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Event Details
November 9, 2012
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Stanford University
521 Memorial Way, Knight Building, Room 102
Stanford, CA 94305
United States

Public Talk - Stanford, CA

The Origin Myth of the Xianbei: The Significance of the Gaxiandong Cave

Albert E Dien
Professor of Chinese, Emeritus, Stanford University

The discovery in 1977 of an inscription dating to 443 CE on a wall of the Gaxiandong Cave in the far northeast of China has led to much discussion concerning its connection with the origin myth of the Xianbei, a nomadic people who had conquered north China and established the Northern Wei dynasty in 386.  Traces of a second inscription has engendered further interest in the cave. This lecture will present first-hand observations of the site and the present state of research on the archaeological significance of the cave and the movement of the Xianbei into China.