ID: Tomb of Emperor Nintoku
MEDIUM: big mound of earth, trees, moat full of H20
HOW WAS IT MADE: people dug the big keyhole-shaped mound, filled the moat around it
- most impressive ones found in Kansai region
PERIOD: Kofun (specif. late 4th/Early 5th century C.E.)
WHAT MAKES IT STYLISTICALLY INTERESTING: example of kofun: big keyhole-shaped tomb mound
- largest of all tomb-mounds
- 90ft at apex, almost 1/3mile long
- surrounded by 3 moats
- entire monument covers 458 acres
- pit-shaft grave with the burial chamber located near top of mound
- iron weapons placed in tomb, plus bronze mirror and magatama, gold crowns, jewelry, glass bowls
- haniwa clay figures distributed over surface of mound
SYMBOLIC/ICONOGRAPHIC SIGNIFICANCE:
CONTEXT IN HISTORICAL FRAMEWORK:
-similar to Yayoi burial mounds, but massive, and no more buried bronze items
- spread of kofun mirrors spread of Yamato power
- tomb mounds for great leaders have strong precedent in China for 2 millennia before Kofun period
THEORIES OF WHO MADE IT & WHY:
- traditionally burial mound ascribed to emperor
- also created for people close to emperor (wife, etc-->would be located closeby)
- kind of a "land of the dead" burial site--separated from rest of living areas |