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In this two-volume work, published in 1912, the Hungarian-born
archaeologist Marc Aurel Stein (1862-1943) describes his second
expedition to the deserts of Chinese Turkestan in 1906-8. (His
account of his first expedition, Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan
(1903), is also reissued in this series.) Stein intended this
account to be read by non-specialists, and, like his previous book,
it is highly illustrated and full of interesting details about his
journey and the people he met en route, as well as of the important
archaeological discoveries which still link his name with the
civilisation of this remote and dangerous area. In Volume 1, Stein
describes the problems of setting up the expedition and the
excitement and perils of the route, which took him through the
tribal areas of the North-West Frontier and the kingdom of
Afghanistan, ending with his arrival at the western extremity of
the Great Wall of China.
In this two-volume work, published in 1912, the Hungarian-born
archaeologist Marc Aurel Stein (1862-1943) describes his second
expedition to the deserts of Chinese Turkestan in 1906-8. (His
account of his first expedition, Sand-Buried Ruins of Khotan
(1903), is also reissued in this series.) Stein intended this
account to be read by non-specialists, and, like his previous book,
it is highly illustrated and full of interesting details about his
journey and the people he met en route, as well as of the important
archaeological discoveries which still link his name with the
civilisation of this remote and dangerous area. In Volume 2, Stein
describes the discovery of the caves near the great trading post of
Dunhuang which contained - walled up and almost perfectly preserved
- manuscripts, sculptures, silk cloths, and the Diamond Sutra, the
earliest complete and dated example of a printed book, hidden by
Buddhist monks nine hundred years previously.
Between 1900 and 1901, the Hungarian-born archaeologist Marc Aurel
Stein (1862-1943) made the first of several significant trips
through Central Asia. In 1903, he published this account of his
journey from Calcutta to London via the deserts of Chinese
Turkestan. The text is richly illustrated with photographs of
locations on the route followed by Stein's party, as well as of the
people they encountered and many of the artefacts they excavated in
the vicinity of the ancient oasis town of Khotan. Stein intended
his book to be accessible to non-specialists, and his descriptions
of the many important archaeological discoveries, such as Sanskrit
texts of Buddhist scriptures, are interspersed with compelling
human details and anecdotes about traversing the challenging
terrain of eastern Central Asia. The work of an indefatigable
explorer, this book sheds light on the spread of Graeco-Buddhist
culture along the Silk Route.
The Hungarian-born archaeologist Marc Aurel Stein (1862-1943) is
probably best remembered today for his explorations in Chinese
Turkestan, and especially his discovery of the Buddhist treasure of
Dunhuang, described in his earlier works, Sand-Buried Ruins of
Khotan and Ruins of Desert Cathay (also reissued in this series).
Stein was equally interested in the territory north-west of the
North-West Frontier, and in this highly illustrated 1929 work he
describes an expedition to survey the route of Alexander the
Great's invasion of India in 326 BCE. Having long been intrigued by
'that comparatively small area to the west of the Indus which
Alexander's march of conquest towards India for a brief span of
time illuminates as it were with the light of a meteor', and by
archaeological remains showing a blend of Hellenistic and Buddhist
art, Stein offers a fascinating account of an ancient clash of
civilisations.
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