An
archeologist follows his dreams to Asia
In the early 1900's, Sir Marc Aurel Stein, a British
archeologist, set out to confirm his theories about rich past of the Silk
Road. In three expeditions, Stein traversed 25,000 miles of central Asia
and western China, thus gaining the reputation of conducting "the most
daring and adventurous raids upon the ancient world". Sir Aurel Stein's expeditions began with a childhood fascination
with the Silk Road. Stein was intrigued by the travels of Xuanzang. He became an archeologist and, at the
age of forty, financed his first expedition into central Asia. In May
of 1900, Stein set out for western China and the Taklamakan Desert. This
trip lasted nearly two years. On this expedition, Stein wanted to follow
in the footsteps of Xuanzang, identifying the Buddhist sites described
by the traveler. Stein set out on his second expedition, his most famous,
in 1907. This trip targeted the sites of Lou Lan and Dunhuang. Stein
wanted to be the first archeologist to explore these sites. Stein reached
Lou Lan first, crossing the high mountains and the Lop Desert. There he
found military records dated to 330 CE. These records described frontier
warfare in the region, when the Chinese emperor was struggling to control
the western regions.
Now viewed as a "treasure hunter", Stein's journeys became
more dangerous. The Chinese government tried to stop further expeditions
and robbers watched for an opportunity to steal his discoveries. Also,
other countries joined the hunt for treasures of the old Silk Road, adding
an element of competition and national pride to the expeditions. In 1915,
Stein set out for his final expedition. Stein revisited Dunhuang and took
more documents from the cave temples. Also, Stein uncovered a cemetery
where the people of the Turfan region were buried. Although most of these
tombs had been robbed, the objects that meant the most to Stein, the silks
encasing the corpses, remained intact. The unearthing of these ancient and
beautiful silks proved a fitting conclusion to Stein's career. Stein
contributed hundreds of artifacts, manuscripts and silks to the British
Museum. These are now part of an important collection of items which
survived the upheaval of China's last century. By the time Sir Aurel Stein began his excavations, the
Silk Road had transformed Still, Stein's discoveries are remarkable. Over a fourteen
year span, he uncovered ancient tombs, found lost languages, discovered
the first printed book and many more Chinese treasures. And importantly,
the objects Stein removed were spared destruction. During the last
century, many of the sites Stein visited were destroyed through a series
of wars and upheavals that continued through the
1970's. Top / Home / Travelers / Teacher Section |
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Stein and his crew on their
first expedition to western China |
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Exploring the Taklamakan |
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Abbot Wang of the Dunhuang cave temples |
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The world's first printed document, the Diamond
Sutra |
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Some the documents discovered by the Stein
expeditions |
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