Silk Roads. Contacts and exchanges across Afro-Eurasia, AD 500–1000.
Join a two-day international conference exploring new discoveries and perspectives on the far-reaching contacts and exchanges that took place across Afro-Eurasia in the pivotal period from AD 500 to 1000.
Since the early use of the term in the 19th century, the 'Silk Roads' have come to mean so much more than a route for trading silk from East to West. Coinciding with the British Museum special exhibition Silk Roads, this two-day conference brings together 18 scholars and chairs from various disciplines to explore an expanded understanding of the Silk Roads. Presenting new discoveries and perspectives, this conference highlights the many instances and contexts in which people, objects and ideas moved and contacts and exchanges took place across Afro-Eurasia, from East Asia to Britain, Scandinavia to Madagascar, in the period AD 500 to 1000.
The conference will be accompanied by the Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art Annual Lecture. The keynote speaker is Susan Whitfield, Professor in Silk Road Studies at the Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, University of East Anglia.
// Programme //
I Thursday, 5 December
10.00 h
Registration/ Coffee and Tea
10.30 h
Welcoming Remarks (TBC)
10.40 h
Introduction to the Silk Roads Exhibition
Sue Brunning, Yu-Ping Luk, Elisabeth R O’Connell, British Museum
I Session 1. Interwoven Worlds: Politics, Culture and Economy
11.00 h
Beyond Silk and Roads: Conceptualizing Premodern Transregional Interactions
Tansen Sen, Center for Global Asia, New York University Shanghai
11.25 h
Margin or Pivot? Byzantium in the World of Afro-Eurasian Connectivities
Claudia Rapp, University of Vienna
11.50 h
Economic Connections and Regional Development along the Silk Roads, by Land and Sea
Chris Wickham, University of Oxford emeritus
12.15 h I Q&A
12.30 – 14:00 h I Lunch
I Session 2. New Archaeological Discoveries
14.00 h
Silk Roads Textiles (AD 500–1000) in Recent Archaeological Excavations in Northwest China
Zhao Feng, Zhejiang University
14.25 h
Medieval Cities of the Chüy Valley on the Great Silk Road
Valerii Kolchenko, Institute of History, Archaeology and Ethnology of the National Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz Republic
14.50 h
New Material on Late Sogdian History, Art, and Religion from the Excavations at Sanjar-Shah
Michael Shenkar, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
15.15 h I Q&A
15.30–16:00 h I Coffee and Tea break
The Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art Annual Lecture
18.00 h I Welcome
Colin Sheaf FSA, The Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art
18.05 h
The Horse in Chinese Life and Art: a Temporary Visitor?
Susan Whitfield, Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, University of East Anglia
I Friday 6 December
10:00 h I Coffee and Tea
10.30 h I Welcoming Remarks
I Session 4. Expanded Networks
10.35 h
Nara to Norwich: Art and Belief at the Ends of the Silk Roads
Simon Kaner, Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, University of East Anglia
11.00 h
Traces of Contacts Between the Silk Roads and the Viking Age North
Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson, Centre for the World in the Viking Age, Uppsala University
11.25 h
Suffolk to Syria: The Anglo-Saxons Who Fought in the Byzantine Army?
Helen Gittos, University of Oxford
11.50 h I Q&A
12.05-13:30 h I Lunch
I Session 5. Reconsidering Visual Material Culture
13.30 h
The ‘Christian Saint’ Painting from Dunhuang in the British Museum and It Identification as a Manichaean Image of Jesus, the Guide for the Afterlife
Zsuzsanna Gulacsi, Northern Arizona University
13:55 h
Reconstructing, Restoring and Reconsidering an Astrological Scroll from Turfa
Lilla Russell-Smith, Museum für Asiatische Kunst, Berlin
14.20 h
Pottery and Poetry: Glazed Ceramics on the Silk Roads
Djangar Ilyasov, Institute of Art Studies, Tashkent
14.45 h I Q&A
15.00–15:15 h I Coffee and Tea break
I Session 6. Local and Global Histories
15.15 h
Along the Hindukush in Afghanistan: How People Communicated and Conducted Their Business in the ‘Land of the Snowy Mountains'
Arezou Azad, Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales, Paris
15.40 h
Persia(n) in Egypt: How People, Practices and Products Moved from East to West in the Early Islamic Empire
Petra Sijpesteijn, Leiden University
16.05 h
The Caliphate and the Silk Road
Hugh Kennedy, SOAS University of London
16.30 h I Q&A
16.45 h I Concluding Remarks
Please note: programme subject to change
Reference:
CONF: Silk Roads. Contacts and exchanges, 500-1000 (London, 5-6 Dec 24). In: ArtHist.net, Nov 27, 2024 (accessed Dec 26, 2024), <https://arthist.net/archive/43227>.