什么身什么骨| 1.25是什么星座| 夏天吃羊肉有什么好处| 梦到被蛇咬是什么意思| 下巴疼是什么原因| 嘴唇发白什么原因| 胆结石吃什么可以化掉结石| 超拔是什么意思| 寒门子弟是什么意思| no是什么气体| 百合和什么一起煮可以治失眠| 叶酸是什么| 心火旺喝什么茶| 肉烧什么好吃| 隐形眼镜什么牌子好| 4月29号0点是什么时候| 李商隐是什么朝代的| 这是什么牌子| 开尔文是什么单位| gh是什么意思| 包皮手术是什么| 有妇之夫是什么意思| 黄油是什么做的| 女性阴部潮湿是什么原因| 隐翅虫是什么样子| 心寒是什么意思| 吃什么受孕率又快又高| 头痒用什么东西洗头最好| 腐竹和什么一起炒好吃| 坐月子送什么礼物好| mom是什么意思| 壮阳是什么意思| 舔是什么意思| 五路财神都叫什么名字| 天秤座跟什么星座最配| 珙桐是什么植物| 净身出户是什么意思| 小腿疼痛为什么| 孕妇吃鸽子蛋对胎儿有什么好处| ad和d3有什么区别| 喉咙有异物感吃什么药| 臭宝是什么意思| 工业氧气和医用氧气有什么区别| 黄铜是什么| 过敏性鼻炎吃什么药好| 日加立念什么| vb6是什么药| 白色糠疹是什么原因引起的| 心内科是看什么病的| 中国特工组织叫什么| 乙肝弱阳性是什么意思| 仰卧起坐是什么现象| 干咳喝什么药| 脂肪是什么| 吃什么水果降血压| 牙痛吃什么药| 水云间什么意思| 12月31号什么星座| 中秋吃什么| 血糖高喝什么酒好| 呢是什么意思| 大蒜泡酒治什么病| 辟加木念什么| 1963属什么| 肝胆相照什么意思| fpu是什么意思| 镜检白细胞是什么意思| 潭柘寺求什么最灵验| 破关是什么意思| 中性人是什么意思| 蝌蚪吃什么食物| 深海鱼油什么时候吃最好| 档案自由可投什么意思| 黑枸杞泡水喝有什么好处| 疼和痛有什么区别| 观音得道日是什么时候| 95年猪五行属什么| 锁阳泡酒有什么功效| 视功能是什么| 天克地冲是什么意思| 完蛋是什么意思| 一什么水花| 男人湿气重吃什么药| 血管很明显是什么原因| 醪糟是什么| hpv检查前需要注意什么| 6月26号是什么星座| 打喷嚏代表什么| 办身份证需要准备什么| 农历3月12日是什么星座| 甘油三脂是什么意思| 小便尿出乳白色液体是什么问题| 离子水是什么水| 男人为什么喜欢女人| 荨麻疹可以吃什么水果| 笔画最多的字是什么| 吃什么补肾壮阳| 白猫来家里有什么预兆| 天子是什么生肖| 肠胃不好吃什么调理| 阿根廷讲什么语言| 植入是什么意思| qq会员有什么用| 白芷有什么作用与功效| 什么发抖| 脸肿是什么原因| 孕妇吃西红柿对胎儿有什么好处| 双子座前面是什么星座| 什么是红颜知己| 梦见很多棺材是什么征兆| 孕妇胃痛可以吃什么药| 什么是带状疱疹| 玛奇朵是什么意思| 知了吃了有什么好处| 备孕需要做什么准备| 男人有美人尖代表什么| 突然晕厥是什么原因| 曲高和寡什么意思| 属牛男和什么属相最配| 老道是什么意思| 地指什么生肖| 补气血吃什么食物| 月经咖啡色是什么原因| 螃蟹是什么季节吃的| 喉咙疼痛一咽口水就疼吃什么药| fnh是什么病| 1990年1月属什么生肖| 骨质疏松吃什么药| 白醋和白米醋有什么区别| 气管炎不能吃什么食物| 财大气粗是什么意思| 糖尿病能喝什么饮料| 猪肉什么馅的饺子好吃| dwi呈高信号什么意思| 食管炎是什么原因引起的| ubc是什么意思| 什么品牌的帽子好| 脾虚湿盛吃什么中成药| 什么泡茶好喝| 腰痛吃什么好| 白腊金是什么意思| 你为什么背着我爱别人| 养胃吃什么| 脚气是什么菌引起的| 瑞士为什么这么有钱| 骨碎补有什么功效| 怀孕吃什么水果比较好| 自愈什么意思| vlone是什么牌子| 梦见刷牙是什么预兆| 卜卜脆是什么意思| 国庆节是什么时候| 胸闷气短呼吸困难心慌是什么原因| 女命正印代表什么| 大便潜血什么意思| 嗜睡乏力没精神容易疲劳是什么原因| dream car是什么意思| 女性尿道感染吃什么药| 空调睡眠模式什么意思| 经警是做什么的| 七月一号是什么节| 绿豆汤不能和什么一起吃| bb是什么意思| 浙江属于什么方向| 怀孕什么时候可以做b超| 芒种是什么时候| 抬旗是什么意思| 菩提萨婆诃是什么意思| 同仁是什么意思| 什么人容易得肺结核| 锁阳泡酒有什么功效| 李子与什么食物相克| 口干是什么病的前兆| 鹅蛋炒香菜治什么病| 波司登是什么档次| hcho是什么意思| 一夜白头是什么原因| 夏季吃桃子有什么好处| 梦到蛇是什么预兆| 浑身麻是什么原因| 拉肚子喝什么| 互攻是什么意思| 强直性脊柱炎是什么病| 狼吞虎咽是什么意思| 什么蔬菜是温性的| def是什么意思| 什么是风水| 豆奶不能和什么一起吃| 吃什么增加免疫力最快| 为什么做完爱下面会疼| 汉朝后面是什么朝代| 宝宝大便发白是什么原因| 白醋和小苏打一起用起什么效果| 吃羊肉不能吃什么| 什么叫地包天| ft什么意思| 右眉上方有痣代表什么| 心慌胸闷是什么原因| 头发长不长是什么原因怎么办| 什么是寓言故事| 否极泰来是什么生肖| 达芬奇发明了什么| 米醋是什么| vte是什么意思| 日本的国宝是什么| 皮是什么意思| 81岁属什么| 什么是滑膜炎| 黑蝴蝶代表什么| 婚检检查什么| 胃胀打嗝吃什么药最好| 十二生肖里为什么没有猫| 一天两包烟会导致什么后果| 他不懂你的心假装冷静是什么歌| 夏天适合种什么菜| 什么叫荨麻疹| 低血糖的人吃什么东西最好| 济州岛有什么好玩的| 脑膜瘤钙化意味着什么| 吃槟榔有什么好处和坏处| 答辩是什么意思| 流脑是什么病| 什么病不能吃西兰花| 望洋兴叹是什么意思| 春眠不觉晓的晓是什么意思| 送朋友鲜花送什么花| 鼻烟壶是干什么用的| 买什么样的老花镜好| 累了喝什么缓解疲劳| 11月26是什么星座| 血压高什么原因| 杨桃是什么季节的水果| 枸杞什么时候吃最好| acth是什么| 小鸭子吃什么| 嫦娥是什么生肖| 毛拉是什么意思| 裤子前浪后浪是什么| 15度穿什么衣服合适| 贵人多忘事什么意思| 健康证需要检查什么| 进产房吃什么补充体力| 裸眼视力是什么意思| 一家之主是什么意思| 梦见孩子结婚什么预兆| 幽门螺旋杆菌挂什么科| 头部出汗多吃什么药| 两肋胀满闷胀是什么病| 蛇靠什么爬行| 月经量少吃什么药| 随性什么意思| 虫草什么时候吃最好| 吃多了拉肚子是什么原因| 吃榴莲对身体有什么好处| 角化型脚气用什么药膏| 金牛和什么星座最配| 多出汗是什么原因| 滑脉是什么意思| 过敏不能吃什么| 高校新生是什么意思| 口干什么原因| 八大碗都有什么菜| 玉米淀粉可以用什么代替| 掉是什么意思| 百度
Home>>

iPhone应用闪退 无法打开 需要输入苹果ID的解决方法

By Shi Muyang, Yu Ying (People's Daily Online) 10:20, November 29, 2022

This is just one of the countless days in which Mark Pollard has walked into 1 South Park Road, a building full of history both for himself and the discipline of archaeological science. Over 40 years ago, just a few minutes’ walk away from here, Pollard was interviewed and recruited by Professor E.T. Hall as a post-doctoral researcher to join the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and History of Art (RLAHA). Upon his return to Oxford in 2004, it was in this very building that Pollard took over the namesake Chair Professorship from his old advisor and delivered his first lecture. Today, this once alien building is full of familiar faces: his colleagues, friends, students, and students of his students. They have all came here for one reason: his retirement.

Mark Pollard

As the Emeritus Professor of Archaeological Science at the University of Oxford, Pollard’s connection with China runs as deep as with the subject itself. Since his first trip to Shanghai in 1982 with the late Professor E.T. Hall for the First International Conference on Ancient Chinese Pottery and Porcelain, he has been an instrumental figure in forging numerous China-UK research partnerships as well as training generations of archaeologists in both countries. In 2014, he became the Principal Investigator in a project that would eventually span the entire Eurasian continent, strengthening the link between China and the UK in both modern and ancient times. Now an encyclopaedic figure in archaeology and a world-renowned scholar, he shares his China story with People’s Daily Online.

A China Obsession

People’s Daily Online: You recently retired as the Edward Hall Professor of Archaeological Science at University of Oxford. Sitting in the same building where you learnt, worked, and taught for many years and looking back at the starting point of your journey into archaeology and China, tell us how it all happened.

Pollard: I think the first thing to say is that I've been very lucky. I've been in the right place at the right time. I started my undergraduate degree in physics in York in 1972, just the summer after going to see the Tutankhamen exhibition at the British Museum. York's an ancient city, one of the Roman capitals. And I volunteered during the summer to excavate with York archaeological trust for a couple of summers and the social life was all I always expected it to be. And so, I was bitten by archaeology.

So, I went straight into a Ph.D. in 1975 and did a Ph.D. for three years on the chemistry and corrosion of the glass in York Minster. And at the end of that I went to a conference, and I met the then director of the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and History of Art in Oxford, who was an amazing man called Teddy Hall - Professor E.T. Hall. He was a big collector of Chinese porcelain. He had a fabulous personal collection of Chinese porcelain. And he was fascinated by Chinese porcelain. He essentially employed me as a postdoc to do some work on the chemistry and provenance and technology of Chinese porcelain. I came down to Oxford in 1978 and started on that, and I've been doing it ever since really, one way or another.

People’s Daily Online: During your post-doctoral study in Oxford, did you get an opportunity to visit China and work on materials there?

Pollard: Teddy Hall had set up contacts with the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Ashmolean Museum, and the British Museum and so I was working on Chinese porcelains largely from UK collections.

In those days, it was much rarer for foreign scholars to go to China. My first visit to China was in 1982. Teddy and I went to the International Conference on Ancient Chinese Pottery and Porcelain, which I think had been organized by the Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, and it was followed by a three-week tour of some of the important kiln sites in southern China. And then in 1985, I went back to the Second International Conference on Ancient Chinese Pottery and Porcelain. This time it was in Beijing. And then we went on a tour of some of the sites around northern China following that.

Going to China in 1982 was probably the most significant event in my life because it gave me an obsession with China, with Chinese history and with a love of China and the Chinese people. And that's been with me ever since.

People’s Daily Online: Could you please go into more detail about your ‘obsession with China’ and share with us the aspects that first attracted you to it?

Pollard: It’s a life changing which was through Teddy Hall being exposed to Chinese ceramics. And there were really two things which astonished me about Chinese ceramics. One is the art, just the sheer beauty of a piece of - if you think of - a Song Dynasty monochrome. It's just perfect. It's perfect in shape. It's perfect in colour.

But as a scientist, the other thing that astonished me about this stuff is how technologically advanced, how technologically skilful it is. So, you know, in 1000 A.D., during the Song Dynasty that the Chinese are firing vessels that the West could only imagine and couldn't compete with until late 18th century. And when you combine that with the aesthetics, that's what sort of blew me away on China.

A Eurasian Partnership

People’s Daily Online: How did your connection with China unfold following your visits to the country in the 1980s?

Pollard: I had those two trips of about a month in 1982 and 1985 and then didn't physically go back. Although I did continue working on Chinese material, I sort of broadened out and so other areas of interest really, and didn't go back again until I came back to Oxford in 2004 and then went to a conference in Beijing. Since then and in the last few years before COVID, I was going to China three times a year, and spending several months in China traveling, visiting museums, and talking to people using the contacts that I had built up, but also primarily as a result of Professor Jessica Rawson's contacts in China.

Since 2014, I went to Peking University to lecture on Archaeological Science. I also went and spent a month teaching and talking to people at the Northwest University in Xi’an.

I've been fortunate in that since coming back to Oxford I've been able to go to China and meet Chinese scholars and have Chinese students and travel all over China. I think I would have been able to get a lot more out of working in China and with China, if I'd have read and spoken Chinese. But I've been very fortunate and it's largely through PhD students like Dr. Rui Wen and Dr. Ruiliang Liu that I've been able to understand Chinese through them and to give lectures in China.

People’s Daily Online: In the past few years, you have been the Principal Investigator of a £2.5 million research partnership that spans the Eurasian continent with China and the UK at its two ends. How did this tremendous project come about?

Pollard: We were very fortunate in 2015 to get funding from the European Research Council for a large project called FLAME, which is an acronym for the FLow of Ancient Metal across Eurasia. It was based in Oxford, but we deliberately looked for regional partners across Eurasia. We partnered with Prof. Jianli Chen at Peking University, Professor Kunlong Chen at University of Science and Technology, Beijing and Prof. Zhengyao Jin at University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei. So, we had at least three main partners in China, but also colleagues in Russia, Mongolia, and Germany.

Apart from just those formal collaborators, we had a whole range, a network of contacts of people that we worked with. Essentially, FLAME was not a unified project. It was a series of relatively discrete projects. Ruiliang Liu and I worked largely in China, Mongolia, and Kazakhstan, partly because that was our main interest, but others worked in Western Europe, the Caucasus, Georgia, and southern Russia.

People’s Daily Online: FLAME aims to explore the connection between the use of metal in material cultures across the whole continent. To many people, there seem to have been far more differences that similarities. Could you share with us some of your findings that shed light on this issue?

Pollard: The FLAME project was very ambitious. It was taking all of Eurasia from Ireland right through to the East Coast of China. And essentially what we're interested in is using this information to reconstruct, if you like, metal circulation systems, which is another way of saying the social organization of a society in how it obtains, makes and uses its metal.

In China, for instance, what we looked at is the boundary between central China and the borderlands, particularly in the first millennium B.C., where you've clearly got metal coming out of China and into these steppe nomad people.

You can see that the typology of the objects that the steppe nomads are using is nothing like the central Chinese typologies. What they seem to have done is taken the metal that they either took in tribute, or exchanged for horses, or took in raids, and then melted it down and used it for their sorts of objects, which tend to be fittings for chariots, horse fittings, personal decoration of sorts that you don't see in central China.

What we were able to demonstrate is that there was trade of metal out of China into the Steppes. But once they get into the Steppes, they were converted into stuff like knives. That's interesting because it shows how you can begin to reconstruct contact between people in the past and how that contact changes that material. The material changes form, but you still get the information out of it.

Mark Pollard

A Common Language

People’s Daily Online: By the end of 2021, you and your colleagues at FLAME managed to organize numerous international conferences and published dozens of research papers in journals such as Nature and Antiquity. What do you think are essential factors in creating a lasting international collaboration such as FLAME?

Pollard: I think the general public in both China and Europe are generally interested in their past, if only you know what happened here 200 years ago or 500 years ago or 1,000 years ago. Archaeology will unite people across borders. I don't speak any Mongolian, but I can go and talk to the professor in Mongolia. And we share a common interest about how we go about taking this information that we recover by. How we go about interpreting that and converting it into what happened in the past. And so, it's a common language.

As a part of the exchange between Oxford and Peking University, I went to lecture on archaeological science. But there was also exchange between one of our Egyptologists in the Ashmolean, John Baines, who went to Peking and lectured on Egyptology for a month. I think there is a very open door to go through. There's no reason why scholars across the world can’t be given introductions to different cultures.

And I think we would very much benefit from that because part of the reason why I think archaeology is so important in China is that it's about identity. It's about who we are, who the Han Chinese are, who the British are.

One of the rationales for learning your own history is that you learn about who you are and who your people are. But if you broaden that and say there's a desperate need in Britain and Europe for understanding China better at the moment and possibly a need in China to understand Europe.

But there's no better way of understanding where a particular people are coming from than by knowing their history and by being able to talk to them about their history. Not only learning your own cultural history is really important, but I think if you want to understand another culture, then learn their cultural history.

People’s Daily Online: You have had a fascinating career and an amazing life journey. Now that you’re retired, what’s next?

Pollard: I'll tell you a little story. When I was interviewed in Oxford for the Edward Hall Professorship, I had the full 12-person interview panel and somebody asked me, Professor Pollard, which would you say is your best academic paper? Perfectly reasonable question. And I said the next one and I haven't changed my opinion. The next thing I write is going to be really important. I just haven't written it yet.

The obsession with China isn't going to go away. I'd like to get back. We've got this project in Dunhuang in Gansu on the chronology of Buddhist cave system and cave temples. I'd like to be able to do some more on that. I'm still completely obsessed by Chinese bronzes and not perhaps in the way that you'd think, but I'm interested in how they actually cast the bronze.

How do you mix the metal to pour into the mould? You've got the furnaces going that are melting metal. How do you mix that metal? What's the recipe? How were they doing this? And I'm interested in how this changed over time.

I shall still be working on Chinese for as long as I can. And hopefully going back to China. 

(Web editor: Hongyu, Wu Chengliang)

Photos

Related Stories

开什么节什么的成语 牙龈疼痛吃什么药 痒痒粉在药店叫什么 31岁属什么生肖 12月21号是什么星座
东山再起是什么意思 杯葛是什么意思 坐月子哭了会有什么后遗症 梦见眉毛掉了什么预兆 招魂是什么意思
梦见剪指甲是什么意思 老年痴呆症挂什么科 momax是什么牌子 肺结节影是什么意思啊 什么人容易得甲亢
耳朵有回音是什么原因 火龙果什么时候吃最好 min代表什么意思 眼角发黄是什么原因 fml什么意思
乔治阿玛尼和阿玛尼有什么区别hcv9jop4ns6r.cn c2能开什么车hcv8jop1ns7r.cn 世界上最难写的字是什么hcv8jop7ns7r.cn 0代表什么意思xscnpatent.com 血糖高吃什么饭hcv9jop2ns5r.cn
西打酒是什么意思hcv9jop4ns4r.cn 爱上一个人是什么感觉hcv8jop2ns2r.cn 赟怎么读 什么意思hcv8jop3ns5r.cn 肾结石是什么原因yanzhenzixun.com 工字五行属什么tiangongnft.com
什么心什么肺hcv8jop8ns9r.cn 日本为什么偷袭珍珠港hcv9jop2ns7r.cn 甲状腺是什么科hcv8jop2ns4r.cn 血红蛋白是指什么hcv8jop4ns9r.cn 慢性咽喉炎吃什么药好hcv8jop7ns3r.cn
肇庆有什么大学hcv9jop5ns5r.cn 狗头什么意思hcv8jop1ns7r.cn 用什么泡水喝补肾hcv9jop1ns7r.cn 始终是什么意思huizhijixie.com ur品牌属于什么档次hcv7jop9ns3r.cn
百度