Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 19-20Department of Archaeology, 2004 - Archaeology |
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Page 62
... Bronze Age ' World System ' ( Kristiansen 1994 , 1998 ) , populated by powerful and distinct local and regional ethnicities and traditions , operating within a wider shared cosmology . Trade and exchange was a fundamental dimension of ...
... Bronze Age ' World System ' ( Kristiansen 1994 , 1998 ) , populated by powerful and distinct local and regional ethnicities and traditions , operating within a wider shared cosmology . Trade and exchange was a fundamental dimension of ...
Page 70
... Bronzes : A Study in Bronze Age Religion and Iconography . Copenhagen : National Museum Studies in Archaeology . Gamble , C. 1998. Palaeolithic society and the release from proximity : a network approach to intimate relations . World ...
... Bronzes : A Study in Bronze Age Religion and Iconography . Copenhagen : National Museum Studies in Archaeology . Gamble , C. 1998. Palaeolithic society and the release from proximity : a network approach to intimate relations . World ...
Page 42
... bronze jug , bronze handle of a patera , a large bronze cauldron , fragments from two buckets or tankards and harness ware . A LIA pit dated to c . AD 45 from Ardleigh ( Essex ) contained five pottery copies of these bronze strainers ...
... bronze jug , bronze handle of a patera , a large bronze cauldron , fragments from two buckets or tankards and harness ware . A LIA pit dated to c . AD 45 from Ardleigh ( Essex ) contained five pottery copies of these bronze strainers ...
Contents
Foreword | 1 |
How Little Does it Take to Represent a Face? | 9 |
Archaeology and Aesthetics | 12 |
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activity aesthetic objects appear approach archaeology artefacts artist associated become Black body Britain British Bronze burial Cambridge cemeteries century coffee concept concerned considered construction consumption context created discussion drink early ethnicity evidence example excavation existence experience expression feasting field Figure glass groups human ideas identify identity illustrative images important indicate individual interest interpretation issues knowledge landscape living London Long material culture mathematics means monuments Museum nature offering original Oxford paintings particular past period physical political possible practice present produced properties questions reference region relations relationship remains represent representation Review ritual role Roman sculpture settlement significant social society space stone structure suggests symbolic theory thought traditional types understanding University Press volume