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Continental Connections [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x170 mm, b/w illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Feb-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782978097
  • ISBN-13: 9781782978091
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 176 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x170 mm, b/w illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Feb-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782978097
  • ISBN-13: 9781782978091
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
New synthesis looking at the cultural, material and social relationships between Britain and Ireland and continental Europe over 15,000 years of later prehistory.

The prehistories of Britain and Ireland are inescapably entwined with continental European narratives. The central aim here is to explore ‘cross-channel’ relationships throughout later prehistory, investigating the archaeological links (material, social, cultural) between the areas we now call Britain and Ireland, and continental Europe, from the Mesolithic through to the end of the Iron Age. Since the separation from the European mainland of Ireland (c. 16,000 BC) and Britain (c. 6000 BC), their island nature has been seen as central to many aspects of life within them, helping to define their senses of identity, and forming a crucial part of their neighbourly relationship with continental Europe and with each other. However, it is important to remember that the surrounding seaways have often served to connect as well as to separate these islands from the continent. In approaching the subject of ‘continental connections’ in the long-term, and by bringing a variety of different archaeological perspectives (associated with different periods) to bear on it, this volume provides a new a new synthesis of the ebbs and flows of the cross-channel relationship over the course of 15,000 years of later prehistory, enabling fresh understandings and new insights to emerge about the intimately linked trajectories of change in both regions.

Recenzijos

This really is a highly recommended, must-read volume that moves the debate forward in interesting directions. * Landscape History * This work is significant. It gives the continental reader insight into both an important subject and the post-process intellectual world of British research. * Germania *

List of Contributors
iv
1 Continental connections: introduction
1(6)
Duncan Garrow
Fraser Sturt
2 From sea to land and back again: understanding the shifting character of Europe's landscapes and seascapes over the last million years
7(21)
Fraser Sturt
3 Attitudes and latitudes to seafaring in prehistoric Atlantic Europe
28(15)
Robert Van De Noort
4 Britain and Ireland inside Mesolithic Europe
43(16)
Graeme Warren
5 Seaways and shared ways: imagining and imaging the movement of people, objects and ideas over the course of the Mesolithic---Neolithic transition, c. 5,000--3,500 BC
59(19)
Hugo Anderson-Whymark
Duncan Garrow
6 Parallel lives? Neolithic funerary monuments and the Channel divide
78(21)
Chris Scarre
7 What was and what would never be: changing patterns of interaction and archaeological visibility across north-west Europe from 2,500 to 1,500 cal. BC
99(23)
Neil Wilkin
Marc Vander Linden
8 Rethinking Iron Age connections across the Channel and North Sea
122(23)
Leo Webley
9 Connections and separation? Narratives of Iron Age art in Britain and its relationship with the Continent
145(21)
Jody Joy
10 Continental connections: concluding discussion
166
Fraser Sturt
Duncan Garrow
Hugo Anderson-Whymark is a Researcher at the University of York, based in Stromness, Orkney. He is a prehistorian specialising in flint and stone artefacts. Duncan Garrow teaches later European prehistory and archaeological theory at the University of Reading. His research interests include long-term histories of deposition, burial practices, island archaeologies and interdisciplinary approaches to material culture. Fraser Sturt is a senior lecturer in the Department of Archaeology at Southampton University specialising in maritime prehistory and geoarchaeology.