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The Distribution Regularity of Tang style metal Belt Excavated around the Yang-Ju・Sang-ju・Gang-ju of Silla
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新羅 良・尙・康州 出土 唐式 帶裝飾具의 分布 定型

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Type
Academic journal
Author
Choi Jung-Bum (경북대학교)
Journal
Yeongnam Archaeological Review 영남고고학 영남고고학 제92호 KCI Accredited Journals
Published
2022.1
Pages
185 - 213 (29page)
DOI
http://doi.org/10.47417/yar.2022.92.185

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The Distribution Regularity of Tang style metal Belt Excavated around the Yang-Ju・Sang-ju・Gang-ju of Silla
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As of November 2021, the number of Tang-style metal belts found in South Korea exceeds 643, and the number is expected to increase. As it is widely known that the owners of Tang-style metal belts were government officials, it is easy to access Silla’s local societies archaeologically via this perspective. Therefore, one must first examine the distribution pattern of the belts in the Yeongnam region, which is the original Silla territory, and the areas corresponding to Yangju, Sangju, and Gangju during the Unified Silla period. In the middle ancient period, the so-called Hwangyongsa-style metal belts, distinguished from the inverse heart-shaped metal belts, were importedintospecificregions through contact with China. However, these did not replace the existing metal belts. They coexisted with the inverse heart-shaped metal belts for some time and are thought to have belonged to officials of a relatively lower class. After Kim Chun Chu’s introduction of an official uniform system and the unification of the three kingdoms under Silla, Tang-style metal belts spread throughout the regions. The primary material was bronze, and the rank of the owner was indicated by visible differences, such as added lacquer. Owners of those belts were provincial officials subordinate to the chief controller of the provincial governments. In the late Silla period, the centralized system was in turmoil. This coincided with the growth of provincial lords. As a result, the number of excavated cases of Tang-style metal belts in the regions outside the capital declined sharply.

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