I belive this book cannot be used as a reliable source. I cannot help thinking that the book 'Korea and the origin of Yamato Japan' is one of those books that arouse their Korea-centrism and the sence of superiority to Japan, using so-called "evidence" which actually has no historical evidence. There are, however, so many books written by Koreans that still claim this false ethymology. Moreover, the word "kudaranai" first appeared about 1000 years after the extinction of Baekjo. ![]() According to Japanese grammar, it is impossible to coin a adjective using a noun "kudara" and anegation "nai". This belief is, however, completely ignorant of the origin of the word or grammatical rules of the Japanese language. For example, I know several books saying the Japanese word "kudaranai"(worthless) originally meant that "kudara-nai"(No Baekje) because the Japanese respected Baekje so much that they regarded anything that had not come from Baekje as worthless. But I must say that most evidence they use is out of the question. Many Koreans love to claim that Baekje was the origin of Japan. ![]() However, is that true? I would love to know which part of the Nihon Shoki claims such a thing. You might think it is properly cited, but do you think the source is worth trusting? It appears that the book even states that the Nihon Shoki refers the Koreans to be the progenitor of Yamato(]). It seems many of the Korea-related pages and the Japan-related pages have information cited from a book named 'Paekche of Korea and the origin of Yamato Japan', and this page is no exception. This article has been rated as Top-importance on the project's importance scale. This article has been rated as C-Class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. History Wikipedia:WikiProject History Template:WikiProject History history articles If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks. This article is within the scope of WikiProject History, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of the subject of History on Wikipedia. East Asia Wikipedia:WikiProject East Asia Template:WikiProject East Asia East Asia articles This article is within the scope of WikiProject East Asia, a project which is currently considered to be defunct. Help translate an article from the Japanese Wikipedia into English.Improve and expand Japan-related stubs.Pages for Deletion: Participate in Japan-related deletion discussions.Add requested images to articles that need them.Good article nominations: Shin Ultraman.A-class review: April 2011 Fukushima earthquake ( discussion)Īrticles: None Pictures: None Lists: None.Peer review: Japanese New Zealanders, Japan Crude Cocktail.If you want to read it send me an e-mail. In the conclusion I answered the research questions, Where, when and in which contexts do these helmets occur? And What is the meaning of this type helmet in these contexts and what does this meaning of the helmets say about the cultural character of Apulia between the end of the 6th and the end of the 4th century B.C.? Due to probable copyright resting on some photo's used in this thesis I decided not to publish it. ![]() Then I explained that to helmets with a known context were all from tombs, some very rich, some of them poorer than other graves of their time, but most of the tombs had the same objects within them military equipment, metal vessels, Lucanian, Campanian and local pottery, and some had Attic pottery. ![]() After this I investigated the spreading, which very clearly pointed out Apulia was the region were these helmets originate from. After establishing what an apulo-Corinthian helmet exactly is and which Type’s there are, I went on and found out that we can also order these helmets by Groups that were made by the same craftsman. This thesis has the subject of the Apulo-Corinthian Helmet, a south-east Italian helmet type and what it can say about the culture in which it was used.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |