25 research outputs found

    南中央アジアにおける王権と都市

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    Land Use Patterns in Central Asia. Step 1: The Musical Chairs Model

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    Herding and farming coexisted in Central Asia for several thousand years as main options of preindustrial economic production. The relationship between people practicing different variants of these modes of subsistence is known to have been dynamic. Among the many possible explanations, we explore this dynamic by modeling mechanisms that connect aggregate decisions to land use patterns. Within the framework of the SimulPast project, we show here the results from step 1 of our modeling program: the Musical Chairs Model. This abstract agent-based model describes a mechanism of competition for land use between farming and herding. The aim is the exploration of how mobility, intensity, and interdependence of activities can influence land use pattern. After performing a set of experiments within the framework of this model, we compare the implications of each condition for the corroboration of specific land use patterns. Some historical and archaeological implications are also discussed. We suggest that the overall extension of farming in oases can be explained by the competition for land use between farming and herding, assuming that it develops with little or no interference of climatic, geographical, and historical contingencies

    The art of face-saving and culture-changing: sculpting Chinese football’s past, present and future

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    In this paper, we consider the football statues of China, whose football team has dramatically underperformed relative to its population size and economic power. Although China lacks a participative grassroots football culture and has struggled to establish a credible domestic league, recent government intervention and investment has seen football’s profile rise dramatically. China’s many football statues are largely atypical in comparison to the rest of the world, including their depiction of anonymous figures rather than national or local heroes, the incorporation of tackling scenes in their designs, and their location at training camps. Through four specific examples and reference to a global database, we illustrate how these statues reflect the tensions and difficulties inherent in China’s desire to integrate itself into global football, and achieve its stated goal of hosting and winning the FIFA World Cup, whilst simultaneously upholding national, cultural and political values such as the primacy of hard work and learning, and saving face in defeat

    Identity and Space in Central Asia

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    This article aims to provide an introduction to Central Asia from a geographic, historical and ethnolinguistic perspective. It demonstrates how the environment has conditioned the patterns of human settlement and, in particular, the relationship betweensemi-nomadic, pastoral populations and sedentary, agricultural populations. Logically, this human geography of Central Asia has had and continues to have a profound effect on notions of identity, which have little to do with those of the modern European concept of Nation-State. Thus, while the languages, ethnic groups and cultures of the current five former Soviet republics of Central Asia seem to have existed for centuries, in reality they were invented by the Soviet regime in the 1920’s. Nevertheless, far from being rejected by the new independent countries, the Soviet categories have been ratified and are today considered unquestionable. It is, however, of fundamental importance that this fact be taken into account in an analysis of the region, because in many cases the current CentralAsian regimes purposefully use notions such as Islamic fundamentalism, natural resources or economic liberalisation, which are very much in vogue at the present time, in order to mask problems which in reality are linked to identities and events from a distant past

    Kingship and City Culture in Southern Central Asia

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    Preliminary report of the first season work of the International Pluridisciplinary Archaeological Expedition to Bactria 2006

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    The International Pluridisciplinary Archaeological Expedition in Bactria (IPAEB) was created in 2006. The name underlines the international character of the team (which includes Uzbeks, Spanish, French, British and Greek members), the presence of specialists from various fields apart from archaeology and the fame of Bactria1

    Soviet military maps and archaeological survey in the Samarkand region

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    In Central Asia, the introduction of mechanised farming and the transformation of the landscape caused by agricultural intensification over the last 50 years have resulted in the massive destruction of archaeological remains. In this paper, we focus on an underestimated and unexploited type of remote sensing for the study of landscape change and anthropic impact on cultural heritage: 1:10,000 Soviet military maps of the 1950s. We present their use in the case study of the Archaeological Map of the Samarkand region. We argue that their precision and the early date at which they were produced make it possible to employ them as a reference tool for systematic survey and archaeological heritage management in Central Asia and throughout the former Soviet Union. We discuss the results of an archaeological survey based on these maps and show how they can be used to evaluate the destruction of archaeological mounds during the last 50 years, by contrasting them with modern satellite imageryPeer reviewe

    IPAEB 2007

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    A prior long-term and complex evaluation of the already available data on the geophysical prospecting during the first season work carried out at 2006, at the archaeological site of Tchinguiz Tepe of Termez, took place to decide the strategy to follow during the campaign of 2007. This previous evaluation of the information, on one hand, leaded to the decision to increase the geophysical prospecting at Tchinguiz Tepe, on the other hand, to decide the exact location of areas where the archaeological interventions.would carry out. The main objective at the beginning of this new season was to crosscheck the reliabilityof the measurements and, at the same time, to establish the unknown up to the present archaeologicaland chronological sequence of Tchinguiz Tepe. Meanwhile, the geophysical prospecting also wasextended to the outskirts of the city were the localisation of an unknown up to now Buddhist Monasterywas possible
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