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Автор Тема: Ancient Chinese woman discovered to be oldest known case of 'yue'  (Прочитано 1566 раз)
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« : 29 Декабрь 2022, 06:56:15 »

Ancient Chinese woman discovered to be oldest known case of 'yue'


Published in Acta Anthropologica Sinica, the work is the first well-studied punitive amputation case from an archaeological site, offering important insight and valuable data for further study of ancient China’s penal system and social customs.To get more news about woman in ancient china, you can visit shine news official website.

The research involved the analysis of a skeleton found at a burial site called Zhouyan in the northwestern province of Shaanxi. Regarded as the birthplace of the Zhou civilization, the site has previously yielded a large number of vessels, tombs and oracle bones.

Yue, along with other forms of mutilation, was widely used as a form of punishment in ancient China for over 1,000 years, until it was eventually abolished around 200 BC.While the body was found during excavations that began in 1999, a study of the bones was not previously prioritized as the archaeologists focused more on finding artifacts.

Peking University postdoctoral researcher and the study’s lead author Li Nan shared that recent scientific developments have made their research on the remains more relevant.

“People only regarded this human bone as an incomplete bone before, but when I had a certain knowledge reserve, I thought at first sight that it might be a case of amputation,” she said.112

Archeologists in China have found potential evidence of “yue,” an ancient Chinese punishment that involved cutting off a person’s foot.

Published in Acta Anthropologica Sinica, the work is the first well-studied punitive amputation case from an archaeological site, offering important insight and valuable data for further study of ancient China’s penal system and social customs.

The research involved the analysis of a skeleton found at a burial site called Zhouyan in the northwestern province of Shaanxi. Regarded as the birthplace of the Zhou civilization, the site has previously yielded a large number of vessels, tombs and oracle bones.

Yue, along with other forms of mutilation, was widely used as a form of punishment in ancient China for over 1,000 years, until it was eventually abolished around 200 BC.More from NextShark: Indonesian college student becomes millionaire after putting his selfies up for sale as NFTs as a joke

While the body was found during excavations that began in 1999, a study of the bones was not previously prioritized as the archaeologists focused more on finding artifacts.Peking University postdoctoral researcher and the study’s lead author Li Nan shared that recent scientific developments have made their research on the remains more relevant.

“People only regarded this human bone as an incomplete bone before, but when I had a certain knowledge reserve, I thought at first sight that it might be a case of amputation,” she said.More from NextShark: MIT Grad Arrested in Alabama for Deadly Shooting of Yale Student

The result of the biomedical examination indicated that the reason for the amputation was not justified by disease or injury. The victim reportedly lived for at least five more years after the foot was amputated.

X-ray analysis of the 3,000-year-old remains concluded they were from a woman aged 30 to 35 with an amputated right foot, indicating the seriousness of her purported crime.

The bone density and structure of other parts of the skeleton ruled out the possibility that the woman suffered from diseases such as diabetes, leprosy and cancer.
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