Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 11Department of Archaeology, 1992 - Archaeology |
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Page 134
... century that emotional times , such as bereavements , are personal . The way cremations are carried out in Britain today is unobtrusive in the extreme . If everything goes well the mourners will neither see nor hear the cremation taking ...
... century that emotional times , such as bereavements , are personal . The way cremations are carried out in Britain today is unobtrusive in the extreme . If everything goes well the mourners will neither see nor hear the cremation taking ...
Page 135
... century " ( 1981 : 577 ) . This is true , but the rejection of this " cult " does not mean that the living have rejected mourning , or no longer feel or expect to feel loss at a death . What has happened over the course of the twentieth ...
... century " ( 1981 : 577 ) . This is true , but the rejection of this " cult " does not mean that the living have rejected mourning , or no longer feel or expect to feel loss at a death . What has happened over the course of the twentieth ...
Page 274
... century French version : " The fox's nature is such that , when he is hungry and cannot find anything to eat , he rolls over in red mud and lies down with his mouth wide open and tongue hanging out as if he had bled to death . Then ...
... century French version : " The fox's nature is such that , when he is hungry and cannot find anything to eat , he rolls over in red mud and lies down with his mouth wide open and tongue hanging out as if he had bled to death . Then ...
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Common terms and phrases
analysis ancient Antiquities appear approach Archaeological Review Archaeology of Death argued artefacts Bar-Yosef barrows Belfer-Cohen Britain British Bronze Age Burgwurster burial Cambridge University Press Capacocha cartoon Castleden cave cemetery century ceramic chaeology Chalcolithic Chiusi context Coppens cremation dead deceased decorated Dodo Elgin marbles epipalaeolithic ethnic jokes Etruscan evidence example excavation forensic forensic archaeology funerary grave Greek groups Hayonim Hidrofóbia Hochdorf human humour ideology important Inca infant infanticide interment interpretation Iron Age jokes about stupidity Kebaran Kinnes Knossos La Tène culture London Lucy manipulation material culture means Milesians Minoan misericord monuments mortuary practices Museum Natufian nature Neanderthals Neolithic Palo Mayombe paper Parker Pearson particular past pottery prehistoric present Randsborg recent reconstructions reference relationships Review from Cambridge rite ritual role Roman Roman Britain Shanks society specific stereotypes structures suggest symbolic theory Tilley tion tomb understanding Valla volume women Yorkshire