Archaeological Research in the Ili Region: A Review
Archaeological Research in the Ili Region: A Review
Date
2020-10-04
Authors
Chi, Xhang
Festa, Marcella
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Abstract
Archaeological research conducted in the Ili River Valley over the last century has
revealed that the region was a crossroads in an early system of exchange throughout
Eurasia. Relationships have been shown between findings in the area with the Andronovo
(ca. 1900–1200 B.C.) and Saka (ca. first millennium B.C.) cultures from the prehistoric
Bronze Age (ca. 1500–1000 B.C.) and Early Iron Age (ca. 1000–300 B.C.), respectively.
The region has been intensively excavated by Chinese archaeologists in recent decades
and an increasing number of cultural and spatial-temporal frameworks have been put
forward to organize the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age finds since the late 1970s. A
growing body of research has also addressed cultural change and contact. These studies
and related debates are almost unknown to international scholars and need to be evaluated
in greater detail. This article surveys the archaeological evidence and critically reviews the
main data from Chinese research. In discussing the development of archaeology in the Ili
region, the article provides a deeper understanding of the current state of research in
Northwest China and a solid backdrop against which further studies can be conducted.
Pointing out some of the main unsolved questions and obscure areas yet to be addressed,
the article suggests future directions for research.
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Ili Valley,
Xinjiang prehistory,
Xinjiang archaeology
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