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  • Xiuzhen Janice Li
Xiuzhen Janice Li

Xiuzhen Janice Li
  • BA, MA, PhD
  • Senior Archaeologist at Emperor Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum, China

About

19
Publications
31,062
Reads
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417
Citations
Introduction
Chinese Archaeology, Eastern Asian Archaeology, Metallurgy, GIS Spatial Analysis, Quantitative Archaeology, Bronze Weapons, Terracotta Warriors, Historical Archaeology, Archaeological Science
Current institution
Emperor Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum, China
Current position
  • Senior Archaeologist

Publications

Publications (19)
Book
Full-text available
Over 40,000 lethal bronze weapons were discovered with thousands of terracotta warriors in the tomb complex of the Qin First Emperor (259-210 BC). This book carries out the first systematic and comprehensive study on these weapons to investigate the mass production and labour organisation in early imperial China. The research draws upon extensive...
Article
Full-text available
Non‐invasive materials characterisation of reconstructed statues of Emperor Qin Shihuang’s Terracotta Army has revealed distinct micro‐geochemical patterning within the clay paste used in their manufacture. The significance of this is explored in terms of the production sequence, logistics and supply‐chain management involved in the construction of...
Article
Full-text available
Abstract At the heart of bureaucratic practice during Warring States and early Imperial China were regular, small acts of accountancy in which objects and people were marked so that their movements could be kept track of, their quality checked and their numbers marshalled. In the mausoleum complex of the Qin Shihuang (259-210 bc, the First Emperor...
Article
Full-text available
Despite decades of research into the Terracotta Army of the First Emperor of China, many questions remain about how, where and by whom the figures were made. This new study compares the results of microscopic analysis of the life-sized clay statues to other ceramic artefacts recovered from the mausoleum. By focusing on their original raw materials...
Article
Full-text available
This paper explores the integration of chemical data with metric studies and spatial analyses of archaeological artifacts to investigate questions of specialization, standardization, and production organization behind large-scale technological enterprises. The main analytical focus is placed on the 40,000 bronze arrowheads recovered with the Terrac...
Article
Full-text available
Structure-from-motion and multiview-stereo together offer a computer vision technique for reconstructing detailed 3D models from overlapping images of anything from large landscapes to microscopic features. Because such models can be generated from ordinary photographs taken with standard cameras in ordinary lighting conditions, these techniques ar...
Article
Full-text available
The Terracotta Army that protected the tomb of the Chinese emperor Qin Shihuang offers an evocative image of the power and organisation of the Qin armies who unified China through conquest in the third century BC. It also provides evidence for the craft production and administrative control that underpinned the Qin state. Bronze trigger mechanisms...
Thesis
Full-text available
Alongside the thousands of terracotta warriors discovered in the tomb complex of the first emperor of China, were tens of thousands of bronze weapons, including arrowheads and crossbow triggers, lances, spears, halberds (and the ferrules associated with them), swords and a few other special types. This quantity and quality of bronze weaponry provid...
Article
Full-text available
The Terracotta Army of the First Emperor of China is one of the most emblematic archaeological sites in the world. Many questions remain about the logistics of technology, standardisation and labour organisation behind the creation of such a colossal construction in just a few decades over 2,000 years ago. An ongoing research project co-ordinated b...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Based on an agreement of cooperative research on craft production, specialisation and organisation during the Qin Period between Emperor Qin Shihuang’s Mausoleum site museum and University Collage of London Institute of Archaeology, bronze weapons unearthed from terracotta army pits had been focus on, especially the big amount of arrows. At beginni...
Article
Full-text available
This paper is concerned with the inscriptions and finishing marks present on the surfaces of the thousands of bronze weapons recovered together with the Terracotta Army at the mausoleum complex of Qin Shihuang, the First Emperor of China (259–210BC). After utilising the textual information from the inscriptions to reconstruct aspects of labour orga...

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