William Gowland (1842-1927)
Professor William Gowland was one of the many foreign advisers
who went to Japan early in the Meiji era (1868-1912). He was a
chemist and metallurgist and worked at the Mint during his stay in
Japan from 1872 to 1879. As an educated young man, he had wide
interests, and soon became involved in archaeology. He investigated
406 tombs of the Kofun period (about 300 - mid-6th century AD), and
surveyed 140. Many of the tombs he visited had already been robbed
and so contained very few grave-goods. In one he mentions 'a small
glass bead and a quantity of vermilion'.
However, one of his excavations was of special significance: the
Shibayama dolmen on the east slope of Ikoma Mountain to the south
of Osaka, which had remained untouched since the sixth century. The
burial chamber contained fragments of a pine-wood coffin mingled
with some personal ornaments of metal and beads made of glass and
jasper. Inside the tomb there were also two swords, one in pieces,
a dagger, arrowheads made of iron, horse-trappings and a large
number of beads. The beads were of various kinds, including
spherical beads of blue glass and stone. Other tubular beads made
of green stone had been strung on a necklace with magatama
(comma-shaped stone jewels). There were also three
magatama made respectively of chalcedony, rock-crystal and
steatite. The tomb also contained a number of Sue ware pots.
Gowland also visited the important Rokuya dolmen in Tamba
Province. He acquired there two gilded horse-bits and other
fragments of harness as well as an iron sword, beads and pottery.
As a metallurgist, Gowland used his specialism to make important
analyses of the metal objects that he found. In the absence of
written records from the Kofun period, Gowland's pioneering
research, and the work of succeeding archaeologists have provided
much of our information about the culture of the time.