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Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts. / Varenov, Andrey V.

Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective. ed. / Ivana Fiore; Francesca Lugli. Archaeopress, 2023. p. 434-441 6.5 (Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Varenov, AV 2023, Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts. in I Fiore & F Lugli (eds), Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective., 6.5, Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, Archaeopress, pp. 434-441. https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.14638137.53

APA

Varenov, A. V. (2023). Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts. In I. Fiore, & F. Lugli (Eds.), Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (pp. 434-441). [6.5] (Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective). Archaeopress. https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.14638137.53

Vancouver

Varenov AV. Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts. In Fiore I, Lugli F, editors, Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective. Archaeopress. 2023. p. 434-441. 6.5. (Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective). doi: 10.2307/jj.14638137.53

Author

Varenov, Andrey V. / Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts. Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective. editor / Ivana Fiore ; Francesca Lugli. Archaeopress, 2023. pp. 434-441 (Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective).

BibTeX

@inbook{51c6a2d79f884539ba966c3e0067d9f2,
title = "Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts",
abstract = "The article analyses images of dog-like or tiger-like (leopard-like) animals, depicted on the surface of stag stones of Mongolian-Trans-Baikal style. According to D.G. Savinov they represent 'chthonic predators'. The victims of chthonic predators' attacks vary greatly (from a human to a fish) and are met in various contexts: stag-stone No. 15 in Ushkijn-Uver (Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia); rock carving in Suyukou gorge of Helan Mountains (Ningxia-Hui Autonomous Region, PRC), a bronze mirror found in the No. 1612 burial of Guo state cemetery in Shangcunling (Henan province, PRC); a Neolithic painted pottery jar from the Dadiwan site (Gansu province, PRC). The author argues that all these scenes depict trials of a human soul in the Underworld.",
keywords = "China, Chthonic predators, Rock carvings, Semantics, Stag stones",
author = "Varenov, {Andrey V.}",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "7",
doi = "10.2307/jj.14638137.53",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781803273556",
series = "Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective",
publisher = "Archaeopress",
pages = "434--441",
editor = "Ivana Fiore and Francesca Lugli",
booktitle = "Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Demonic dogs of mongolian stag stones and their chinese counterparts

AU - Varenov, Andrey V.

PY - 2023/9/7

Y1 - 2023/9/7

N2 - The article analyses images of dog-like or tiger-like (leopard-like) animals, depicted on the surface of stag stones of Mongolian-Trans-Baikal style. According to D.G. Savinov they represent 'chthonic predators'. The victims of chthonic predators' attacks vary greatly (from a human to a fish) and are met in various contexts: stag-stone No. 15 in Ushkijn-Uver (Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia); rock carving in Suyukou gorge of Helan Mountains (Ningxia-Hui Autonomous Region, PRC), a bronze mirror found in the No. 1612 burial of Guo state cemetery in Shangcunling (Henan province, PRC); a Neolithic painted pottery jar from the Dadiwan site (Gansu province, PRC). The author argues that all these scenes depict trials of a human soul in the Underworld.

AB - The article analyses images of dog-like or tiger-like (leopard-like) animals, depicted on the surface of stag stones of Mongolian-Trans-Baikal style. According to D.G. Savinov they represent 'chthonic predators'. The victims of chthonic predators' attacks vary greatly (from a human to a fish) and are met in various contexts: stag-stone No. 15 in Ushkijn-Uver (Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia); rock carving in Suyukou gorge of Helan Mountains (Ningxia-Hui Autonomous Region, PRC), a bronze mirror found in the No. 1612 burial of Guo state cemetery in Shangcunling (Henan province, PRC); a Neolithic painted pottery jar from the Dadiwan site (Gansu province, PRC). The author argues that all these scenes depict trials of a human soul in the Underworld.

KW - China

KW - Chthonic predators

KW - Rock carvings

KW - Semantics

KW - Stag stones

UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85173008015&origin=inward&txGid=be608138c9753b542b5973965eb209ef

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/d46832e8-8b9b-399d-b8aa-cbcea91f3d94/

U2 - 10.2307/jj.14638137.53

DO - 10.2307/jj.14638137.53

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781803273556

T3 - Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective

SP - 434

EP - 441

BT - Dogs, Past and Present: An Interdisciplinary Perspective

A2 - Fiore, Ivana

A2 - Lugli, Francesca

PB - Archaeopress

ER -

ID: 59549017