日本建筑-中部(神奈良)

Akiko Walley
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摘要

在目前的日本历史中,古坟到奈良时期以4世纪日本列岛上出现的巨大古坟和794年新建立的平安京(今天的京都)放弃了短暂的“永久”首都长冈京(nagaoka - kyu)为结束。这一时期大致对应于4世纪和5世纪大和政体的兴起。大和的“大国王”聚集了盟友,并发起了征服群岛南北“野蛮人”的运动,同时组织了对朝鲜半岛和中国的王国和王朝的外交使团。公元663年,为了对抗新罗和唐朝的联合军,第一次派出有组织的远征军,与百济并肩作战,遭受了巨大的损失。从那时起,大和率先积极采用和实施中国式的政策,最终在Heijō-kyō(710-784)成功地建立了一个规划的城市和行政结构。从7世纪后半叶到8世纪初,随着第一个代表日语的语音系统的发展,受过教育的精英们越来越熟练地掌握了汉语书写系统。这一时期也是佛教被接受和传播的时期,伟大的国王(后来的“皇帝”)和他们强大的盟友的神话起源建立起来,为他们的政治权威提供了新的哲学基础,并使其合法化。简而言之,神奈良是一个充满活力的国家形成的初期,需要大规模的建设项目,从坟墓、寺庙、神社到网格化的城市。然而,仍然存在的只是少数几个例子。因此,这一时期的建筑史研究不可避免地与考古学重叠。由于正在进行的强大的挖掘项目和科学技术的进步,任何对这一时期的研究现在都很快被新的研究所超越。不幸的是,在日本以外从事这一领域研究的学者还不够多,无法跟上每年用日语发表的新发现的速度。日本古代艺术和建筑史仍然是日本和任何西方语言之间研究差距最大的领域之一。这个列表的目的是介绍英语基础研究的选择(很少有可访问的日语著作补充),这可以作为一个跳板,为有兴趣的学生和学者在其他语言的未来研究。
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Architecture of Japan - Middle (Kofun-Nara)
In present Japanese periodization, the Kofun to Nara periods are bookended by the emergence of monumental tumuli across the Japanese archipelago in the 4th century and the abandonment of the short-lived “permanent” capital, Nagaoka-kyō, to the newly established Heian-kyō (present day Kyoto) in 794. The period generally corresponds to the rise of the Yamato polity in the 4th and 5th centuries. The “Great Kings” of Yamato amassed allies and campaigned to subjugate the “barbarians” to the north and south of the archipelago, while organizing diplomatic missions to the kingdoms and dynasties on the Korean peninsula and China. In 663, it dispatched the first organized military expedition across the sea to fight alongside Baekje against the combined forces of Silla and Tang, suffering a monumental loss. Since then, Yamato spearheaded active adoption and implementation of Chinese-style polity, eventually succeeding in establishing a planned city and administrative structure in Heijō-kyō (710–784). Through the latter half of the 7th into early 8th centuries, the educated elites increasingly gained proficiency in the Chinese writing system, as the first phonetic system of representing Japanese developed. The period was also when Buddhism was embraced and disseminated, and the mythological origins of the Great Kings (later “emperors”) and their powerful allies were established, providing new philosophical foundations that defined and legitimized their political authority. In short, Kofun-Nara was a dynamic incipient period of state formation, which required massive construction projects from tombs, temples, and shrines, to gridded cities. What remains still standing, however, are just a handful of examples. The scholarship on architectural history of this period, thus, inevitably overlaps with archaeology. Due to ongoing robust excavation projects and advancement in scientific technology, any study of this period is now quickly surpassed by new research. Unfortunately, there are not enough scholars working in this field outside of Japan to keep up with the rate of new discoveries published each year in Japanese. Ancient Japanese art and architectural history remains one of the fields with the greatest gap between what research is available in Japanese and any Western language. The intent of this list is to introduce a selection of foundational studies in English (with few accessible Japanese works to supplement), which can serve as a springboard for future research in other languages for interested students and scholars.
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