Mei Jianjun


Mei Jianjun is an archaeo-metallurgist. As of January 2014, he became Director of the Needham Research Institute, as well as a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge University. He served as President of the International Society for the History of East Asian Science, Technology and Medicine in 2015. His book
Copper and bronze metallurgy in late prehistoric Xinjiang presented "significant new archaeological data" relating to the introduction and use of copper and bronze in Xinjiang province and neighboring areas.

Education

Mei Jianjun is a graduate of the Beijing University of Iron and Steel Technology from which
he received a B.Eng in Metallurgical Chemistry in 1984. In 1988, he received an M.Sc in the History of Science and Technology. In 1994, he became a Li Foundation scholar at the Needham Research Institute at the University of Cambridge. In 2000 he received his Ph.D. from the Department of Archaeology at Cambridge.
Mei then held postdoctoral fellowships at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge, the Needham Research Institute, and the Tokyo National Museum.

Career

In 2004, Mei became a Professor and Director of the Institute of Historical Metallurgy and Materials at the renamed University of Science and Technology Beijing.
In 2014, Mei became director of the Needham Research Institute at Cambridge.

Publications

Articles

  • , "Recent Research on Early Bronze Metallurgy in Northwest China", in Paul Jett, Scientific Research on Ancient Asian Metallurgy. Washington: Freer Gallery of Arts, 2012, pp. 37–46.
  • , "Scientific Examination of Shang-Dynasty Bronzes from Hanzhong, Shaanxi Province, China" in Journal of Archaeological Science, 36, 2009: 1881-1891.
  • "Early Metallurgy and Socio-Cultural Complexity: Archaeological Discoveries in Northwest China", in Bryan K. Hanks and Katheryn M.Linduff, Social Complexity in Prehistoric Eurasia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009, pp. 215–32.
  • , "Special Alloys from Remote Frontiers: Scientific Study of the Shang Bronzes from Hanzhong, Southwest Shaanxi", Journal of Archaeological Science, 36, 2009: 2108-2118.
  • "The Material Culture of the Iron Age Peoples in Xinjiang, Northwest China", in Joan Aruz and Ann Farkas, The Golden Deer of Eurasia. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2006, pp. 132–145.
  • , "Copper Smelting from Xinjiang, Northwest China, Part I: Kangcun village, Kuche County, c. 18th century AD", Historical Metallurgy, 39, 2005: 96-105.
  • "Metallurgy in Bronze Age Xinjiang and its Cultural Context", in Katheryn M. Linduff, Metallurgy in Eastern Eurasia from the Urals to the Yellow River. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2004, pp. 173–88.
  • "Qijia and Seima-Turbino: the Question of Early Contacts between Northwest China and the Eurasian Steppe". Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 75 : 31-54.
  • "Cultural interaction between China and Central Asia during the Bronze Age. Proceedings of the British Academy, 121 : 1-39.
  • , "The Iron Age Cultures in Xinjiang and their Steppe Connections", in Katie Boyle et al., Ancient Interactions: East and West in Eurasia. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2002, pp. 213–234.

    Books

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