@article{oai:toyo-bunko.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005671, author = {陳, 國燦 and CH‘ÊN, Kuots‘an and 關尾, 史郎 and SEKIO, Shiro}, issue = {3・4}, journal = {東洋学報, The Toyo Gakuho}, month = {Mar}, note = {Recently about twelve hundred and twenty T’ang documents have been excavated from the old tombs of Turfan district. Most of them were written on the spot called Hsi-chou in the T’ang period, but a few of them were written at the other places. The aim of this article is to classify and study about the documents written at Ch’ang-An and Luo-Yang, the capitals of the T’ang dynasty, and brought to Hsi-chou.The first documents are the orders of the emperor, central government offices and written appointments. Severa1orders are very valuable, because they are not contained in the historical books. Written appointments can be distinguished as Hüsan-Kao and Kuan-Kao, but both of them are abstracts. We can rarely read an original written appointment.The second are three private documents which were brought from the capital to Hsi-chou, included two letters and one contract. The addresser who had been forced into emigrating to Luo-Yang after 640, the T’ang’s conquest against the Kao-Ch’ang sent their letters to their households remained at the home country. A superscription of the one was written on the after folding, and this letter was sent among a long distance without an envelope. The contract told us that they lead their comparatively wealthy and unrestricted lives in Lou-Yang. It is probable that they have returned to Turfan, their home country just after 651, because we cannot find the letter which was written after the second half of the 7th century.The third documents are the official documents brought to Hsi-chou by particular routs. Wen-Kuan-Fêng-An, the title of the collected documents concerning the salary of officials, Tieh, the written request concerning the imperial tomb of Kao-Tsung, and Shih-Mu-Li, the list of the documents approved by the central office of the Shang-Shu-Sheng are included of them. Besides there are two ledges of a pawn office and a financial organ. All of them have been excavated from the tomb 206 of Astana. Mrs. Ch’u, buried person of this tomb, had been given the title from the T’ang dynasty, therefore the dynasty gifted her the doll as an article buried in a tomb. These documents had been thrown into the wastepaper and diverted to materials of this doll at the national fac-tory.}, pages = {235--263}, title = {長安、洛陽よりトゥルファンに将来された唐代文書について(原著)}, volume = {72}, year = {1991}, yomi = {チン, コクサン and セキオ, シロウ} }