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    Judith A. Lerner,Aspects of Assimilation: The Funerary Practices and Furnishings of Central Asians

    in China(Sino-Platonic Papers, 168, December, 2005)

    ERRATUM AND ADDITIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY AND OBSERVATIONS

    Although the use of the singular for a post-printing discovery may be unduly optimistic, I

    take this opportunity to direct the reader to a particular error in Table 2, Occurrence of

    Specific Scenes and Motifs. The dates given for the Northern Zhou and Northern Qi

    dynasties, respectively, have been reversed; they should, of course, be Northern Zhou

    (557-581) and Northern Qi (550-577).

    Page 3, continuation of footnote 2: Citing reports in the files of the Freer Gallery,

    Washington, D.C., I noted the possibility that the base that has been linked to the panelsand gateposts of the funerary bed attributed to Anyang, comes from Cave 4 at

    Xiangtangshan, and observed that, if this was the case, it is hard to reconcile the style and

    iconography of the panels and gateposts with a royal Buddhist burial. Etsuko Kageyama

    has drawn my attention to the reason for the Xiantangshan attribution in the volume,

    Museum fr Ostasiatische Kunst der Stadt Kln, Buddhistische Plastik aus China und

    Japan, ed. Gunhild Gabbert (Wiesbaden: F. Steiner, 1972), 278-85 (85. Zwei

    Reliefplatten in Form von Torbauten) and 414-17 (Anhang 1: Die Mittlere Hhle von

    Nord-Hsiang-tang-shan und ihre mutmassliche Verbingdung zu den Klner Torreliefs).

    Early reports of the contents of this and other caves in the complex seem to confirm the

    Xiangtangshan attributionat least for the Freer base (see also Jiang Boqin, The

    Zoroastrian Art of the Sogdians in China. V. A Study of the Pictorial Program on the

    Anyang Mortuary Bed, China Art and Archaeology Digest, IV [December, 2000]: 60-

    61). The use of the caves for royal burials is under study and has been confirmed by

    current archaeological investigation at Xiangtangshan, as recently presented in the

    Conference on Xiangtangshan and Northern Qi Art, Museum of the University of

    Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, May 2, 2006, specifically in the paper by Li Chongfeng, On

    Gaohuans Tomb Cave at Xiangtangshan.

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    Judith A. Lerner,Aspects of Assimilation: The Funerary Practices and Furnishings of Central Asians

    in China(Sino-Platonic Papers, 168, December, 2005)

    Page 5, footnote 6: Regarding the DNA of Yu Hong, the recent publication of the tomb

    and sarcophagus reports that his was of European type while that of his wife was both

    European and Asian: Shanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology, Taiyuan Municipal

    Institute of Archaeology and the Bureau of Cultural Relics and Tourism, Jinyuan District,

    Taiyuan, The Sui Dynasty Tomb of Yu Hong in Taiyuan (Beijing: Cultural Relics

    Publishing House, 2005), 207. This publication was not available to me when I was

    writing Aspects of Assimilation. I am grateful to Etsuko Kagayama for bringing the

    DNA section to my attention.

    Pages 26-7: Etsuko Kageyama has further observed in an email to me that on the panel

    depicting An Qie seated in a yurt with a Turk (Shaanxi Provincial Institute of

    Archaeology,An Jia Tomb,pl. 57, and noted on p. 29, note 73) the two men seem to be

    drinking from a rhyton. I agree that they are sharing a vessel and appreciate the acuity of

    her observation. However, I would identify the object that An Qie hands to the Turk a

    drinking horn. Although the Iranian rhyton is also horn-shaped, its liquid contents are

    consumed from the pierced narrow end (often terminating in an animals head) while

    held aloft so that the liquid pours into the drinkers mouth (see the Kooros bed, Pl. 6d). In

    contrast, An Qie hands the Turk the horn by means of its tapered narrow end, implying

    that it is open only at the wider top, and therefore is more like a cup.

    Similar vesselsthat is, drinking hornsheld in this position are found on several gold

    plaques from Scythian burials in the Crimea, dating to the latter half of the first

    millennium BCE. On these plaques, two Scythians drink from the same horn, which

    recalls the oath-taking ceremony described by Herodotus (IV.70) (The Metropolitan

    Museum of Art and The Los Angeles Country Museum of Art, From the Lands of the

    Scythians. Ancient Treasures from the Museums of the U.S.S.R. 3000 B.C. 100 B.C.

    [New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1975], 110, nos. 72 and 76; pl. 14). Is it

    possible that An Qies meeting with the Turk perpetuates this ancient Iranian/Indo-

    European ritual to mark the conclusion of their negotiations? I am grateful to Kageyama

    for opening this line of inquiry.