Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 20Department of Archaeology, 2005 - Archaeology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 72
Page 104
... importance of the place . Case study 3 : Abernethy The monastic foundation at Abernethy has already been the subject ... important and visible area , especially being down the river and between Scone to the north , and Forteviot to the ...
... importance of the place . Case study 3 : Abernethy The monastic foundation at Abernethy has already been the subject ... important and visible area , especially being down the river and between Scone to the north , and Forteviot to the ...
Page 106
... important place in the landscape . The Picts erected their symbol stones in the same locations as earlier monuments indicating that these places in the landscape up and down the Tay valley were important , and that those erecting the ...
... important place in the landscape . The Picts erected their symbol stones in the same locations as earlier monuments indicating that these places in the landscape up and down the Tay valley were important , and that those erecting the ...
Page 191
... important to put even more stress on archaeology as the discipline which studies material culture or the structuring agency of materiality in general ' ( p.10 ) . The infuriating aspects of theory appear , but then again , they are ...
... important to put even more stress on archaeology as the discipline which studies material culture or the structuring agency of materiality in general ' ( p.10 ) . The infuriating aspects of theory appear , but then again , they are ...
Contents
Preface | 1 |
Real and unreal landscapes | 7 |
Activating the prehistoric landscape of Lancashire | 39 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activity appear approach Archaeology assemblages associated attempt become Britain Cambridge cemeteries century chapter coffee collection colonisation communities consideration considered construction consumed consumption contained context create cultural discussion drink early East eating economic environment evidence example excavation feasting field Figure finds fragments glass Hill House human identity important indicate individuals interesting interpretation Iron Age issues knowledge landscape late later lives London material material culture meaning monuments nature objects offering original Oxford particular past period physical political possible pottery practice present Press production record regarding region relationship remains represent result Review ritual role Roman Scotland settlement significance social society space specific stones structure suggest symbolic traditional types understanding University valley vessels volume whisky wine xenia zooarchaeology