Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 5Department of Archaeology, 1986 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 19
Page 139
... period to another , or within the same period and area , so do our archaeological techniques , methods and sets of assumptions come to differentiate themselves from one historical period to another , or even within the same historical ...
... period to another , or within the same period and area , so do our archaeological techniques , methods and sets of assumptions come to differentiate themselves from one historical period to another , or even within the same historical ...
Page 145
... period 1570- 1640 was routinely seen as a turning point in regional sequences of building types . though in various areas the absolute chronology of such a sequence was modified in varying degrees . And yet , as we shall see , the ...
... period 1570- 1640 was routinely seen as a turning point in regional sequences of building types . though in various areas the absolute chronology of such a sequence was modified in varying degrees . And yet , as we shall see , the ...
Page 217
... period and the accom- panying objects . But even in the periods where there is a equal number of graves and particularly rich female graves , women are still automatically seen as obtaining their status from fathers or husbands . in ...
... period and the accom- panying objects . But even in the periods where there is a equal number of graves and particularly rich female graves , women are still automatically seen as obtaining their status from fathers or husbands . in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
3rd millennium BC action analysis anthropology archaeo archaeological heritage Archaeological Review argued artefacts aspects assumptions Azande behaviour Brahmins British Bronze Age building burial cairn Cambridge University Press causewayed enclosures conception construction context created demarcation depth discipline discussion distinction distribution domestic dominant caste Easter Island eavesdrip economic enclosure ethnoarchaeology evidence example excavation exhibition fact Figure formal Giddens Glyn Daniel Hodder Hoskins household houses human important interaction interest interpretation Intrasite Iron Age landscape layout logy London material culture Megalithic tombs megaliths methodological monuments MRA values Neolithic Nick Higham nodes organisation paper past permeability maps plans political prehistory problems Randsborg Rebuilding reference relations relative asymmetry Renfrew Review from Cambridge ritual Robin Boast Savory segregation significance simulated social sciences society Somerset Levels space Spatial Archaeology spatial studies specific status suggest Sweet Track Tilley tradition transformation variability vernacular architecture village women