このエントリーをはてなブックマークに追加


ID 63025
Title Alternative
Kofun culture and the ancient Maya: An introductory comparative archaeology of “Out of Eurasia"
JaLCDOI
FullText URL
Author
Aoyama, Kazuo Ibaraki University, College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Matsugi, Takehiko The National Museum of Japanese History, School of Cultural and Social Studies, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies
Abstract
Both the ancient Maya and Kofun society of Japan were cultural regions formed by Homo sapiens groups after leaving the Eurasian continent more than 10,000 years ago. In this paper, we examine their similarities and differences by comparing perspectives on time and space. The two societies were stratified and witnessed the development of monuments that emphasized their verticality. The greatest similarity was the formation of a network society in which local polities coexisted without the institutionalization of centralized leadership at the beginning. Subsequently, the Kofun society adopted the worldview of the Eurasian continent including the concept of the "nation", thereby achieving a new social integration. On the other hand, the ancient Maya, a primary civilization, did not go through the same social process and maintained a sustainable society over a long period of time, maintaining the same form of worldview, monuments, and technological systems. On the similarities rooted in the universality of the human body and cognition, disparity in the process of environmental and social changes, including the direction and distance of "Out of Eurasia", can be seen in the subsequent differences between the ancient Maya and the Japanese archipelago. In this paper, we have illustrated how the similarities and differences created diverse directions of culture and history.
Keywords
Ancient Maya
Kofun
monuments
comparative archaeology
Amo Type
論文(Research Articles)
Publication Title
Dynamics of Civilizations
Published Date
2022-03
Volume
volume1
Publisher
岡山大学文明動態学研究所
Start Page
21
End Page
38
ISSN
2436-8326
Content Type
Journal Article
language
Japanese
Copyright Holders
© 2022 by RIDC
File Version
publisher
NAID