在班德哈格尔森林中追踪古代游牧民和中世纪早期统治者

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES South Asian Studies Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/02666030.2022.2163067
Nayanjot Lahiri, M. Rajani, Debdutta Sanyal, Samayita Banerjee, Satyendra Tiwari
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章源于对历史上印度考古学的不安,这在很大程度上与城市和村庄有关。森林和荒野很少出现在那里,除非是在描述与森林土地被驯化有关的不断扩大的农业地形时,或者是在探索通信线路时,其中一些线路会穿过森林地带。由于在研究农田和城市遗址以外的土地方面存在这种差距,因此,带有古代人类使用标志的大片土地并没有成为此类研究的重点。在这里,我们描述了我们在班德哈格尔国家公园和老虎保护区的实地工作及其意义。最早的遗迹可以追溯到公元2世纪的洞穴。中世纪早期的神殿,雕塑和水库始于卡拉丘里国王时期(公元7世纪至公元13世纪),并持续到中世纪晚期,瓦格拉防御工事和宫殿遗迹(公元13世纪起)。当它们沉浸在班德哈格尔的山丘和草地、森林和水体周围时,它们能告诉我们什么,我们在这里进行了探索。
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Tracing Ancient Itinerants and Early Medieval Rulers in the Forests of Bandhavgarh
This article arises out of a disquiet about the archaeology of historical India which has largely been concerned with cities and villages. Forests and wilderness rarely figure there, except in passing when the expanding agricultural terrain is described in relation to forest lands being domesticated or when there is an exploration of lines of communication, some of which pass through forested tracts. Because of this gap in engaging with lands beyond agrarian tracts and city sites, large expanses that carry markers of ancient human use have not centrally figured in such research. Here, we describe our field work in the Bandhavgarh National Park and Tiger Reserve and its implications. The earliest remains go back in the form of caves to the 2nd century CE. Shrines of early medieval antiquity, sculptures, and reservoirs begin in the time of Kalachuri kings (7th century CE till the 13th century CE) and continue into the high medieval with Vaghela fortifications and palace remains (13th century CE onwards). What these can tell us when they are immersed in the hills and meadows of Bandhavgarh, in its forests and around its water bodies, is explored here.
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来源期刊
South Asian Studies
South Asian Studies ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
4.00%
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