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Taiwan Archaeology - Local Development and Cultural Boundaries in the China Seas (Hardcover)
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Taiwan Archaeology - Local Development and Cultural Boundaries in the China Seas (Hardcover)
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In Taiwan Archaeology: Local Development and Cultural Boundaries in
the China Seas, Richard Pearson describes the archaeology of the
island, outlining the major discoveries of the past fifty years.
These date from roughly 200,000 years ago to the pivotal
seventeenth century AD, the time of Dutch and Spanish contact and
the entry of Taiwan into global trade markets. The book focuses on
some forty sites and is based on roughly 450 published sources in
English, Chinese, and Japanese and includes a brief discussion of
finds from the surrounding areas of Fujian, Guangdong, the northern
Philippines, and the Ryukyu Islands, noting their significance for
understanding Taiwan. This discussion allows for comparison of the
different historical trajectories of the neighboring regions of the
East and South China Seas through more than five millennia. While
the early chapters are primarily descriptive with some interpretive
conclusions, the final chapter contains discussions of general
topics that integrate and interpret the earlier narrative sections
and highlight some of the most interesting topics of the latest
research, such as the effects of sea level change, ancient exchange
systems of basalt from Penghu and nephrite from Fengtian (Hualien)
and glass beads from Southeast Asia and the China mainland. The
prehistoric people of Taiwan lived in a similar fashion to the
peoples of the adjacent mainland until around 3500 years ago, when
their cultural and political developmental trajectories of
development diverged, as Taiwan became isolated from the
increasingly complex societies of Guangdong and Fujian. New data
show that southern and eastern Taiwan groups participated in
exchange networks with people in Island Southeast Asia as early as
2500 years ago. Unique in its coverage of recent advances in the
study of the long-term history of Taiwan and surrounding areas,
Taiwan Archaeology explores many features of the island’s
premodern past that are key to understanding its current
geopolitical situation.
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