@article{oai:kanazawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00050971, author = {YOSHIDA, Yasuyuki and 吉田, 泰幸}, issue = {21}, journal = {金沢大学文化資源学研究, Kanazawa cultural resource studies}, month = {Mar}, note = {The definition of a museum is being modified in the international setting led by International Council of Museums, and the responsibilities of museum are expanding to landscapes outside of museum buildings. Kofun, gigantic tumuli built mainly in the western part of Japan over a thousand years ago, are the most typical archaeological landscape that still exists in contemporary society. This paper attempts to situate the Kofun landscape into the contemporary discussion of museology and cultural heritage studies. The author examines how the Kofun landscape is preserved under the imperial majesty which has its root in an ancient era or was restructured at the beginning of the modern era, presented to the public underpinned by archaeological knowledge as modern science, and dedicated by local residents who are engaging in reflexive public history. The imperial Kofun landscapes are like a very limited-access and cabinet-type museum. The reconstructed Kofun landscapes are turned into open-air museums. A small museum attached to Kofun is built as a community hub to maintain the Kofun landscape. Analyzing the relationship between Kofun landscapes and museums is providing a fine example as to how authentic values of the landscape have been formed, and future museums face with landscapes.}, pages = {33--43}, title = {古墳をまもる・つたえる・まつることと博物館}, year = {2019} }