Osaka, Nara, Kyoto)  |g p. 129 --  |g a  |t Toraijin in the Osaka (Kawachi) Plains  |g p. 129 --  |g b  |t Toraijin in the Asuka District of Southern Nara Asuka-mura: Home of the Yamato no Aya  |g p. 137 --  |t The Rise of the Soga Clan  |g p. 138 --  |t Tombs and Temples  |g p. 143 --  |g c  |t Elite Toraijin Technicians in Nango, Nara  |g p. 145 --  |g d  |t Toraijin Settlement of Yamashiro (Modern Kyoto)  |g p. 146 --  |g e  |t Toraijin around Lake Biwa in Ancient Omi  |g p. 147 --  |g B  |t Toraijin in Ancient Kibi (Modern Okayama)  |g p. 148 --  |g C  |t Toraijin in the Kanto Region  |g p. 148 --  |g D  |t Toraijin in Kyushu  |g p. 149 --  |g Chapter 5  |t Imaki No Tehito's Contributions to the Middle-Late Kofun Society  |g p. 152 --  |g I  |t The Early and Middle Kofun Societies: Compared  |g p. 152 --  |g II  |t Technological Revolutions  |g p. 154 --  |g 1  |t Iron Industry  |g p. 154 --  |g 2  |t Horse Breeding and Horsemanship  |g p. 162 --  |g 3  |t Flood Control, Land Reclamation, and Public Works  |g p. 163 --  |g 4  |t Gold, Gilt-Bronze, and Silver Craftsmanship  |g p. 164 --  |g 5  |t Silk Industry  |g p. 167 --  |g 6  |t The Sueki Stoneware Industry  |g p. 167 --  |g III  |t Ideological Transformation  |g p. 170 --  |g 1  |t Confucianization of the Yamato Court  |g p. 170 --  |g 2  |t Buddhism for the Nation  |g p. 171 --  |g 3  |t Elite Mortuary System: From Vertical Pit-Chamber Burials to Corridor-Style Tombs  |g p. 172 --  |g IV  |t Exchange and Interaction Between Paekche and Yamato Elites (4th-6th century)  |g p. 174 --  |g 1  |t Kingly Exchanges  |g p. 174 --  |g 2  |t Intermediary Role of Powerful Paekche Elites Residing in Yamato  |g p. 176 --  |g V  |t Shotoku Taishi, the Seventeen Article Constitution of 604, and the Toraijin  |g p. 177 --  |g VI  |t Lasting Fraternity Between Yamato and Paekche  |g p. 178. 
590 |a k0822 
650 0 |a Koreans  |z Japan  |x History. 
650 0 |a Archipelagoes  |z Japan  |x History. 
650 0 |a Excavations (Archaeology)  |z Japan. 
651 0 |a Japan  |x Antiquities. 
700 1 |a Aikens, C. Melvin  |e author  |9 171 
700 1 |a Barnes, Gina Lee  |e author  |9 1066 
776 0 8 |i Online version  |a Rhee, Song Nai, 1935- :  |t Archaeology and history of Toraijin.  |d Oxford : Archaeopress Archaeology, [2021].  |z 9781789699678  |w 002061659 
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