Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (157)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = cultural excavation

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
19 pages, 730 KB  
Article
From Housing to Admissions Redlining: Race, Wealth and Selective Access at Public Flagships, Post-World War II to Present
by Uma Mazyck Jayakumar and William C. Kidder
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(12), 694; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14120694 (registering DOI) - 1 Dec 2025
Abstract
This paper interrogates two important but obscured admission policy developments at leading American universities in the post-World War II era. First, we critically examine the University of California’s “special admissions,” later formalized as the “Admission by Exception” policy adopted at two flagship campuses [...] Read more.
This paper interrogates two important but obscured admission policy developments at leading American universities in the post-World War II era. First, we critically examine the University of California’s “special admissions,” later formalized as the “Admission by Exception” policy adopted at two flagship campuses (Berkeley and UCLA) to open opportunities for veterans returning from the War under the GI Bill. The scale of this Admission by Exception policy was orders of magnitude larger than any comparable admissions policy in recent decades, including both the eras with and without legally permissible affirmative action. Second, we excavate archival evidence from the immediate aftermath of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, where leaders at the flagship University of Texas at Austin campus hastily adopted a new standardized exam requirement because their enrollment modeling indicated this was the most efficient way to not face further losses in federal court while excluding the largest number of African Americans (and thereby resisting Brown) and maintaining the same overall size of the freshmen class. These two post-war admission policy changes, one arising in de facto segregated California and the other in de jure segregated Texas, operated as racialized institutional mechanisms analogous to “redlining” racially restrictive housing policies that are a more familiar feature of the post-War era. We draw on historical data about earnings and wealth accumulation of the overwhelmingly white graduates of UC and UT in the 1950s–70s and connect these findings to the theoretical frameworks of Cheryl Harris’s “whiteness as property” and George Lipsitz’s racialized state investment. We show how these admission policies contributed to the intergenerational transfer of advantage. We then turn to the contemporary admissions landscape at highly selective American universities after the Supreme Court’s SFFA v. Harvard ruling. We link current trends at some elite institutions toward a return to standardized testing requirements, maintaining considerations of athletic ability mostly in “country club” sports as manifestations of bias in university admissions, which tend to favor white applicants (Jayakumar and Page 2021; Jayakumar et al. 2023b). The paper connects historical racialization of admissions to ongoing inequities in access and outcomes, showing how both historical and contemporary admissions policies reward inherited forms of cultural capital aligned with whiteness. Full article
17 pages, 4713 KB  
Article
Characteristics and Provenance of Tremolite Jade Artifacts from the Fangjiagang Cemetery of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, Hubei, China
by Qian Zhong, Qifang Xiang, Xing Xu, Jun Shu, Ping Li, Xiang Zhang and Yungui Liu
Minerals 2025, 15(12), 1273; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15121273 - 30 Nov 2025
Abstract
Hubei Province is a significant center for cultural and trade exchange in Central China. However, since no nephrite deposit has been discovered in Hubei, nephrite artifacts excavated within its jurisdiction must have been obtained from other regions. Tracing their provenance can contribute to [...] Read more.
Hubei Province is a significant center for cultural and trade exchange in Central China. However, since no nephrite deposit has been discovered in Hubei, nephrite artifacts excavated within its jurisdiction must have been obtained from other regions. Tracing their provenance can contribute to our understanding of the trade exchange between ancient Hubei and other regions. In this study, the appearance, spectroscopy, and chemical compositions of nephrite artifacts excavated from the Fangjiagang Cemetery of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, Hubei Province, were systematically studied, and their provenance was discussed. The characteristics of a weathered layer of raw nephrite material retained in one of the jade artifacts (M22:5) indicate it should be made from the placer nephrite of Hetian, Xinjiang. Infrared and Raman spectroscopy confirms that both the whitened and unwhitened areas in the samples are composed of tremolite, indicating that the whitening mechanism should be attributed to the etched structures caused by weathering rather than a change in the major mineral composition caused by high temperature. When no obvious appearance-based characteristics remain, chemical compositions become a crucial tool for discussing the provenance of jade artifacts. The chondrite-normalized rare earth element patterns for the samples suggest that their formation is associated with granite intrusion, implying that the placer nephrite of Hetian, Xinjiang; Xiuyan nephrite, Liaoning; Golmud nephrite, Qinghai; Xiaomeiling nephrite, Jiangsu; Vitim nephrite, Russia; and Chuncheon nephrite, South Korea, are potential sources. However, the trace element spider diagrams for the samples show a better match with those of the placer nephrite of Hetian. The placer nephrite of Hetian was used in Fangjiagang Cemetery, indicating that the trade exchange between the Eastern Zhou dynasty and the Hetian area had already been established. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

19 pages, 4363 KB  
Article
The Lithic Journey of Jerusalem Stone: New Evidence of Ancient Quarries
by Adi Sela Wiener, Laura Medeghini and Gabriele Favero
Heritage 2025, 8(11), 490; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8110490 - 19 Nov 2025
Viewed by 389
Abstract
Jerusalem’s prominent building material of limestone and dolostone, which is commonly known as “Jerusalem stone”, characterizes the city’s architecture and built environment. The distinctive stone was quarried from the Jerusalem landscape, prepared as building stone, and transported to building sites, a process referred [...] Read more.
Jerusalem’s prominent building material of limestone and dolostone, which is commonly known as “Jerusalem stone”, characterizes the city’s architecture and built environment. The distinctive stone was quarried from the Jerusalem landscape, prepared as building stone, and transported to building sites, a process referred to in this paper as the “lithic journey”. While these ancient quarries have been identified in previous studies, new evidence identifies the characteristics and the spatial distribution of these quarries and the connections between them. This study examined over one hundred archeological reports resulting from mainly salvage excavations conducted in the last decade (2012–2024), which has enabled the creation of updated mapping. Data collected from the Hadashot Arkheologiyot: Excavations and Surveys in Israel (HA-ESI), are included in a database that classifies quarry types, building material provenance, and specific characteristics of the ancient quarries that supplied Jerusalem’s building stones. The resulting expanded dataset of this open-access, online resource broadens our understanding of the quarry landscape and the continuous use of stone in the city’s building culture, while also offering an understanding of Jerusalem’s urban development and the design of Jerusalem’s cityscape from antiquity to the present day, as well as contribute to the city’s heritage management. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

19 pages, 12357 KB  
Article
Ecological Wisdom Study of the Han Dynasty Settlement Site in Sanyangzhuang Based on Landscape Archaeology
by Yingming Cao, He Jiang, MD Abdul Mueed Choudhury, Hangzhe Liu, Guohang Tian, Xiang Wu and Ernesto Marcheggiani
Heritage 2025, 8(11), 466; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8110466 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 379
Abstract
This study systematically investigates settlement sites that record living patterns of ancient humans, aiming to reveal the interactive mechanisms of human–environment relationships. The core issues of landscape archeology research are the surface spatial structure, human spatial cognition, and social practice activities. This article [...] Read more.
This study systematically investigates settlement sites that record living patterns of ancient humans, aiming to reveal the interactive mechanisms of human–environment relationships. The core issues of landscape archeology research are the surface spatial structure, human spatial cognition, and social practice activities. This article takes the Han Dynasty settlement site in Sanyangzhuang, Neihuang County, Anyang City, Henan Province, as a typical case. It comprehensively uses ArcGIS 10.8 spatial analysis and remote sensing image interpretation techniques to construct spatial distribution models of elevation, slope, and aspect in the study area, and analyzes the process of the Yellow River’s ancient course changes. A regional historical geographic information system was constructed by integrating multiple data sources, including archeological excavation reports, excavated artifacts, and historical documents. At the same time, the sequences of temperature and dry–wet index changes in the study area during the Qin and Han dynasties were quantitatively reconstructed, and a climate evolution map for this period was created based on ancient climate proxy indicators. Drawing on three dimensions of settlement morphology, architectural spatial organization, and agricultural technology systems, this paper provides a deep analysis of the site’s spatial cognitive logic and the ecological wisdom it embodies. The results show the following: (1) The Sanyangzhuang Han Dynasty settlement site reflects the efficient utilization strategy and environmental adaptation mechanism of ancient settlements for land resources, presenting typical scattered characteristics. Its formation mechanism is closely related to the evolution of social systems in the Western Han Dynasty. (2) In terms of site selection, settlements consider practicality and ceremony, which can not only meet basic living needs, but also divide internal functional zones based on the meaning implied by the orientation of the constellations. (3) The widespread use of iron farming tools has promoted the innovation of cultivation techniques, and the implementation of the substitution method has formed an ecological regulation system to cope with seasonal climate change while ensuring agricultural yield. The above results comprehensively reflect three types of ecological wisdom: “ecological adaptation wisdom of integrating homestead and farmland”, “spatial cognitive wisdom of analogy, heaven, law, and earth”, and “agricultural technology wisdom adapted to the times”. This study not only deepens our understanding of the cultural value of the Han Dynasty settlement site in Sanyangzhuang, but also provides a new theoretical perspective, an important paradigm reference, and a methodological reference for the study of ancient settlement ecological wisdom. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

22 pages, 22541 KB  
Article
The End of the Egyptian New Kingdom in Colonial Nubia: New Perspectives on Sociocultural Transformations in the Middle Nile
by Julia Budka
Humans 2025, 5(4), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5040026 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 783
Abstract
In recent decades, the concept of a so-called Dark Age in ancient Sudan at the beginning of the first millennium BCE has been called into question within the field of Nubian archaeology. This is primarily due to new archaeological findings at urban sites [...] Read more.
In recent decades, the concept of a so-called Dark Age in ancient Sudan at the beginning of the first millennium BCE has been called into question within the field of Nubian archaeology. This is primarily due to new archaeological findings at urban sites such as Tombos and Amara West, as well as new theoretical approaches developed during the postcolonial turn. This study aims to show that new remote sensing, surveys and excavations in the Attab to Ferka region of Sudan have also revealed important evidence of continued occupation after the end of Egypt’s colonial rule over Nubia. In particular, studies of settlement patterns and ceramics enrich our understanding of people’s lives during the period between 1070 and 750 BCE and allow us to expand on dynamic processes, local forms of resilience and innovation. This new understanding of the persistence of communities after the fall of colonial Nubia under Egyptian rule facilitates a more nuanced interpretation of the evolution of the Napatan Empire, thereby challenging the conventional concept of secondary states. The Attab to Ferka case study demonstrates that previously marginalised regions and communities are significant contributors to cultural dynamics and achievements during the first millennium BCE in Sudan. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

18 pages, 15262 KB  
Article
Thin-Section Petrography in the Use of Ancient Ceramic Studies
by David Ben-Shlomo
Minerals 2025, 15(9), 984; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15090984 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1750
Abstract
The potential of thin-section petrography for the analysis of ancient ceramic materials, such as pottery vessels, figurative objects and building materials made of fired clay, was already recognized during the 19th century, but its use has become more intensive during the past 80 [...] Read more.
The potential of thin-section petrography for the analysis of ancient ceramic materials, such as pottery vessels, figurative objects and building materials made of fired clay, was already recognized during the 19th century, but its use has become more intensive during the past 80 years. Since pottery is the most common and typologically datable artifact in archaeological excavations from the pottery Neolithic period onwards (some 7000–8000 years ago), the analysis of pottery, including its composition, is a central component of archaeological research. As ceramic materials are made of fired clay, which in turn is procured from soils, weathered rocks and geological formations, the mineralogical composition of the ceramic artifacts represents the clay sources. The study of the mineralogical and rock fragment composition of thin sections of ancient ceramic artifacts can yield the characterization of the clay and soil type and thus the geographic location or area of the clay source. Since in antiquity we assume clay was not precured from a distance of more than one day’s walk from the production site (‘site catchment area’), the production location can be detected as well. Thus, petrographic analysis can identify the trade of artifacts and commodities (if the ceramics are containers) in antiquity, which can shed light on political and cultural links and trade between ancient societies and their economic and social structure. In addition, since clay was often treated by ancient potters to improve its quality (levigation, clay mixing, addition of temper), technological aspects of the production sequence (chaîne opératoire) can also be acquired by petrographic analysis. Today, petrographic analysis is part of many standard studies of ancient pottery. While it is an old and relatively ‘low tech’ method, the accessibility of the equipment needed and its high analytic potential maintains its important and common position in archaeological research. This article describes the method and its analytical potential from the archaeological point of view and briefly mentions several archaeological case studies exemplifying its wide and diversified potential in the study of ancient ceramics in past decades. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Thin Sections: The Past Serving The Future)
Show Figures

Figure 1

12 pages, 2090 KB  
Article
Predicting the Mechanical Strength of Caliche Using Nanoindentation to Preserve an Archaeological Site
by Carmen Salazar-Hernández, Jorge Cervantes, Mercedes Salazar-Hernández, Juan Manuel Mendoza-Miranda, Antonio Guerra-Contreras, Omar Cruces-Cervantes and María Jesús Puy-Alquiza
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(17), 9355; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15179355 - 26 Aug 2025
Viewed by 696
Abstract
During the processes of excavation, restoration, and conservation of archaeological sites, it is common practice to perform physical and chemical characterization of the site materials. This is carried out to determine the best methods and materials for conserving and preserving the site. For [...] Read more.
During the processes of excavation, restoration, and conservation of archaeological sites, it is common practice to perform physical and chemical characterization of the site materials. This is carried out to determine the best methods and materials for conserving and preserving the site. For this reason, techniques such as infrared spectroscopy and elemental analysis by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) are primarily used for chemical characterization, while mechanical tests such as the uniaxial compression test and hardness tests are used for physical and mechanical characterization. However, a common limitation is obtaining samples for destructive physical tests, such as compression tests, due to their invaluable cultural value. To address this problem, this work proposes the mechanical characterization of the material through nanoindentation. This technique requires a smaller sample size and can be performed in a timely manner by observing the resistance of each mineralogical phase present in the material. Thus, a preliminary predictive model of mechanical resistance is proposed based on the composition observed in the samples from the archaeological site of Cerro de los Remedios, located in the municipality of Comonfort, Guanajuato, Mexico. The samples were characterized using infrared spectroscopy, XRF, XRD, and SEM-EDS. The results indicate that the stone (caliche) is formed from 95.6–93% micrite calcite; 2.51–0.42% aluminosilicate; 3.14–1.89% high-calcium aluminosilicate; and 3.43–2.39 quartz or amorphous SiO2. The proposed correlation models were adjusted to a linear function, a second-order polynomial, and a logarithmic function. In the M2–linear model, the non-linear effects generated by variables such as texture, porosity, phase adhesion, cement type, and cracks or discontinuities were not considered. In this model the best prediction of the experimental data was obtained within a variation of ±15%. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

24 pages, 425 KB  
Review
Survey on the Application of Robotics in Archaeology
by Panagiota Kyriakoulia, Anastasios Kazolias, Dimitrios Konidaris and Panagiotis Kokkinos
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4836; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154836 - 6 Aug 2025
Viewed by 3883
Abstract
This work explores the application of robotic systems in archaeology, highlighting their transformative role in excavation, documentation, and the preservation of cultural heritage. By combining technologies such as LiDAR, GIS, 3D modeling, sonar, and other sensors with autonomous and semi-autonomous platforms, archaeologists can [...] Read more.
This work explores the application of robotic systems in archaeology, highlighting their transformative role in excavation, documentation, and the preservation of cultural heritage. By combining technologies such as LiDAR, GIS, 3D modeling, sonar, and other sensors with autonomous and semi-autonomous platforms, archaeologists can now reach inaccessible sites, automate artifact analysis, and reconstruct fragmented remains with greater precision. The study provides a systematic overview of underwater, aerial, terrestrial, and other robotic systems, drawing on scientific literature that showcases their innovative use in both fieldwork and museum settings. Selected examples illustrate how robotics is being applied to solve key archaeological challenges in new and effective ways. While the paper emphasizes the potential of these technologies, it also addresses their technical, economic, and ethical limitations, concluding that successful adoption depends on interdisciplinary collaboration, careful implementation, and a balanced respect for cultural integrity. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

17 pages, 11812 KB  
Article
Heritage GIS: Deep Mapping, Preserving, and Sustaining the Intangibility of Cultures and the Palimpsests of Landscape in the West of Ireland
by Charles Travis
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6870; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156870 - 29 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1386
Abstract
This paper presents a conceptual and methodological framework for using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to “deep map” cultural heritage sites along Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, with a focus on the 1588 Spanish Armada wrecks in County Kerry and archaeological landscapes in County Sligo’s [...] Read more.
This paper presents a conceptual and methodological framework for using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to “deep map” cultural heritage sites along Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, with a focus on the 1588 Spanish Armada wrecks in County Kerry and archaeological landscapes in County Sligo’s “Yeats Country.” Drawing on interdisciplinary dialogues from the humanities, social sciences, and geospatial sciences, it illustrates how digital spatial technologies can excavate, preserve, and sustain intangible cultural knowledge embedded within such palimpsestic landscapes. Using MAXQDA 24 software to mine and code historical, literary, folkloric, and environmental texts, the study constructed bespoke GIS attribute tables and visualizations integrated with elevation models and open-source archaeological data. The result is a richly layered cartographic method that reveals the spectral and affective dimensions of heritage landscapes through climate, memory, literature, and spatial storytelling. By engaging with “deep mapping” and theories such as “Spectral Geography,” the research offers new avenues for sustainable heritage conservation, cultural tourism, and public education that are sensitive to both ecological and cultural resilience in the West of Ireland. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

23 pages, 10100 KB  
Article
Vestiges of the Sedimentary Archive of Late Paleolithic Inhumations from San Teodoro Cave: Insights into ST3 Burial and Site Stratigraphy
by Vittorio Garilli and Luca Galletti
Heritage 2025, 8(7), 285; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8070285 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1125
Abstract
Studies of prehistoric burials are fundamental for understanding cultural human evolution. Those found in the San Teodoro cave (northeastern Sicily) are significant for the discovery at the turn of the 1930s and 1940s of at least four individuals (ST1–ST4). About 15–16 kyr ago, [...] Read more.
Studies of prehistoric burials are fundamental for understanding cultural human evolution. Those found in the San Teodoro cave (northeastern Sicily) are significant for the discovery at the turn of the 1930s and 1940s of at least four individuals (ST1–ST4). About 15–16 kyr ago, the bodies of ST1–ST4 were intentionally buried, apparently in a manner original to the context of prehistoric burials, namely by covering them with a continuous layer of red ochre found to connect the graves. Since the earliest excavations, plagued by clandestine digging, there is no material memory of the stratigraphic transition from the burial layer to the subsequent anthropogenic deposit through the red ochre, and nothing certain is known about the orientation of ST3, the presence of grave goods and the ochre cover related to this burial. Moreover, there is no exhaustive knowledge of how much is actually left of the anthropogenic layers described in the old literature. Based on field observations and 3D reconstruction of ST3’s skull position and deposits at the San Teodoro site, we provide insights into anthropological issues, such as the rediscovery of the red ochre vestiges that reasonably covered the ST3 burial, and the burial context of this individual, and shed light on what actually remains of the stratigraphic units described in the 1940s. Full article
Show Figures

Graphical abstract

20 pages, 9284 KB  
Article
Tunnels in Gediminas Hill (Vilnius, Lithuania): Evaluation of a New Tunnel Found in 2019
by Šarūnas Skuodis, Mykolas Daugevičius, Jurgis Medzvieckas, Arnoldas Šneideris, Aidas Jokūbaitis, Justinas Rastenis and Juozas Valivonis
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2383; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142383 - 8 Jul 2025
Viewed by 809
Abstract
This article provides a concise overview of the existing tunnels located within the historic cultural heritage site of Gediminas Hill in Vilnius, with particular emphasis on the implications of a recently discovered tunnel. This newly identified tunnel is of particular interest due to [...] Read more.
This article provides a concise overview of the existing tunnels located within the historic cultural heritage site of Gediminas Hill in Vilnius, with particular emphasis on the implications of a recently discovered tunnel. This newly identified tunnel is of particular interest due to its location beneath a retaining wall in close proximity to an adjacent structure. Long-term structural monitoring data indicate that the building has experienced displacement away from the retaining wall. Although the precise cause of this movement remains undetermined, the discovery of the tunnel adjacent to the structure has raised concerns regarding its potential role in the observed displacements. To investigate this hypothesis, a previously developed numerical model was employed to simulate the tunnel’s impact. The simulation results suggest that the tunnel’s construction was executed with careful consideration. During the excavation phase, the retaining wall exhibited displacements in a direction opposite to the expected ground pressure, indicating effective utilization of the wall’s gravitational mass. However, historical records indicate that no retaining structures were present in the area during the tunnel’s initial period of existence. Consequently, an additional simulation phase was introduced to model the behavior of the surrounding loose soil in the absence of retaining support. The results from this phase revealed that the deformations of the retaining wall and the adjacent building were elastically interdependent. The simulated deformation patterns closely matched the temporal trends observed in the monitoring data. These findings support the hypothesis that the tunnel’s construction may have contributed to the displacement of the nearby building. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Construction Management, and Computers & Digitization)
Show Figures

Figure 1

16 pages, 9472 KB  
Entry
Underground Built Heritage
by Roberta Varriale
Encyclopedia 2025, 5(3), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5030092 - 2 Jul 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1212
Definition
The Underground Built Heritage (UBH) class, introduced at a methodological and theoretical level in 2021, collects cultural assets excavated throughout history from underground that, today, are significant elements of local cultural heritage, having strongly impacted on the “sense of place” of local communities. [...] Read more.
The Underground Built Heritage (UBH) class, introduced at a methodological and theoretical level in 2021, collects cultural assets excavated throughout history from underground that, today, are significant elements of local cultural heritage, having strongly impacted on the “sense of place” of local communities. Those cultural assets have been at the core of several national and international regeneration processes, and, recently, new tools have been developed to support their classification and sustainable reuses. This entry introduces tools for the classification of historical uses of UBH elements and their historical reuses, as well providing guidelines for their sustainable regeneration for the social and economic benefit of local populations based on the analysis of some worldwide case studies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Encyclopedia of Social Sciences)
Show Figures

Figure 1

35 pages, 5313 KB  
Article
The Jamāl Gaṛhī Monastery in Gandhāra: An Examination of Buddhist Sectarian Identity Through Textual and Archaeological Evidence
by Wang Jun and Michael Cavayero
Religions 2025, 16(7), 853; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070853 - 30 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1916
Abstract
In the 19th century, the British archaeologist Sir Alexander Cunningham identified the remains of an unidentified Buddhist monastery at Jamāl Gaṛhī, an ancient site located approximately 13 km from present-day Mardān, Pakistan. Subsequent excavations by the Archaeological Survey of India between 1920 and [...] Read more.
In the 19th century, the British archaeologist Sir Alexander Cunningham identified the remains of an unidentified Buddhist monastery at Jamāl Gaṛhī, an ancient site located approximately 13 km from present-day Mardān, Pakistan. Subsequent excavations by the Archaeological Survey of India between 1920 and 1921 unearthed a schist inscription dated to the year “359”. Heinrich Lüders, the renowned German Indologist and epigraphist, attributed this inscription to the Dharmaguptaka sect/school. Despite this early attribution, the Monastery’s precise sectarian characteristics have remained largely unexplored in later scholarship. This article reevaluates the site’s sectarian identity by employing a “ground-to-text” methodology that integrates archaeological evidence with textual analysis, with a particular focus on the Chinese translation of the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya. Through this comparative framework, this study seeks to elucidate the religious ideas reflected in the site’s material culture and their relationship with Dharmaguptaka disciplinary thought. The analysis encompasses the architectural remnants of the stūpa excavated by Cunningham and the “Fasting Buddha” statuary, now preserved in the National Museum of Pakistan, the British Museum, and other sites, situating these artifacts within the distinctive visual and contemplative traditions linked to the Dharmaguptaka Vinaya. By integrating architectural, sculptural, textual, and epigraphic materials, this article provides a nuanced understanding of sectarian developments at Jamāl Gaṛhī and argues that an explicit emphasis on the ‘Middle Way’ ideology constituted a defining feature of the Dharmaguptaka tradition during this period. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

34 pages, 3322 KB  
Article
Translating Medicine Across Cultures: The Divergent Strategies of An Shigao and Dharmarakṣa in Introducing Indian Medical Concepts to China
by Lu Lu
Religions 2025, 16(7), 844; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070844 - 25 Jun 2025
Viewed by 3472
Abstract
The Yogācārabhūmi, compiled by Saṅgharakṣa, was first introduced to China by An Shigao’s abridged translation (T607, Daodi jing 道地經), later, in 284 CE, Dharmarakṣa produced a more comprehensive version (T606, Xiuxing daodi jing 修行道地經). Lacking extant Sanskrit or Pali parallels, the text [...] Read more.
The Yogācārabhūmi, compiled by Saṅgharakṣa, was first introduced to China by An Shigao’s abridged translation (T607, Daodi jing 道地經), later, in 284 CE, Dharmarakṣa produced a more comprehensive version (T606, Xiuxing daodi jing 修行道地經). Lacking extant Sanskrit or Pali parallels, the text is difficult to interpret literally, and the differences between T607 and T606 add to the analytical challenges. However, a substantial section in both translations describing omens of impending death in the sick exhibits systematic parallels with Indian Āyurvedic texts, such as the Caraka-saṃhitā and Suśruta-saṃhitā. These parallels help clarify the ambiguous passages through comparative analysis. This study explores the translation strategies of An Shigao and Dharmarakṣa in introducing Indian medical concepts to China. An Shigao adopted a localization strategy, replacing foreign terms with analogous Chinese concepts. His terminology, corroborated by usage in Eastern Han or earlier Chinese texts—particularly excavated manuscripts—supports claims in the Chu sanzang ji ji regarding his expertise in medicine and divination. By contrast, Dharmarakṣa’s Xiuxing daodi jing sought greater fidelity to the Indian source material, offering a more detailed and systematic presentation of Āyurvedic knowledge. However, Dharmarakṣa did not entirely abandon An Shigao’s localization approach. He adopted a balanced strategy that combined faithful representation with cultural adaptation, reflecting the broader capacity of his more diverse and sophisticated audience to engage with complex and extensive foreign knowledge. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

34 pages, 43549 KB  
Article
Ancestral Pueblo and Historic Ute Rock Art, and Euro-American Inscriptions in the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument, Colorado, USA
by Radoslaw Palonka, Polly Schaafsma and Katarzyna M. Ciomek
Arts 2025, 14(3), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14030060 - 26 May 2025
Viewed by 1118
Abstract
In the central Mesa Verde region, rock art occurs on canyon walls and on boulders that are frequently associated with other archaeological remains. Moreover, rock art, together with architecture and pottery, is actually a primary source of archaeological information about the presence of [...] Read more.
In the central Mesa Verde region, rock art occurs on canyon walls and on boulders that are frequently associated with other archaeological remains. Moreover, rock art, together with architecture and pottery, is actually a primary source of archaeological information about the presence of various cultures in the area. It includes paintings and petroglyphs of Ancestral Pueblo farming communities, images and inscriptions made by post-contact Ute and possibly Diné (Navajo) people as well as historical inscriptions of the early Euro-Americans in this area. This paper presents the results of archaeological investigations at four large rock art sites from Sandstone Canyon, southwestern Colorado, within the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument (CANM). Methods of rock art recording included advanced digital photography, photogrammetry, terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), hand tracing, and consultations with members of indigenous societies and rock art scholars. Geophysics and sondage excavations were conducted at one site revealed important information about archaeology, environment, and geology of the area. Analysis of rock art and other material evidence aims to help reconstruct and understand the mechanisms and nature of cultural changes, migrations, and human–environmental interactions and later cross-cultural contacts between indigenous peoples and Anglo-American ranchers and settlers in southwestern Colorado and the US Southwest. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Rock Art Studies)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop