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Dvāravatī and Zhenla in the Seventh to Eighth Centuries: A Transregional Ritual Complex
Author Revire, Nicolas
Source Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Volumev.47 n.3
Date2016.10
Pages393 - 417
PublisherDepartment of History, National University of Singapore
Publisher Url http://www.fas.nus.edu.sg/hist/publications/publications2_1.htm
LocationArts Link, Singapore
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
AbstractThe paradigm that the early Southeast Asian polities known as Dvāravatī and Zhenla were respectively, indeed almost exclusively, Buddhist and Hindu/Brahmanical during the second half of the first millennium CE has long remained uncontested. In this reappraisal, however, arguments are presented that challenge this general scholarly opinion. A thorough reassessment of the material culture and inscriptions from these two neighbouring regions of mainland Southeast Asia tempers such clear-cut compartmentalisation and instead emphasises the complex and evolving nature of the religion of that age through the lens of the ideology of merit. The religious affiliation of certain artefacts and inscriptions that are clearly related to this ideology are further examined and questioned.
Table of contentsChanging paradigms in Southeast Asian art and archaeology 393
Time and space: The relationship between Funan, Zhenla and Dvaravati 395
Numismatic and archaeological evidence 400
Inscriptional evidence 409
Merit-making: Who holds the monopoly? 415
ISSN00224634 (P); 14740680 (E)
DOI10.1017/S0022463416000254
Hits164
Created date2017.06.21
Modified date2019.12.20



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