Saved from Desert Sands
Re-discovering Objects on the Silk Roads

Download Url(s)
https://oapen-dev.siscern.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/98978/1/9789004706880_webready_content_text.pdfContributor(s)
Galambos, Imre (editor)
Granger, Kelsey (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Saved from Desert Sands, edited by Kelsey Granger and Imre Galambos, unites historians, codicologists, art historians, archaeologists, and curators in the study of material culture on the Silk Roads. The re-discovery of forgotten manuscript archives and sand-buried cities in the twentieth century has brought to light thousands of manuscripts and artefacts. To date, textual content has largely been prioritised over physical objects and their materiality, but the material aspects of these objects are just as important. Focusing primarily on the material and non-textual, this volume presents studies on silver dishes, sealing systems, manuscripts, Buddhist paintings, and ceramics, all of which demonstrate the centrality of material culture in the study of the Silk Roads.
Keywords
Buddhist art; Buddhist studies; Central Asia; China; Dali; Dunhuang; Hexi Corridor; Jinshan Kingdom; Kroraina; Lingzhou; Niya siste; Silk Road; Silk Roads; Tang ceramics; Western Han; codicology; divination scroll; manuscript culture; material culture; medieval ChinaISBN
9789004706880, 9789000000000Publisher
BrillPublisher website
http://www.brill.comPublication date and place
2024Series
East and West,Classification
Asian history
China
Silk Roads
BCE period – Protohistory
c 1000 BCE to start of CE period
c 500 to c 1000 CE
Material culture

