Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 July 2017
1 This is the number archaeologist colleagues in China inform me is currently used as a working number.
2 Choosing most recent publications as examples, Zhongshu, Wang, Wang Zhongshu wenji (Collected essays of Wang Zhongshu) (Beijing, 2014)Google Scholar includes many of the seminal essays but not the archaeological surveys; for James, Jean M., A Guide to the Tomb and Shrine Art of the Han Dynasty, 206 B.C. – A. D. 220 (Lewiston, 1996)Google Scholar that includes her long list of articles in the bibliography; Huacheng, Zhao, Qin-Han kaogu (Qin-Han archaeology) (Beijing, 2015)Google Scholar; or to Liu Qingzhu, Li Yufang, or their joint publications that, although focused on archaeology of Western Han Chang'an, may be the most prolific scholars of Han archaeological material of the last thirty years.
3 Brown, Miranda, “Did the Early Chinese Preserve Corpses? A Reconsideration of Elite Conceptions of Death,” Journal of East Asian Archaeology 4, no. 1 (2003), pp. 201–223 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.