2012 Fiscal Year Final Research Report
Researches on the 4th-12th century Chinese and non-Chinese documents unearthed in Inner Asia.
Project/Area Number |
22520727
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Research Category |
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)
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Allocation Type | Single-year Grants |
Section | 一般 |
Research Field |
Asian history
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Research Institution | 財団法人東洋文庫 (2012) The Toyo Bunko (2010-2011) |
Principal Investigator |
DOHI Yoshikazu 財団法人東洋文庫, 研究部, 研究員 (10104746)
|
Co-Investigator(Kenkyū-buntansha) |
OKANO Makoto 財団法人東洋文庫, 研究部, 研究員 (50110979)
KATAYAMA Akio 財団法人東洋文庫, 研究部, 研究員 (10224453)
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Project Period (FY) |
2010 – 2012
|
Keywords | 敦煌 / 吐魯番 / 漢語文献 / 胡語文献 / 出土資料 / 石刻 / ソグド |
Research Abstract |
Summary of Research Findings 1. Work continued on drafting a catalog of Chinese documents appearing on the versos of Sogdian language documents preserved in the archives of the Russian Science Academy’s St. Petersburg Institute of Oriental Studies, and the non-Buddhist records in that collection were published. 2. Release to the scholarly community of photographs showing fragments of the Tanglu (唐律, Tang Dynasty Penal Code) and Lushu (律疏, Commentaries on the Tanglu) preserved in the Lushun Museum, China, and refining of several related controversial points in the existing research literature. Also at the Lushun Museum, the team inspected fragments of documents related to the Tang Period arable land system, the backs of which were used for pictorial burial paraphernalia and later excavated in Turfan, enabling these fragments to be pieced together with fragments preserved in such archives as the Ryukoku University Otani Collection, thus placing them within the historiographical context of reconstructed Tang Period official documents. 3. Supplementation of early Northern Song Period Buddhist stone inscriptions found at Pota 繁塔 in Kaifeng, Henan Province, China, as comparative sources to the historiography of Dunhuang Buddhism, enabling a more comprehensive image of Buddhism during that period. 4. Survey of the replicated gravesite for the Sogdian Anpu 安菩 and his wife and his epitaph found in Luoyang, Henan Province, China and the publication of a report on its findings related to Sogdian language documents.
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Research Products
(31 results)