Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 14-15Department of Archaeology, 1997 - Archaeology |
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Page 86
notion that we , as archaeologists , should not reject written evidence when it is available . The argument against such a view , which stresses the ideological biases of written evidence and therefore its lack of worth , is here ...
notion that we , as archaeologists , should not reject written evidence when it is available . The argument against such a view , which stresses the ideological biases of written evidence and therefore its lack of worth , is here ...
Page 91
... evidence and ancient literary evidence in Etruscan studies . The Use of Written Evidence In The Study Of Ancient Israel Uncritical integration of archaeological and historical evidence has received much criticism in recent years . Yet ...
... evidence and ancient literary evidence in Etruscan studies . The Use of Written Evidence In The Study Of Ancient Israel Uncritical integration of archaeological and historical evidence has received much criticism in recent years . Yet ...
Page 114
... evidence needs to be considered in terms of three kinds of basic information which would be expected of any archaeological evidence : provenience , by which I would distinguish the categories enumerated above , date of production , and ...
... evidence needs to be considered in terms of three kinds of basic information which would be expected of any archaeological evidence : provenience , by which I would distinguish the categories enumerated above , date of production , and ...
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acoustical Africa analysis ancient Anthropology approach archaeological evidence archaeological record Archaeological Review archaeological writing architecture areas argued artefacts Beowulf bone Bronze Age buildings burial Cambridge University Press century cognitive cognitive archaeology concept construction context Contributions disability discipline discussion economic environment ethnic example excavation figurines historians History of Archaeology Hodder human impairment important individual interest Interpreting Archaeology Iron Age issues landscape London Lower Nubia material culture meaning medieval megalithic art memory Meroitic monuments Museum Neolithic Nubia organisation Oxford Palaeolithic papers past perception perceptual framework period perspective Phenomenology political pottery prehistoric present problems processual archaeology production prospective memory Qasr Ibrim recognised relationship representation retrospective memory Review from Cambridge Roman Romanesque Routledge settlement social society sources space structure style suggests symbolic temples textual theoretical theory Tilley traditional Trigger understanding University of Cambridge visual volume