活人法庭上的死者行为:清代法律中的坟墓

IF 0.6 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY LATE IMPERIAL CHINA Pub Date : 2019-01-16 DOI:10.1353/LATE.2018.0011
T. G. Brown
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在帝制晚期的中国,坟墓除了作为死者的安息之地外,还充当了要求土地、保护和隐藏财富以及表达社会地位的强大机制。由于几个复合因素,它们特别有效。明太祖在1370年颁布的火葬禁令,从本质上来说是强制要求建造坟墓,而在随后的几个世纪里,世系制度在中国的传播,传播了与新儒家仪式相关的埋葬习俗帝国通过法典和管理承认坟墓和埋葬在坟墓中的死者的权力。法律条文对侵犯墓地的人规定了严厉的惩罚对于那些没有得到妥善安葬或不幸去世的人,他们的葬礼将被取消
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The Deeds of the Dead in the Courts of the Living: Graves in Qing Law
In late imperial China, graves, in addition to serving as the resting places of the dead, served as a powerful mechanism for claiming land, securing and hiding wealth, and expressing social status. They were particularly effective because of several compounding factors. Ming Taizu’s ban on cremation in 1370 essentially mandated the creation of graves, while the spread of the lineage institution across China in the subsequent centuries disseminated burial practices associated with Neo-Confucian ritual.1 The imperial state recognized the power of graves and the dead buried in them through its law code and its administration. The legal code prescribed harsh punishments for those who violated gravesites.2 For those who had failed to receive a proper burial or had passed away unpropitiously, the
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
25.00%
发文量
8
期刊最新文献
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