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Origins, Ancestors, and Imperial Authority in Early Northern Wei Historiography
著者 Duthie, Nina Natasha (撰)
出版年月日2015
ページ190
出版者Columbia University
出版サイト https://www.columbia.edu/
出版地New York, NY, US [紐約, 紐約州, 美國]
資料の種類博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
言語英文=English
学位博士
学校Columbia University
学部・学科名East Asian Languages and Cultures
指導教官Hymes, Robert
卒業年2015
キーワードGenealogy; Emperors; History; East Asian literature
抄録In this dissertation, I explore Wei shu historiography on the early Northern Wei imperial state, which was founded by the Tuoba Xianbei in the late fourth century C.E. In examining the Wei shu narrative of the Northern Wei founding, I illuminate not only the representation of cultural and imperial authority in the reigns of the early Northern Wei emperors, but also investigate historiography on the pre-imperial Tuoba past. I argue that the Wei shu narrative of Tuoba origins and ancestors is constructed from the perspective of the moment of the Northern Wei founding. Or, to view it the other way around, the founding of the Northern Wei imperial state by Tuoba Gui signifies the culmination of the Wei shu narrative on the early Tuoba.
This narrative of the early Tuoba past is of course teleological: Essentially everything in this phase of Tuoba historiography leads up to the moment of the Northern Wei imperial founding, including genealogical descent from a son of Huangdi, who is represented as the Xianbei progenitor, in a remote northern wilderness; the continuous succession of Tuoba rulers that followed; and the journeys that brought the Tuoba out of the wilderness and toward the geographical center.
In focusing on the account of the inaugural reign of Tuoba Gui, the Northern Wei founder, and the record of his ritual practice as emperor, I have discovered tensions in Wei shu historiography that I believe signal toward some of the actual cultural contestation that attended the founding of the Northern Wei imperial state. The Wei shu historiography on Buddhism in the early Northern Wei then, I argue, presents an alternative source of authority, one that stands outside both an imperial Han inheritance and a culturally Tuoba tradition.
目次Introduction 1

Part I
Chapter 1: Origins and Cultural Authority:
Ethnography and Historiography on the Early Xianbei 16

Part II
Prologue: Other Origins of the Tuoba Xianbei 54
Chapter 2: Early Tuoba Imperial Ancestors and Territorial Migrations 66
Chapter 3: Ritual and Imperial Authority in the Founding of the Northern Wei 101
Chapter 4: Imperial Authority and Buddhism in the Early Northern Wei 144

Epilogue 177
Bibliography 184
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8NC601F
ヒット数549
作成日2021.12.13
更新日期2021.12.13



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