Author:
Oh Chang Seok,Kang In Uk,Hong Jong Ha,Slepchenko Sergey,Park Jun Bum,Shin Dong Hoon
Abstract
Joseon mummies have proved to be excellent subjects for scientific research on the health and disease statuses of pre-modern Korean peoples. Despite its academic significance, the origins of the Hoegwakmyo tomb in which the Joseon mummy was discovered have not yet been entirely revealed. Meanwhile, over the past several decades, there have been some reports on mummies and cultural artifacts preserved very well in the tombs of several Chinese dynasties (especially Song, Yuan, Ming and Qing). Although the Chinese tombs were very diverse in structure, we note that some graves among them were structurally very similar to Joseon Hoegwakmyo tombs. Before the Hoegwakmyo tomb in Korea, there were already similar tombs in China, inside which dead persons were mummified like the Joseon mummies. Considering that the Hoegwakmyo tomb of the Joseon Dynasty was established by the influence of the Confucian ideology, the Korean and Chinese mummies might share common cultural origins in history.
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Endoscopy in Mummy Studies;The Handbook of Mummy Studies;2021
2. Mummy Clothing Found in East Asia;The Handbook of Mummy Studies;2021
3. Joseon Dynasty Mummies of Korea;The Handbook of Mummy Studies;2021
4. Endoscopy in Mummy Studies;The Handbook of Mummy Studies;2021
5. Mummy Clothing Found in East Asia;The Handbook of Mummy Studies;2021