Tag: Silk road

Chief Archaeologist: New discoveries show First Emperor’s Mausoleum influenced by foreign ideas

Acrobats from Burma, workers from Central or West Asia, and a mausoleum design inspired by work in the Middle East the Mauseoleum of Chinas First Emperor was a cosmopolitan place says Dr. Duan Qingbo, the man in charge of excavating it.

The mausoleum was created about 2,200 year ago and served as a tomb for Qin Shi Huang the first emperor of China. While the emperors tomb is largely unexcavated, archaeologists have found thousands of life-size terracotta figures nearby. Its believed that this army was created to serve the emperor in the afterlife.

Dr. Duan (Duan is his family name) discussed this idea at a lecture last Thursday at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto Canada. The museum is hosting a Terracotta Warriors exhibit until January 2, 2011. He doesnt speak English so his words were translated by Dr. Chen Shen, a museum curator and Chinese archaeology expert.

East meets West

Traditionally scholars have marked the 2nd century BC as the starting point of Chinas relationship with the west. The Silk Road was opened for trade at that time,opening upwhat would become a booming trade.

Now the evidence shows that the cultural exchange or influence from the western world begins as early as the time of the First Emperor, said Dr. Duan. In fact the emperors burial structure is probably inferenced from west.

The First Emperors Mausoleum uses a step up structure that allows the soul to escalate to the top. Duan pointed out that the Mausoleumat Halicarnassus in Turkey is quite similar, gradually rising up in levels and was built only 100 years before the First Emperors life.

The structure of this tomb mound is very similar to what we find inside the First Emperors tomb mound, said Duan. Also, on top of this structure (at Halicarnassus) theres a chariot driven by four horses, we all know that (at) the First Emperors tomb complex there also is a chariot with four horses, he said.

DNA Evidence and foreign bricks designs

A few years ago Dr. Duans team unearthed 120 skeletons of workers who were buried near the Mausoleum. Among the finds were three skulls that were definitely not Chinese. Theres three skulls that are different from the rest of them which represents the Mongolian type of people, he said through a translator. The nose protrude (is) very extensive.

The first time DNA tests were performed they indicated that the individuals were from west Eurasia probably like a white people, however the second DNA test showed they were more similar to Mongolian.

Duan has an idea as what these workers might have been used for. His team discovered that the Terracotta Warriors pits used an interlocking rectangular brick pattern that had not been used in China before the time of the First Emperor. This kind of bricks has never been found in China, it was the first time used in the Terracotta Warrior pits, he said. The style used in the Terracotta Army pits of these rectangular brick (is) probably also inference from West Asia.

This means that these foreigners may have served as skilled labour bringing knowledge of this technology from Central or West Asia allowing the First Emperors officials to implement it.

Acrobats & Terracotta Entertainers

Another discovery that adds weight to Dr. Duans theory is a pit of terracotta entertainers, including strongmen, wrestlers and acrobats.

The acrobats were created in a lifelike way with their carving conveying a sense of movement. One example, that is now on display in Toronto, has an index finger pointing up, indicating that the figure is trying to perform a balancing act.

Dr. Duan believes that the acrobats the terracotta figures are modelled on,were probably not from China. According to the way they perform we speculate they are not indigenous to central China, but probably come from the south probably Burma area. This is an idea that if proven true will add another ethnic layer to what appears to have already been an ancient cosmopolitan project.

Ticket sale starts for ‘Secrets of the Silk Road’ at the Penn Museum – Exhibition Preview

We all know the face of the Xiaohe Beauty, but what about the Yingpan Man? His clothed mummy - excavated at Yingpan, China - dates to the 3rd to 4th century AD. - Image copyright Xinjiang Institute of ArchaeologyTickets go on sale today for “Secrets of the Silk Road” a landmark exhibition from China making its only East Coast stop at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (Penn Museum) in Philadelphia February 5 through June 5, 2011. The exhibition aims to reflect the wide extent of the Silk Road trade and cultural interchange (see some of the highlights in this slideshow).

Despite of what its name suggests, the Silk Road isn’t one single route. Rather, it is an extensive interconnected network of maritime and overland trade routes extending from Southern Europe through The Arabian Peninsula, Somalia, Egypt, Iran, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Java-Indonesia, and Vietnam until it reaches China.

This travelling exhibition of materials from half way around the world is opening new doors providing visitors with an unparalleled opportunity to come face to face, literally, with life in East Central Asia, both before and after the formation of the fabled Silk Routes, noted Victor Mair, University of Pennsylvania scholar, and curatorial consultant and catalogue editor for the exhibition.

‘Secrets of the Silk Road’ Preview

Click one of the images to see a larger photograph.

The Secret of Silk

Although recent archaeological evidence a small ivory cup carved with a silkworm design as well as spinning tools, silk thread and fabric fragments is dated to between 4000 and 5000 BC,it is still generally assumedsilk production started in China somewherein thelate 4th millennium BC.

About 500 years later, the domestication of pack animals (we wouldn’t learn to ride until the 1st millennium BC) and the development of shipping technology increased the capacity for prehistoric peoples to carry heavier loads over greater distances; trade started to develop rapidly.

It were not just goods that were exchanged along the first trade routes. Over the centuries, many different peoples controlled parts of the Silk Routes, all using it to spread their technology, ideas, believes and art.

Even before the 1st century AD, the earliest evidence ofsilk reaching Rome, Alexander the Great took the Greek culture into Central AsiawithGraeco-Buddhism as result.

Yet the well-guarded secret of sericulture or silk production did not spread at all.(Recent research does show the possibility that silk production started independently in the Indus Valley, around 2000BC.)

Roman historian Pliny the Elder wrote in his Natural History in 70 BC that “silk was obtained by removing the down from the leaves with the help of water”.

The secret of silk production reached the Middle East only in the 6th century AD, when two monks appeared at Emperor Justinian’s court hiding silkworm eggs in their hollow sticks.

And Europe? It wasn’t until the 13th century that Italy began that Italy began silk production with the introduction of 2000 skilled silk weavers from Constantinople (once Byzantium, modern day Istanbul).

Even then, high-quality silk textiles woven in China would continue to be highly valued in the West, and the trade along the Silk Route continued as before.

TheBeauty of Xiaohe

The appearance of the 3,800 year old Beauty of Xiaohe, one of two strikingly well preserved ‘caucasian’Tarim mummies and their associated artefacts travelling from China, makes “Secrets of the Silk Road” an exhibition that reaches back well beyond the historic period of the Silk Road to tell a tale of long-forgotten peoples and cultures along the worlds legendary trading route.

Tall in stature and fair in complexion, the Beauty was excavated in 2003 (listed as one ofour’Top 10 Most Important Archaeology Finds in China… ever). She is one of hundreds of spectacularly preserved mummies, many with surprisingly Eastern European and Mediterranean features, buried in the harsh desert sands of the vast Tarim Basin of Central Asia, in the Far Western Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China.

The Beauty of Xiaohe, will be shown along with a bundled baby mummy dated to the 8th century BC, and the complete trappings of Yingpan Man, a six-foot six-inch mummy, from the 3rd to 4th centuries AD.

The Wide Extent of the Silk Road

Besides the mummies, the exhibition features a wide range of objects, 700 to 3,800 years. Objects include well-preserved clothing, textiles, jewellery, gem-encrusted gold vessels, wood and bone implements, coins and documents even preserved foods (2,500-year-old fried dough and flower-shaped desserts).

Organized by the Bowers Museum, Santa Ana, California in association with the Archaeological Institute of Xinjiang and the Urumqi Museum, “Secrets of the Silk Road” began its U.S. tour at the Bowers Museum (March 27 to July 25) before traveling to the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences, where it is on view through January 2, 2011.

Timed tickets for the Secrets of the Silk Road exhibition at the Penn Museum can be purchased online at www.penn.museum/silkroad or by phone: (877)77-CLICK. Discounted group tickets are available by phone: (215)746-8183, or by email: grouptickets@museum.upenn.edu.

Teacher programs, including a Thursday, November 4 Educators’ Evening, 4:30 to 6:30 pm, are available through the Museum’s Community Engagement Office: (215)898-4015. Teacher materials will be available online starting December 15.

Lonely Planet Travel Awards: What’s the Best Journey in the World?

The Pyramids of Giza, EgyptBritish politicians, ancient Roman rulers, and Art galleries arent the only ones doing battle for your vote during the month of May the ancient world needs your support too as it takes on those pesky modern upstarts in a new worldwide travel poll.

Ancient destinations feature prominently on the shortlist for the inaugural Lonely Planet Travel Awards, which seek to find the worlds most popular and interesting travel experiences.

Voting is open until May 31, 2010, with the results published online and in Lonely Planet Magazine from August 19, 2010. Everyone who votes has the chance to win a trip to Angkor Wat.

Each question comes with a shortlist drawn up by a panel of Lonely Planet experts including co-founder Tony Wheeler, Travel Editor Tom Hall and Lonely Planet Magazine Editor Peter Grunert.

Great Journeys

Great Wall of China - Bandaling

In the greatest journey category, driving the Silk Road from Tashkent to Xian, sailing down the Nile, going overland from Cairo to Cape Town, island-hopping in the Greek Cyclades and the Trans-Siberian Railway to Beijing all take in ancient sites. Theyre up against journeys as diverse as Switzerlands Glacier Express, an Amazon cruise, Californias Pacific Coast Highway, Scotlands West Highland Railway, and Australias Ghan train.

Gladiators at the Colosseum, the Acropolis and New Acropolis Museum, the Mayan temples at Tikal, the Pyramids of Giza, Aboriginal culture in Australia, and Hadrians Wall all feature in the greatest historical experience category.

Other categories that don’t include ancient sites on the shortlist but do provide the option for voters to nominate their own include: most under-rated British day out, greatest cultural experience, greatest outdoors activity.

Were pleased to report no ancient sites made the I wouldn’t go there if you paid me shortlist.

Heritage Key chatted to Lonely Planets Tom Hall about the awards and also asked him for his views on heritage-related tourism in general.

HK: You’ve placed modern history (Anne Frank, the Iron Curtain, etc) up against ancient history (Hadrian, the Acropolis, the Pyramids, Rome, etc). How do you expect these young upstarts to go against the more traditional historical experiences?

TH: One of the most interesting developments in European travel has been the establishment of modern historys must-sees to rival timeless sites. Europe has layer upon layer of remarkable history and in covering many eras we were looking to acknowledge this. Id expect classical sites to endure, but younger attractions to continue to grow in popularity.

HK: The greatest journeys category includes the Silk Road theres huge potential there, too.

Whats amazing about Britain’s prehistory is how the more you see of it the more you realise how average Stonehenge really is

TH: The Silk Road has always been the greatest overland adventure. However, its now more a collection of routes due to its lack of a definite starting and finishing point. The other thing holding Central Asia back as a destination is visa restrictions travel there is not as free as in other parts of Asia. Still, that gives following Marco Polos trail a rarity value that makes other travellers ears prick up. It will get more popular the key question is how.

HK: Hearing Aboriginal stories round a camp fire in Australia could have appeared in the historical category or the cultural one…

TH: More and more visitors to Australia realise that history didnt begin with Captain Cook (who discovered Australia and claimed it for England). In some areas, Aboriginal people still maintain traditions that are among the oldest in the world. These are better understood now than ever before and a visit to an Aboriginal area and a cultural tour is increasingly popular for visitors to Australia. We wanted to reflect this in the awards.

HK: In the person I’d most like to travel with category, you have Michael Palin, historian Dan Cruickshank, adventurer Charlie Boorman, chef Gordon Ramsay but no room for Herodotus chasing Persians, Howard Carter in search of the Pyramids or Agatha Christie digging around in Iraq… Oh, hang on, you mean ‘alive’ people

TH: Yes, though a trip around the Med in Herodotus day would have been an incredible journey. If I had to answer this one, Id choose to travel with Saladin when he evicted the Franks from Jerusalem.

HK: In the British categories, it’s good to see Hadrian’s Wall get a nomination but there are so many other great historical sites as well and not all of them are called Stonehenge. What needs to be done to promote Britain’s oldest cultures its prehistoric sites, its Roman legacy and its Anglo-Saxon heritage? Is the tourism sector missing a beat?

TH: Whats amazing about Britains prehistory is how the more you see of it the more you realise how average Stonehenge really is. Average setting, overpriced and overcrowded. The Bronze Age circles and houses on Orkney and in the Western Isles knock it for six, and are deserted and usually free. As for Anglo-Saxon and Roman, I find it amazing how little is communicated of what a dynamic area of history this is. Its one area were still discovering all the time the Staffordshire Hoard is an excellent example. Id be promoting this as an area of history where the scope to make fresh discoveries is huge its a book that has yet to be fully written and one that is hugely exciting. More exciting than solstice at Stonehenge anyway.

HK: What is your view of historical and cultural tourism and its potential both worldwide and in the UK?

TH: History is one of the most important themes in tourism and, as an area of the market, it has grown considerably more popular and more specialised in recent years. Its safe to say theres much more to come, in particular from big-hitters like Petra, where visitor number are up 50% year-on-year. Following the journeys of great explorers is another popular growth area. History buffs are travelling further than ever before and theyre looking to explore their own particular interests I know this because I spent two days in Eritrea following the path of a dismantled cable-car which once linked the capital with the sea.

HK: What’s the ‘next big thing’ in historical and cultural tourism?

TH: I wish I knew! But people tend to like sites associated with death and depravity, so probably something along those lines.

Voting ends 31st May – click here to support the ancients!

Interview: Esther Jacobson-Tepfer on the Hidden Archaeology of Mongolia’s Altai Mountains

Archaeology and Landscape in the Altai Mountains of Mongolia is an ambitious project designed to provide the first ever in-depth survey of the cultural landscape of one of the most remote regions of the world. The Altai Mountains are on the western edge of Mongolia, wedged along the borders of China and Russia, and home to archaeological marvels such as engraved standing stones and rock art. We spoke to project leader Esther Jacobson-Tepfer, a Professor of Asian Art at the University of Oregon, whose first visit to the Altai (or Altay) Mountains in 1994 became the catalyst for the project, an initiative undertaken with Mongolian and Russian researchers.

The region’s human history dates back thousands of years but is little documented until now.

A new book, Archaeology and Landscape in the Mongolian Altai: An Atlas, documents the work undertaken by Dr Jacobson-Tepfer and her team, and is complemented by an extensive website that gives the world a long-awaited insight into this little explored region.

In this interview with Heritage Key, Dr Jacobson-Tepfer explains how the project came about and what she hopes it will achieve.

HK: Most people know very little about Mongolia, and even less about the specifics of the Altai Mountains. Can you explain why the region is so important from an archaeological perspective?

The study area in the Altai Mountains.EJT: Scientists have long recognized that Mongolia (especially the Gobi Region) was a significant cultural hearth in the Paleolithic Period. With its endless steppe, Mongolia was also a major stage for the emergence of North Asian pastoralism in the pre-Bronze Age and its spread in the Bronze Age.

More specifically, the Altai Mountains appear to have constituted a singularly generative cultural region through that period and right up through the Turkic Period. This is probably due to several factors. With their distinctive mountain steppe environment, the Altai served as a transition zone between forest steppe (to the north) and desert steppe (to the south), thus providing a rich biosphere for early hunters and pastoralists, both sedentary and mobile.

Secondly, the Altai Mountains can be seen as both dividing Central from North Asia and joining them. In addition, they have traditionally been an important source of metals. For these reasons, undoubtedly, they are unusually rich in the archaeology of the Bronze and Early Iron ages, but also for the archaeology of the iron-working Trks.

HK: Would it be fair to say that until your project, little of archaeological interest was properly documented in the region and, since V.V. Sapozhnikov first explored it in the early 1900s, little has probably changed, either?

EJT: I think that is generally correct. A number of Mongolian and Russian archaeologists undertook surveys during the 20th century, but almost no-one went back to document that material. An exception to this is represented by the survey of Turkic image stones by Bayar and Erdenebaatar that I refer to in the book; their work, however, published in Mongolian, focused primarily on materials within well-known valleys and within the eastern sector of Bayan lgiy. When we first went into the Mongolian Altai, in 1994, I think the region looked pretty much as it was seen by Sapozhnikov except that the glaciers had greatly receded in the preceding 80 years.

HK: We don’t know a great deal about Bronze and Iron Age people of the region probably we know less about these people than their contemporaries anywhere else in the world…

EJT: That is probably correct with regard to the cultures and peoples of the Bronze Age. As far as the Early Iron Age goes, our knowledge is much more extensive. Unfortunately, virtually all of the written documentation of the important Turkic cultures of the Altai and adjoining Sayan regions are in Mongolian or Russian and have not been translated; for that reason, they are more or less out of the reach of interested Westerners.

HK: What were your original goals when you started the project? Did you foresee that it would become such a large-scale project stretching over so many years?

EJT: That is a big question! When we first began to survey the area that became our study region, we were interested only in rock art: in identifying concentrations and in documenting them. One might say that we had no idea of the potential enormity of our project. Only as it became clear that we had identified two of the largest rock art concentrations in North and Central Asia and one of the oldest did we begin to recognize the possible scope of our work. By 1997, I had also become very interested in the other monument types and had begun to document them more deliberatively and in a more organized fashion. It was then that I began to formulate the larger, long-range project with my colleagues, James Meacham and Gary Tepfer.

HK: The Altai project had its origins in Russia following your first visit there in 1989. Can you tell us how this came about and some of the challenges particularly as an American you originally encountered studying the region?

EJT: As so often happens, I fell into a series of unexpected opportunities. As as scholar of the art of the Early Nomads of the Eurasian Steppe, I had become impatient with the limitations imposed by un-provenanced (for the most part) materials in museums and publications. I wanted to look for materials in the field that would corroborate or clarify my understandings. By good fortune I had been put into contact with a researcher who was interested in collaboration with a foreign scholar in the Russian Altai.

When I began to go into that region between 1989 and 1993, the closer we got to the border with Mongolia, the richer the archaeology seemed to become; or, I should say, the more interesting to me became the surface archaeology in the Steppe region of southeastern Altai and the more I sensed that the material would be even more considerable on the Mongolian side of the border.

In those years, the challenges of going into that remote region of South Siberia were still considerable and included everything from getting the right permissions to getting flights out to Siberia to transferring the funding that was necessary to mount our expeditions. At the beginning it was even a problem getting down into the Altai region since we had to go through then-closed cities. And, of course, working in a foreign language with people who had had little contact with Americans raised its own, interesting, challenges.

HK: The Altai, while predominantly in Mongolia, do straddle the borders with China, Russia and even Kazakhstan did this present any problems with bureaucracy or having to deal with various cultures or laws?

EJT: Not really, since we were never able to cross borders in that part of the world. In order to get to the Russian Altai, we had to go through Russia; and in order to work on the Mongolian side, we still had to go through Ulaanbaatar. Our Russian colleagues could go back and forth across the border, but even that was frequently difficult and fraught with many financial and political problems.

Chance encounters or long talks with herders often gave us invaluable information about where to seek archaeological concentrations.

HK: You talk in the introduction to the book about getting to know the local herders. Can you tell us more about how important the support and friendship of the local people has been?

EJT: One of the most important aspects of our relationship with the Kazakh and Tuvan herders with whom we became acquainted was that their daily lives and seasonal movements up and down the valleys mirrored the lives of herders in that region for the last few thousand years.

For example, working on a rock art site high on a hillside and documenting several caravan scenes from the Bronze Age, we could look down on households hundreds of animals, loaded camels led by men and women on horseback, occasional trucks full of belongings moving down to lower pastures for the autumn.

The only difference between the ancient scenes we were recording and what we saw below us was that then they used yaks instead of camels or trucks and they moved on foot and not on horseback. But beyond that mirroring of the past, our friends offered us gracious hospitality that was particularly welcome in the difficult working conditions of the Altai. By being able, in turn, to offer them both hospitality in our modest tents or even, occasionally, essential help, we were able to cement our relationships with several families. Chance encounters or long talks with herders often gave us invaluable information about where to seek archaeological concentrations; these conversations also enlightened us about aspects of their daily lives that are not particularly visible to outsiders.

HK: Mongolians and nomadic herders in particular are such a resilient people, having to withstand harsh climates and terrains. What can archaeology tell us about their lives, and the ancient ways they still use today?

EJT: That is a difficult question and one that would really demand a very long answer. It is a question that caused me to conceive of and bring the atlas to completion. The archaeology we have recorded falls into two broad categories. The first reflects the ritual or ceremonial aspects of ancient lives: how people and cultures organized their monuments in space, how they constructed them according to apparent ritual requirements, where they buried their dead, and so forth. Within the atlas we have tried to elaborate on these issues, identifying patterns of structure, location, and orientation, for example, and speculating on the concerns underlying those patterns.

The second category of ancient monuments is that occupied by rock art, such as we discuss in the atlas and such as I have written about more extensively in other publications. Rock art invariably reflects the concerns of daily lifeherding, hunting, household scenes, for example and even the concerns of individuals. In a real sense, it allows us to penetrate back through time to observe the workings of individual people male and female, adult and even child.

HK: The area around Ulaanbataar is increasingly familiar to Westerners thanks to the emergence of the Trans-Siberian as a popular overland tourist route, and the Nadam festival is generally included on most international tourism calendars. What is the potential for tourism to develop westwards, and can archaeology and cultural heritage play a role in this?

EJT: Over the years we worked in our study region, we were increasingly aware of the destruction of archaeological materials and of the landscape, primarily through the activities of local herders and thoughtless tourists. Would silence be better in that situation or would it be better to speak out?

Mongolia is contemplating building a large motor route between Ulaanbaatar and the western aimags. That would certainly increase the tourism pressure on a region that is already unprepared to deal with the tourist traffic it has. In publishing the atlas, we struggled between two considerations: that making this material known would only increase the destructive pressure on the region and its cultural heritage; and, conversely, that only by making it known would it be possible to develop protective measures to secure that heritage.

We decided that the second hypothesis was more accurate; and that offering a means for educating tour leaders and tourists would ultimately serve our concerns for preservation. But I have also been working with a number of cultural heritage initiatives primarily related to UNESCO‘s World Heritage program. I would hope that these initiatives, as well as the self-interest of local communities and authorities would help to secure the preservation of their cultural heritage.

HK: The book that has resulted from the project is so much more than a photographic journey through the region, or even an atlas. It’s a self-contained library of images, history, archaeology and culture. The maps, the photos and the accompanying words are all very detailed, and everything is integrated online. Was this your original intention?

EJT: Yes, this is exactly what we wanted to do. In this we were aided by three important factors. The first was the receipt of a generous grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The second was that our publisher, ESRI, agreed to have us take over much of the design of the book while at the same time retaining important editorial oversight. The third factor was that we have within the University of Oregon’s Knight Library an excellent team for the development of internet-based portals. It was a great pleasure for Jim (Meacham) and I to work with our colleagues there – to have someone who could translate our rather developed conception into reality. (The website can be viewed here.)

HK: What have been some of the challenges of juggling such a large project and so much information?

EJT: The development of this project and then its multi-year completion have been for me, over many years, all-consuming. When we undertook this project, there were no models for us to follow in either the development of the database or the organization of materials over such a large space and time. Working out the basic organizing principles was a huge project; and keeping all that information in order really stretched my organizational skills!

HK: How important has mapping technology and modeling been to the project?

EJT: Mapping and modeling have been central to the success of the project, both in its development and in its completion. It is one thing to talk about the distribution of a monument type, for example, and to show a few pictures; but to actually display that distribution on a map and to compare it with the distribution of other monument typologies offers a far deeper understanding, I think, of the region’s cultural past. Mapping allowed me to see what was actually going on with all the data recording we were doing in the field; and maps have allowed us to convey to others the region’s rich archaeological textures over both space and over time.

HK: What does the future hold for the project, and what more needs to be done to document and protect the cultural heritage of the region?

EJT: With the publication of the atlas, website, and Mongolian Altai Image Collection, we have brought this particular project to completion. It has not, however, come to an end. I am continuing to work with Jim Meacham and his colleagues on the refinement of the database so that it would be more transparent to other scholars in the field. I hope, also, that other scholars will expand what we have done in our study area by documenting and analyzing the very rich archaeological heritage of southern Bayan lgiy and Khovd aimags.

My own major project now is to archive the vast amount of material I have on Altai rock art and to develop some publicly accessible means (print or web-based) to help people navigate through this material. It is, in my opinion, a priceless part of Mongolia’s cultural heritage and I want it to help preserve it as a part of human knowledge and as a major element in the region’s cultural heritage. I anticipate that this endeavor, together with my work with UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre on a number of Altai Mountain initiatives, will take several years.

How to Train Your Dragon Movie Could Help Teach us Humans to Play Nice

Still image from How to Train Your DragonI went to see How to Tame Your Dragon at the weekend – a beautiful and delightful film by Dreamworks Animation about Hiccup, a distinctly un-Viking-like young boy from a village of blood-thirsty Vikings. Hiccup discovers that creatures who are different from them are not necessarily the enemy a discovery that his marauding fellow Vikings are unlikely to believe easily. Differentiating foreign from invading is a difficult concept that mankind has long struggled to grasp. But do we really still live in an era where a social message like this is necessary – are we still as socially and politically sophisticated as animated Vikings?

Differentiating foreign from invading is a difficult concept that mankind has long struggled to grasp

The film doesnt give a huge amount of insight into the real day-to-day life of the Vikings theyre satisfyingly large, bearded and fierce, but historical fidelity ends there. For instance, the violent Vikings all have Scottish accents and the cute Vikings are American, the landscape would be impossible to sail in and out of, and they sit around campfires built on mountainous terraces of wobbly wooden scaffolding. Oh, and these Vikings are plagued by a host of multi-coloured dragons of many different breeds, which set themselves on fire and steal fish. Unlike the real Vikings.

Psychologically, however, there were many aspects of the film that resonated as authentic. The sight of a fleet of frightened, angry, determined, confused Vikings sailing out into the unknown determined to beat whatever threat lurked out there. The anxiety of the teen preparing to inherit her parents war. The ambivalence of the father torn between his son and his tribe. Especially, the general, all-encompassing sense of us and them that was the focal point of the story.

Divide and Conquer

Still image from the movie How to Train Your DragonHow to Tame Your Dragon is really about the way in which we create divisions and make assumptions about little-known and different nations. This must have happened all the time, we think, back in the time of the Vikings, when cultures were still emerging from blinkered ignorance into an unknown world. Now were sophisticated, cosmopolitan, and armed with facts, images and the benefit of the worlds experience online and in the press. Weve come a long way since the Vikings, right?

Ancient cultures were often more cosmopolitan than we like to think. Humans have always roamed the world, and evidence of Siberians in China and an Asian in Roman Vagnari showed that even very early foreigners found a role, however inferior, in foreign cultures, or at least were allowed to exist alongside them.The famous Silk Road, stretching from China, through the Middle East, as far as Rome, represented a hugely effective trade route through which cultures learnt about each other.

In ancient Egypt, they sailed to the Land of Punt which was so other-worldly and resource-rich that they dubbed it the Land of the Gods. When the Egyptians discovered baboons in this magical land, they didnt catapult them to death like these movie Vikings they adopted them as pets, just as Hiccup would have done.

The active imperialism of the ancient world gave occupying and occupied states the kind of insights into foreign lifestyles that we dont experience today. Egypt was controlled by Rome and Greece at different points, leading to Antony and Cleopatra establishing the most celebrated ancient international love story of all time, and the emergence of Alexandria as the centre of Greek philosophy.

Half the world was taken over by Rome, who conquered through very grown-up strategies of interaction, assimilation and culture. Im not saying these were just cosy love-ins with occupying forces just that the immediacy of a different culture being able to take over your country completely is something that we dont experience to the same extent in the world today.

Modern Vikings

Then, as now, our default attitude towards foreign civilizations is often to either trade with them or wage war with them (or refuse to trade with them – a kind of semi-war). These days, surprisingly, we often still go in for unjust wars and attempt to wipe out cultures that we dont like. At the same time, we clearly have a strong interest in foreign civilizations. Unlike the colonised Egyptians and ancient Brits, we now view other cultures from a distance, as tourists, travellers, virtual explorers (click here to start), and consumers, and, of course, through films.

Still image from<br /> movie How to Train Your DragonI asked my 4-year-old which character hed liked the most in the film. Without hesitation he replied The big Viking, because he was the best fighter. Not the boy who was the first Viking ever to make friends with a dragon and (minor spoiler alert) go on amazing dragon rides? Or the cool girl Viking?. No the big Viking, because he was the best fighter. Of course.

The desire to discover and learn from foreign cultures has always been there, as has the desire to whack them over the head with a big heavy club (after all, it’s in our genes). Weve definitely come some way since the Vikings, but theres still plenty more for us (some more than others) to learn. Luckily, we still have films like How to Train Your Dragon and history – to help or teach us how to behave. With an iPhone app and game also available, we should really be able to study hard.

Photographer Interview: John Gollings on Kashgar

John GollingsKashgar has for centuries been a destination for visitors from all over the world. Originally, it was a pivotal point on the ancient Silk Road trading routes, standing at the crossroads of the route linking Kyrgyzstan to Islamabad in Pakistan, and the one heading to modern-day Istanbul and Damascus from the larger Chinese cities to the east.

Today, a team from the Asia Institute at Australia’s Monash University, working with Chinas Xinjiang Normal University, is hoping to help put Kashgar back on on the traveller’s map this time not as a trade destination, but as a tourist one.

Monash’s Kashgar project team invited John Gollings, one of Australia’s most celebrated photographers, to create a book of photo essays Kashgar: Oasis on Chinas Old Silk Road to help illustrate the vibrancy and colour of one of China’s most important western outposts. It is hoped the book will inspire tourism to the region, and also promote other forms of cultural and economic development.

We caught up with John Gollings to chat about his work photographing Kashgar.

KashgarWhat fascinates you most about Kashgar?

Its historic connection to the Western world as an entry point to China its remoteness contradicts the knowledge that it was the centre of the ancient world of trade and commerce.

What sets it apart from other Chinese cities?

Its Islamic civic architecture and the medieval mud city itself. It’s rare to be able to visit a living city unchanged for hundreds of years.

How long did you spend there? You shot upwards of 7,000 photos…

The trip was well researched before we left, with categories to be covered, like archeology, architecture, portraits, daily life, religion, and so forth, so it was possible to do in just under three weeks of non-stop shooting and travelling. I had very good local guides, both Han and Uigar, who facilitated local access to houses and mosques.

KashgarYour photos capture remarkably clearly the daily lives of local people. Flicking through the chapter called Merchants and Markets, it is almost possible to hear the vibrancy of the markets and smell the fresh produce and the animals. The markets have always been a lifeblood of Kashgar. Can you tell us a bit about the time you spent shooting this section of the book?

The area is remarkably fertile and trading is the lifeblood of Kashgar, so the markets are extensive this made it easy to find material. However I shot a lot of images of each area, and I was constantly looking for compositions that had their own power and sense of balance. I tend to use either very long lenses or very wide angle as a way of quickly building a narrative into the image. I believe a well composed image gives credibility to the story and sets it apart from a gratuitously attractive snapshot.

Animals feature prominently in your photos particularly working animals like donkeys, camels and horses. Was this deliberate?

It was deliberate, but only because the animals are central to the life of the place and I was struck by the sense of equivalence to the Western world: the donkey is the family sedan, the camel is the tractor, and the horse is the semi-trailer! The animal as the automobile is as pervasive as the car in the West and as normal.

You also go inside people’s homes, into mosques, shrines and other private places. How difficult was it to secure access and gain the trust of the people?

We asked permission, worked quickly, didn’t rearrange anything, accepted hospitality and respected traditions as the local guides explained them. However, it was generallyspontaneous, occasionally a call had been made the day before to make a time, but most people were much more open and generous than in the West, and less suspicious of our motives.

KashgarCan you tell us a bit about your time in the Old City?

The architecture of the Old City is a mix of English ‘colonial’, eclectic Victoriana, with the mud brick style of oasis cities around the world. It’s simple and pragmatic, with narrow streets and a close community spirit. It is unique and timeless, and to the visitor the thrill is the time travel back some 500 years a priceless education. The Chinese are all for ‘modernisation’, some buildings are being pulled down to make freeways and roads, other parts because the Chinese fear the Old City is a breeding ground for terrorists. Equally, the locals don’t want to live in a museum without urban services like sewerage, water and power, and they don’t understand the tourist potential or the cultural value of their own city, so it is very threatened by both Uigar and Han.

kashgar

The area surrounding Mauri Tim appears desolate and vast in your photos almost eerie…

It’s a moonscape and cold and empty, especially in winter. It is so rugged one can only have respect for the inhabitants and their integration with nature and its forces. It also explains the very fatty diet which keeps them warm.

The Grotto of the Three Immortal Buddhas is also vast …

Equally true of the landscape, but the religious plurality is emphasised as you travel across the mountains.

Sites like Mauri Tim and the Grotto of the Three Immortal Buddhas are little known outside archaeological circles, and much of the area is yet to be properly excavated. Can you see this changing?

Monash University are pushing hard to change this but it is physically and politically frustrating. It will be slow!

kashgarKashgar was the scene of a terrorist attack during the Olympics what impact has this had on the city and its spirit?

And the recent riots as well! It is devastating and divisive and has set back the integration many years. There are moral, ethical and geo-political issues of nationalism and economic imperatives that are hard to resolve happily. It had seemed to exist as a mutually profitable detente between Uigar and Han, but there is much more suspicion now.

What do you hope this book achieves?

More outside knowledge of the area and some greater tourism, which would reinforce local pride and respect for protecting their own culture.

Finally, you have travelled to and worked in many other ancient cities. What have been some of your favourites?

I’ve done a lot of work in India and Cambodia, documenting imperial cities of the 1st millennia, in particular Vijayanagara and Angkor Wat which are both now world heritage sites.

All images by John Gollings, and reproduced from Kashgar: Oasis on Chinas Old Silk Road

New ‘Nazca’ Lines found in Kazakh Mountains

Kazakhstan has become the latest hotbed of UFOspeculation, as experts announce the discovery of a set of geoglyphs in a remote mountainous region of the huge central Asian county. The huge lines, created either by removing topsoil or by decorating with various stones, have been spotted in the country’s southern Karatau range.

And though many will draw comparisons with the better known ‘Nazca Lines‘ of Peru, the Kazakh geoglyphs are strikingly different. Rather than depicting the menagerie of fish, lizards, monkeys, birds and other animals favoured by the mysterious Nazcas, they show a humanoid figure huddled between two odd-shaped structures.

Some UFO ‘scholars’ believe the lines are ancient distress signals to the stars


Peru, Nazca, Nazca Lines, MonkeyThe revelation has sparked a hive of interest from UFOresearchers, some of whom believe the lines are ancient markers set out by tribes to entice alien contact.

Kazakh site Vesti expects UFOscholars to claim the enigmatic figure is an alien who once visited earth, and that the lines may have once been part of a distress signal pleading for help from ‘star gods’.

Kazakhstan has a rich history, having been perched in the centre of the famous Silk Road – a vital trade route which ran between Europe and the Far East from as far back as the first millennium BC. The lines are close to the historical city of Taraz, an important stop on the route.

Daming Palace In Xi’an Undergoes Major Restoration As National Relics Park Is Created

Work is ongoing in China on a major project to restore Daming Palace the 1,100 year-old ruling centre of the Tang Dynasty in modern Xian (formerly the Tang capital, Changan) and around it build an expansive National Relics Park. The project was officially launched in October of last year, and is hoped to be completed by October 2010.

Daming Palace was established in 634 AD, in the eight year of the reign of Emperor Taizong. It was the largest of three major palaces in Changan, and the political hub of the empire for 240 years, until the Tang moved their capital to Luoyang in Henan Province in 904. Its architecture was hugely influential on many other major public buildings constructed in its wake, and Daming Palace remains one of the largest and finest examples of the Tang style. Its grounds cover 3.2 square kilometres, and feature various terraces, halls, temples, pavilions and administrative buildings, all of which will be incorporated into the Relics Park.

The Daming Palace Heritage Site Preservation Revelation Project is a key scheme among 100 others outlined under Chinas Eleventh Five-Year Plan. It’s intended to be a model of large-scale heritage site restoration, and with it demonstrate how such an endeavour can help drive wider city development.

The long-term goal is for Daming Palace to be listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The project is a perfect integration between [the] preservation of ancient cultural heritage and [the] construction of ecological landscape, states the DMGYZ website. Its hoped to be a masterpiece, that makes the most of the buildings aesthetic features, while also fulfilling more utilitarian goals such as accommodating citizens needs of recreation, residence and environment, and mirroring the international standards for improving the humanistic ambience and building up [of] new urban districts.

The long-term goal is for Daming Palace to be listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Additionally, since Xian is the starting point of the celebrated Silk Road the 2,000-year-old trade route linking Asia and Europe its also hoped that the project will aid the drive by China and other East Asian countries to get numerous major landmarks on the Silk Roads path added to the UNESCO list. Currently, several sites along the road have been nominated by the Chinese government for inclusion, although the ancient city of Kashgar remains conspicuously absent from the list.

Picture by Richard White. All rights reserved.

Roads Not-So-Less Travelled

A blog by Bija Knowles got me thinking about travel to ancient destinations.

In particular, Bija talks about Libya and its move towards promoting itself more as a tourist destination. Libya has long been one of the Holy Grails of travel writing because it’s been so difficult to get into (and to get around) it independently until now. This story by Jim Keeble has more on how the country is finally opening up to tourism.

It’s the same in countries along the old Silk Road routes, which are more tourist-friendly than ever. This encourages more people to discover the historic trading paths for themselves. And books like Silk Roads: A Route and Planning Guideby Trailblazer make it relatively easy to plan such trips.

The Benefits of Tourism

Tourism doesn’t only bring money to sometimes impoverished regions or leave visitors with stamps from exotic destinations in their passports. It also often draws external attention to local issues and puts previously ignored stories closer to the international spotlight. Would, for instance, an influx of tourism and the publicity surrounding it help preserve sites threatened with destruction, such as Kashgar? George Mitchell’s wonderful photos in Kashgar: Oasis City on China’s Old Silk Road illustrate why the city is worth preserving (and seeing for oneself).

Before Lonely Planet, it was only the daring (or the sometimes daft) who travelled overland through the Middle East

Guide book publishers play a huge role in deciding who goes where and when. Lonely Planet is perhaps the most obvious example of one publisher originally just one couple typing away on their kitchen table changing the travel landscape and opening up new destinations. Before Lonely Planet, it was only the daring (or the sometimes daft) who travelled overland through the Middle East, stopping at the Pyramids and Petra along the way, or who saw Ethiopias ancient churches for themselves. Perhaps they were the lucky ones; people who experienced those magical places before they were forced to share them with busloads of other camera-wielding tourists.

Publishers such as Trailblazer and Bradt are setting themselves apart from the Lonely Planets by presenting formerly off-limits destinations to the mass tourism market. Bradts Iran and North Africa: The Roman Coast are excellent examples.

Regardless of how we get there or whose advice we follow, we are all surely richer for being able to share the worlds ancient wonders. But with this good fortune comes a duty of care and a responsibility to help preserve them. How this is best achieved is a debate for another day.

How did leprosy spread across the ancient world?

Over the past five weeks two new studies have been released that are giving scholars new clues as to how leprosy became a global scourge.

The first, and most dramatic, find came out at the end of May and reported on the analysis of a 4,000 year old skeleton from the site of Balathal, a Harappa site, in India. The analysis detected the presence of leprosy, making it, by far, the oldest case known. (For comparison the next oldest cases date to nearly 2,500 years ago)

This study means that the troops of Alexander the Great might well have spread the disease after they returned home from their campaign in India a popular idea given historical accounts that describe a disease that sounds like leprosy coming in their wake.

It also makes it possible that the 3,500 year old Ebers Papyrus, in Ancient Egypt, did in fact discuss leprosy.

The second study wasreleased just a weekago online in the Journal of Archaeological Science. Itoffers a possible reason why such virulent outbreaks occurred in the 4th century Byzantine World, and then Middle Ages Europe.

The team was led by G. Michael Taylor of the Centre for Infectious Diseases and International Health at University College, London.

In it the scientists analyze the skeleton of an adult female found in Uzbekistan dating from the 1st 4th century A.D and find that she had leprosy.

Now,while there are other cases of leprosy known inCentral Asia, what is specialaboutthis case isthat the scientists were able to identify the type she had.It turned out that genetically its the same type (type 3) as those that pop up in Europe and in afew instances, China.

This isnt likely to be a coincidence.

You see at the end of the second century B.C. China opened its export market for silk. This quickly mothballed into what we call the Silk Road linking China, Central Asia and Europe in an ancient long-distance trade route. The scientists theorize that this trade route may have aided the spread of leprosy westward to Europe.

The idea certainly seems plausible. Just look at this timeline of the history of leprosy and you can see the overlap between outbreaks in East Asia and Europe.

Type 3 strains have also been reported in China and it is possible that leprosy may have reached Uzbekistan and other regions of Central Asia through the movement of peoples and trade westwards and southwards, eventually reaching Europe, theteam says in the journal article.

This is supported by the observation of (type 3) strains in Iran and some regions of Turkey.

These discoveries leave some important questions to be answered of course.

Why hasnt there been skeletal remains found of someone with leprosy for the period between 2,000 500 B.C? Did the disease die out between them? Or have we simply not found them yet?

Also, are there more “type 3” cases waiting to be found in Central Asia that can solidly prove a Silk Road avenue of spread?