Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 3Department of Archaeology, 1984 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 33
Page 63
... context is presented . ( For a more thorough introduction , see , e.g. , Chadwick 1976 or Hooker 1980. ) Secondly , the way in which we handle texts of this type and the information they provide is briefly analysed and set out in two ...
... context is presented . ( For a more thorough introduction , see , e.g. , Chadwick 1976 or Hooker 1980. ) Secondly , the way in which we handle texts of this type and the information they provide is briefly analysed and set out in two ...
Page 65
... context , which can again , as the diagram shows , be divided into material ( here labelled ' archaeological ' ) and ... context , but not of a text's relationship to its textual context . In other words , without knowing a single fact ...
... context , which can again , as the diagram shows , be divided into material ( here labelled ' archaeological ' ) and ... context , but not of a text's relationship to its textual context . In other words , without knowing a single fact ...
Page 67
... context . A converse instance is the Pylos archive room , where many texts are found within the same archaeological context , but form part of many textual contexts . Here the separate definition of textual context and detailed ...
... context . A converse instance is the Pylos archive room , where many texts are found within the same archaeological context , but form part of many textual contexts . Here the separate definition of textual context and detailed ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
administrative Aegean amphoras analysis approach archaeo archaeological context archaeological data archaeological evidence Archaeological Review archives areas artefacts Aztec Bennet Bronze Age Cambridge 3:2 cargo centres century Chadwick clay complex Cuicatlán cultural Deir el-Medina documents dynasties early economic Egypt Egyptian ethnohistory example excavation field archaeology Figure Greek Herodotus historical archaeology Iberia identified important Indian inscriptions Institute Japanese Kapilavastu Knossos Kojiki kudurru land Linear Marcus Matching Game material Maya Mediterranean mentioned Mesoamerica Mesopotamia Mixtec Monte Albán museum Mycenae Mycenaean names Nihon Shoki Nubia organisation Oztuma palace Palaima pattern period philosophical place signs place-names pottery Prehistoric Britain prehistory problem Pylos reconstruct record refer region Review from Cambridge rooms scribes settlement Shelmerdine shipwrecks social society specific structure tablets Tarascan Tartessos territorial boundaries texts textual data timber/walls tion towns trade tradition transaction Tututepec types typology UNESCO University Press village wrecks writing written Zapotec