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Nail of the World: mandalas and axes in ancient Java
Did “traditional” non-Western cities evolve as ceremonial or economic centers? Mandala concepts were influential in central Java’s temples, but there are no comparable temples in east Java. East Java’s capital Trowulan may have been designed as an axis mundi.
30/03/2009
Durée du programme :85 minute(s) et 49 secondes
Classification Dewey :Asie du Sud-Est
Conférences
Niveau :niveau Licence (LMD)
Disciplines :Histoire de l'art et Archéologie
Fiche LOM-FR :Anglais
Générique :
Réalisateur(s) :
EFEO Ecole Française d'Extrême OrientMIKSIC Dr John N.
Dr John N. Miksic is Associate Professor in the Southeast Asian Studies Programme, National University of Singapore. He is an archaeologist/historian/art historian who has lived in Southeast Asia since 1979. His interests include ancient cities, temples, sculpture, and ceramics. He teaches courses on cultural resource management in Southeast Asia, and the evolution of Southeast Asian civilizations. His current research includes a translation of a 17th-century Malay manuscript, the archaeology of ancient ports on the shores of the Straits of Melaka, and early cities in Indonesia, Cambodia, and Myanmar.
