Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 20Department of Archaeology, 2005 - Archaeology |
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Page 13
... specific moment and no other . Every viewer has access to this level of reality but the specific reality of another individual or culture is very difficult to access . Indeed , the individual specificity of the Imagined landscape is one ...
... specific moment and no other . Every viewer has access to this level of reality but the specific reality of another individual or culture is very difficult to access . Indeed , the individual specificity of the Imagined landscape is one ...
Page 98
... specific to time and place . In other words , the ways in which the Picts as a cultural entity understood the monuments of the Neolithic would probably have been quite different from people of the preceding millennium . In the following ...
... specific to time and place . In other words , the ways in which the Picts as a cultural entity understood the monuments of the Neolithic would probably have been quite different from people of the preceding millennium . In the following ...
Page 38
... Specific forms of vessels with specific functions appear during the later Iron Age . Hill ( 2002 ) identified two broad phases in the development of LIA pottery . The first ( before c . 20 / 10BC ) is characterised by the appearance of ...
... Specific forms of vessels with specific functions appear during the later Iron Age . Hill ( 2002 ) identified two broad phases in the development of LIA pottery . The first ( before c . 20 / 10BC ) is characterised by the appearance of ...
Contents
Preface | 1 |
Real and unreal landscapes | 7 |
Activating the prehistoric landscape of Lancashire | 39 |
Copyright | |
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activity Anglo-Saxon Cemetery approach archaeological record Archaeological Review artefacts assemblages associated Avebury barrows bowl Bronze Age burial cafés Campanian Celtiberian century ceramic chapter coffee colonisation communities construction consumption context copper alloy create Deir el-Medina Department of Archaeology early Anglo-Saxon eating economic environment evidence example excavation feasting focus food and drink fragments funerary glass vessels Hill human identity Imagined landscape important indigenous individuals interaction interpretation Irish Sea Iron Age Britain landscape archaeology landscape learning London Lundenwic material culture medieval Mesolithic midden monuments nature Neolithic Norfolk ostracon Oxford paper particular past period political Popayán pottery practice prehistoric production Real landscape region relationship Review from Cambridge ritual role Roman Britain Routledge Royal Opera House Scotland Scottish Segeda settlement sherds significance social society stones Tilley traditional University of Cambridge University Press valley volume whisky wine xenia zooarchaeology