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  1. 学習院大学
  2. 附置研究施設等
  3. 東洋文化研究所
  4. 東洋文化研究
  5. (1)

秦始皇帝長城伝説とその舞台 : 秦碣石宮と孟姜女伝説をつなぐもの (伝統中国の政治理念と支配)

http://hdl.handle.net/10959/2816
http://hdl.handle.net/10959/2816
5a93d684-ad5f-40c9-9c12-7ef407fd48df
名前 / ファイル ライセンス アクション
toyobunka_1_15_32.pdf toyobunka_1_15_32.pdf (803.7 kB)
Item type 紀要論文 / Departmental Bulletin Paper(1)
公開日 2013-03-15
タイトル
タイトル 秦始皇帝長城伝説とその舞台 : 秦碣石宮と孟姜女伝説をつなぐもの (伝統中国の政治理念と支配)
言語 ja
タイトル
タイトル シン シコウテイ チョウジョウ デンセツ ト ソノ ブタイ シン ケッセキキュウ ト モウキョウジョ デンセツ オ ツナグ モノ デントウ チュウゴク ノ セイジ リネン トシハイ
言語 ja-Kana
タイトル
タイトル The Legend of the First Qin Dynasty Emperor's Great Wall and Its Setting : Linking the Jieshi Palaces to the Mengjiangnü Legend (Traditional Chinese Political Ideology and Governance)
言語 en
言語
言語 jpn
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
資源タイプ departmental bulletin paper
著者 鶴間, 和幸

× 鶴間, 和幸

WEKO 38102
CiNii ID 1000050143144
e-Rad 50143144
AID DA04164291

ja 鶴間, 和幸

ja-Kana ツルマ, カズユキ

en Tsuruma, Kazuyuki

Search repository
抄録
内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 To the northwest of the city of Qinhuangdao秦皇島in Heibei Province, in Wangfushi望夫石Village on the provincial border with Liaoning遼寧stands the mausoleum of MengjiangnU孟姜女. According to the legend, MengjiangnU is a tragic heroine who lived during the early days of the Qin Dynasty. Soon after marriage her husband was conscripted to work in the construction of the Great Wall. Concerned about his welfare, she followed him to the construction  site and found that he had been killed in a cave-in. While she wept, they found her husband’s remains in the rubble, and she then returned home with the body. However, MengjiangnU’s mausoleum  is actually situated on the site of the Ming period Great Wal1, while the Qin period Great Wall is located much farther north, clearly indicating that the legend is not from the Qin period. Indeed, legends of later eras not directly connected with the Qin period are not very helpful as historical source materials for its study;however, the situation changed greatly when in 19820n the seashore across the water from the Jiangnushi姜女石the remains of a large cluster of remote palaces from the Qin and Han periods were unearthed. The purpose of the present article is to trace more systematically the development from the Great Wall legend to the MengjiangnU legend in an attempt to discover historical facts about the Qin period from folklore of a later era.   The investigation reveals that the development of such Great Wall folklore as the MengjiangnU legend is connected to confusion concerning  historical sites that from its setting in the Jieshi ma石peaks on the Bohai seacoast. That is to say, Iegends lamenting the hardships  and casualties suffered by the anonymous masses who built the Great Wall were originally derived from tales of the wives of Qiliang 杞梁who lost their husbands in battle. The author estimates that the change of setting from the battlefield to the Great Wall and the creation of the MengjiangnU legend took place in pre-Tang China during the latter part of Wei and Jin eras of the Northern and Southern Dynasties period. Furthermore, the geographical location for the new Iegend, Yuwang禺王site in the Jieshi peaks on the Bohai seacoast, despite being a cluster of remote palaces completely unrelated  to the Great Wall built during the Qin and Han periods, is situated on the eastern edge of the Great Wall of the Northern Qi Dynasty of the Wei and Jin eras of the Northern and Southern Dynasties period. Jieshimen碍石門, formed by two rock shoals on the Bohai Coast, was inscribed as a monument to the first Qin emperor, but was later destroyed on purpose probably as an act of rebellion against the emperor. During the Wei and Jin eras of the Northern and Southern Dynasties period, the original Jieshi peaks, from which residents of the remote palaces high above the coast could look out on the mystical eastern sea, were forgotten, and replaced by towering inland Jiehi peaks climbed by emperors of the Northern Wei, Northern Qi, and Tang Dynasties to view the eastern sea. It was in this way that the Mengjiangnu mausoleum and JiangnUshi  came to be located on the Bohai Coast with no relation what so ever to the original Jieshi palaces of the Qin period. Nevertheless,  a historical setting forgotten in the historical record has been revived by the archeological excavation of the Qin and Han period Jieshi palaces on the Bohai Coast.
書誌情報 ja : 東洋文化研究
en : Journal of Asian cultures

号 1, p. 15-32, 発行日 1999-03-31
出版者
出版者 学習院大学東洋文化研究所
言語 ja
ISSN
収録物識別子タイプ PISSN
収録物識別子 13449850
書誌レコードID
収録物識別子タイプ NCID
収録物識別子 AA11335469
フォーマット
内容記述タイプ Other
内容記述 application/pdf
著者版フラグ
出版タイプ VoR
出版タイプResource http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
URI
識別子 http://hdl.handle.net/10959/2816
識別子タイプ HDL
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