From London to Dunhuang: Knowledge Circulation and the Global Context of Chinese Archaeology
Introduction: Mapping the Route from London to Dunhuang
During the twentieth century archaeology developed into a
global scholarly enterprise. Excavations were conducted across continents,
archaeological methods circulated through international academic institutions,
and scholars increasingly participated in transnational intellectual networks.
The development of archaeology in China must therefore be understood not only
within the framework of national intellectual history but also within the
broader context of global knowledge circulation.
This article examines that process through the intellectual
career of Xia Nai (1910–1985), one of the most influential archaeologists in
modern China. Xia Nai’s scholarly trajectory—from academic training in Britain
to archaeological work across northwestern China—provides a revealing example
of how archaeological knowledge moved between different intellectual and
geographical contexts during the twentieth century.
The phrase “From London to Dunhuang” encapsulates the
central theme of this study. London represented one of the most important
centers of archaeological scholarship during the early twentieth century.
Universities, museums, and learned societies located in the city played a
crucial role in shaping archaeological research worldwide. Through institutions
such as the British Museum and the University of London, British archaeology
developed systematic methods of excavation, stratigraphic recording, and
artifact classification that profoundly influenced the discipline.
At the opposite end of the Eurasian continent lay Dunhuang,
an oasis city located at the edge of the Gobi Desert. For more than a
millennium Dunhuang functioned as a gateway between China and the cultures of
Central Asia. Merchants, monks, and diplomats traveling along the Silk Road
passed through the region, leaving behind an extraordinary archaeological
record of cultural interaction.
Archaeological research conducted in and around Dunhuang
during the twentieth century revealed a material archive of Eurasian history
that extended far beyond the boundaries of any single civilization. Manuscripts
written in multiple languages, mural paintings depicting religious traditions
from different regions, and artifacts reflecting long-distance trade all
demonstrated the interconnected character of the ancient world.
The intellectual journey linking London and Dunhuang
therefore reflects a broader pattern in which archaeological knowledge
circulated between global academic centers and remote field sites. Scholars
trained in metropolitan institutions traveled to distant regions to conduct
excavations, while artifacts and research findings were transported back to
museums and universities where they were analyzed and interpreted.
Within this global system of knowledge production, Chinese
archaeologists gradually emerged as important participants. The career of Xia
Nai illustrates how scholars educated in international academic environments
helped transform archaeology into a major discipline within modern Chinese
scholarship.
Archaeology and the Global Circulation of Knowledge
The globalization of archaeology began during the nineteenth
century, when European explorers and scholars conducted excavations in regions
stretching from the Mediterranean to Central Asia. These expeditions were often
linked to imperial expansion, yet they also produced new forms of scholarly
collaboration that transcended national boundaries.
Archaeologists relied heavily on international communication
networks. Excavation reports were published in scholarly journals circulated
throughout Europe and Asia, while artifacts were transported to museums where
they could be studied by specialists from different countries. Conferences and
academic societies further facilitated the exchange of ideas and research
methods.
Within this emerging global discipline, the study of Central
Asia and the Silk Road attracted particular attention. The region’s
archaeological remains offered evidence of long-distance cultural interactions
that connected East Asia with the Mediterranean world. Expeditions conducted in
this region transformed scholarly understanding of Eurasian history.
Among the most influential figures involved in this research
was Aurel Stein, whose expeditions across Central Asia uncovered numerous
archaeological sites along the Silk Road. Stein’s discoveries included
manuscripts, textiles, and paintings that provided unprecedented insights into
the cultural exchanges linking China, India, and the Islamic world.
Another important scholar associated with the study of
Dunhuang was Paul Pelliot. During his expedition to the Mogao Caves in 1908,
Pelliot examined thousands of manuscripts preserved in a hidden library cave.
His careful selection of documents revealed the extraordinary linguistic and
cultural diversity of the Dunhuang archive.
The discoveries made by Stein, Pelliot, and other explorers
attracted widespread attention within the international scholarly community.
Yet these expeditions also stimulated the emergence of Chinese archaeological
research. Chinese scholars increasingly recognized the importance of studying
their own archaeological heritage using modern scientific methods.
By the 1920s and 1930s Chinese archaeologists had begun organizing
their own excavation projects and establishing research institutions devoted to
archaeological study. The development of archaeology in China thus occurred
within a dynamic environment in which local scholarly initiatives intersected
with global intellectual currents.
Xia Nai and the Formation of a Transnational Scholar
The intellectual formation of Xia Nai took place within this
expanding global network of archaeological research. Born in the early
twentieth century, Xia belonged to a generation of Chinese scholars who pursued
higher education abroad and returned to China with new academic perspectives.
During his studies in Britain, Xia Nai encountered the
methodological traditions that had shaped modern archaeology in Europe. British
archaeologists emphasized systematic excavation techniques, including careful
stratigraphic recording and detailed documentation of artifact contexts. These
methods allowed researchers to reconstruct the chronological development of
archaeological sites and to identify cultural sequences spanning thousands of
years.
Exposure to this methodological framework had a profound
influence on Xia Nai’s intellectual development. Yet his engagement with
European scholarship did not result in a simple transfer of Western
archaeological methods into China. Instead, Xia adapted these approaches to the
specific historical and archaeological conditions of Chinese research.
Chinese archaeology presented challenges that differed
significantly from those encountered in the Mediterranean or Near Eastern
contexts where many European archaeological techniques had been developed. The
vast geographical scale of China, the diversity of prehistoric cultures, and
the rich tradition of textual historiography required archaeologists to
integrate multiple forms of evidence.
Xia Nai therefore pursued an approach that combined
archaeological excavation with the analysis of historical texts. By comparing
material remains with documentary sources, he sought to reconstruct the
historical processes that shaped the development of Chinese civilization.
Such methodological synthesis exemplifies the creative
adaptation that often accompanies the circulation of knowledge across cultural
boundaries. Rather than passively adopting foreign intellectual models,
scholars reinterpret and transform them within new research contexts.
The Historical Value of the Xia Nai Riji
The principal source for this study is the ten-volume Xia
Nai Riji (The Diaries of Xia Nai). These diaries constitute one of the most
detailed personal records of archaeological research produced in
twentieth-century China.
For historians of science, personal diaries provide valuable
insight into the everyday practices through which scholarly knowledge is
produced. Published articles and monographs typically present the final results
of research projects, yet they rarely reveal the processes through which ideas
develop or the social interactions that shape intellectual work.
The Xia Nai Riji documents a wide range of activities
central to archaeological scholarship. The diaries record excavation work,
academic meetings, correspondence with colleagues, and encounters with foreign
scholars. They also include reflections on archaeological discoveries and
observations made during field surveys.
Through these records it becomes possible to reconstruct the
networks of communication that connected Chinese archaeologists with scholars
in other parts of the world. The diaries reveal how archaeological information
circulated through conferences, institutional collaborations, and personal
contacts.
Most importantly, the Xia Nai Riji demonstrates that
the development of archaeology in China was embedded within a broader global
system of knowledge production.
Framing the Argument
By examining the intellectual trajectory of Xia Nai and the
networks documented in his diaries, this article seeks to illuminate the global
circulation of archaeological knowledge during the twentieth century. The route
connecting London and Dunhuang serves as a metaphor for the movement of ideas,
methods, and scholars across continents.
Through this perspective, the development of Chinese archaeology can be understood not as a peripheral imitation of Western scholarship but as an integral component of a global intellectual enterprise.
Archaeological Knowledge between Metropole and Frontier
The relationship between metropolitan centers of scholarship
and archaeological field sites constituted one of the defining features of
twentieth-century archaeology. Archaeological knowledge rarely emerged in a
single location. Instead, it was produced through a process that linked
universities, museums, and excavation sites into a shared intellectual system.
Fieldwork generated archaeological data, while metropolitan institutions
provided the theoretical frameworks and methodological tools through which those
data were interpreted.
London functioned as one of the most important nodes within
this global network. By the early twentieth century, British academic
institutions had accumulated extensive experience in archaeological research
across the Mediterranean, the Near East, and South Asia. Archaeologists working
within these institutions developed increasingly sophisticated excavation
methods, including systematic stratigraphic recording and careful documentation
of artifact assemblages. These techniques were disseminated through academic
training programs, scholarly publications, and museum exhibitions.
For Chinese students studying abroad, exposure to this
intellectual environment provided an opportunity to encounter archaeology as a
fully developed scientific discipline. Training in such institutions introduced
them not only to excavation techniques but also to broader theoretical debates
concerning cultural chronology, diffusion, and the comparative study of ancient
civilizations.
At the same time, archaeological research conducted in
regions such as Dunhuang presented scholars with material evidence that could
not easily be incorporated into existing historical narratives. The
archaeological remains of the Silk Road revealed patterns of cultural
interaction that transcended the boundaries of traditional historiography.
Manuscripts discovered in Dunhuang included texts written in Chinese, Tibetan,
Sanskrit, and several Central Asian languages. These documents demonstrated
that the region had served for centuries as a zone of cultural exchange
connecting East Asia with the broader Eurasian world.
For archaeologists, such discoveries demanded new
interpretive frameworks capable of explaining the movement of peoples, goods,
and ideas across vast distances. Archaeology thus became a discipline
particularly well suited to the study of global historical processes.
Within this intellectual context, scholars such as Xia Nai
occupied a distinctive position. Their careers bridged the gap between
metropolitan centers of scholarship and archaeological field sites located in
regions far from traditional academic institutions. By traveling between these
different environments, they helped translate methodological approaches
developed in one context into practical research strategies applied in another.
Knowledge Translation and Scholarly Adaptation
The circulation of archaeological knowledge between London
and China did not involve a simple transfer of ideas from one region to
another. Instead, the process required continuous adaptation and
reinterpretation. Methods developed for excavations in the Mediterranean or
Near East could not always be applied directly to the archaeological conditions
encountered in China.
Chinese archaeological sites often presented different forms
of material evidence. Many prehistoric sites were characterized by complex
settlement layers formed through long periods of occupation, while burial
assemblages frequently contained distinctive artifact types that required new
systems of classification. Archaeologists working in China therefore had to
modify existing methodological frameworks in order to analyze these materials
effectively.
This process of methodological adaptation illustrates a
broader pattern in the global circulation of knowledge. When intellectual ideas
travel across cultural and geographical boundaries, they rarely remain
unchanged. Instead, they are reshaped by scholars who interpret them within the
context of local research problems.
In the case of archaeology, this transformation was
particularly evident in the integration of archaeological evidence with China’s
long historiographical tradition. Unlike many regions where archaeology served
primarily to reconstruct pre-literate societies, Chinese archaeology developed
in dialogue with a vast corpus of historical texts. Archaeologists therefore
needed to establish connections between material evidence uncovered through
excavation and the historical narratives preserved in written sources.
Scholars such as Xia Nai played a crucial role in developing
approaches capable of bridging these two forms of evidence. Their work
demonstrated that archaeological discoveries could illuminate historical events
described in classical texts while also revealing aspects of ancient society
that had never been recorded by historians.
Toward a Global History of Archaeological Knowledge
Understanding the career of Xia Nai within this broader
context allows historians to reconsider the development of archaeology in China
from a global perspective. Rather than viewing Chinese archaeology as a
derivative branch of Western scholarship, it becomes possible to see it as an
integral component of an international intellectual enterprise.
The movement of scholars, artifacts, and research methods
between London and China formed part of a larger process in which
archaeological knowledge circulated across Eurasia. Excavations conducted in
regions such as Dunhuang contributed new evidence that reshaped scholarly
interpretations of ancient trade networks, religious transmission, and cultural
interaction.
By examining the intellectual networks documented in the Xia
Nai Riji, this article therefore seeks to reconstruct the pathways through
which archaeological knowledge traveled between different scholarly
communities. These pathways linked academic institutions in Europe with
archaeological landscapes in China and Central Asia, creating a shared
framework for investigating the material history of the ancient world.
The journey from London to Dunhuang thus represents more
than the biography of a single scholar. It reflects the emergence of
archaeology as a global discipline in which knowledge was produced through
collaboration across geographical, cultural, and institutional boundaries.
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