Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 3Department of Archaeology, 1984 - Archaeology |
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Page 4
... written sources , and it is entirely laudable that prehistorians should attempt to supply the answers to questions in prehistory which will tend to fall in the domain of the historian once written sources become available . There is an ...
... written sources , and it is entirely laudable that prehistorians should attempt to supply the answers to questions in prehistory which will tend to fall in the domain of the historian once written sources become available . There is an ...
Page 7
... writing not as a mirror of early society , but as an essential and dynamic ingredient in it . The written document has been part of Old World civilisation for 5,000 years , and , though one can envisage complex systems of administration ...
... writing not as a mirror of early society , but as an essential and dynamic ingredient in it . The written document has been part of Old World civilisation for 5,000 years , and , though one can envisage complex systems of administration ...
Page 13
... written authority are obvious and almost indispensible . Yet the incompleteness of the codes we have confirms that much law remained in the realm of tradition , and suggests that the written prescriptions were only intended to deal with ...
... written authority are obvious and almost indispensible . Yet the incompleteness of the codes we have confirms that much law remained in the realm of tradition , and suggests that the written prescriptions were only intended to deal with ...
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amphoras analysis antiquarian studies Antiquarianism Antiquity approach archaeo archaeological context archaeological data Archaeological Review archives areas artefacts aspects Aztec British Bronze Bronze Age central centres century complex concepts concerning contemporary context critical historiography cultural Deir el-Medina discipline discussion documents E.M. Forster early economic Egypt emphasis England English evidence example excavation Herodotus history of archaeology human ideas important interest interpretation Knossos knowledge Kojiki Kristiansen limited logical London material Mixtec Monte Albán museums Mycenaean nature Nihon Shoki organisation palace Palaima paper particular past pattern period perspective philosophical political pottery prehistory present problems production Pylos reconstruct record reference regional remains Rescue Archaeology Review from Cambridge Roman rooms scribes settlement Shelmerdine shipwrecks social society specific structure suggest tablets Tarascan Tartessos texts textual data theoretical theory timber/walls tion tradition Tututepec understanding UNESCO University Press volume writing Zapotec