News
YU Museum Begins ‘Half-century-cherished Project’!
September 23, 2020, pr
YU steps up to organize Gyeongju tomb artifacts discovered in the 70s
University museums unite to submit proposal to the Cultural Heritage Administration... Government and the National Assembly provides exceptional budget support
Register and arrange unreported artifacts, publish reports, hold special exhibits, etc. until 2023
The Jeokseokmokgwakbun (stone tomb) that should be in Gyeongju is currently located at the YU campus in Gyeongsan, Gyeongbuk. The ‘Gyeongju Inwangdong Tombs’ discovered in 1977 were moved in its entirety and restored at the YU Folk Village. A total of 2,262 rare artifacts were found at this time and most of them are currently stored at the YU Museum. Valuable artifacts from the Silla Dynasty were asleep at the YU Museum for tens of years.
YU Museum also participated in the joint excavation of ‘Hwangnam-dong Tomb 110’ (excavated in 1973) and ‘Michuwangneung District Tombs’ (excavated in 1973-1974) in relation with the ‘Gyeongju General Development Plan Project’ of the government in the 1970s. About 2,000 important artifacts were found in this excavation as well. But this was a time when there was still no appropriate guideline on returning artifacts to the state or drafting reports. In result, the artifact excavation project ended with on-site excavations and submission of simple reports, thus being left behind as an incomplete project for 47 years.
The government and National Assembly finally stepped up. The National Assembly passed a budget of 4.2 billion KRW for the ‘Buried Cultural Heritage Unarranged Artifact Preservation and Utilization Project’ that has been sleeping in university museums around the nation. This was quite an unexpectedly high budget.
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