Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Rock Art and Seascapes in Uppland [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 124 pages, col illus
  • Serija: Swedish Rock Art Research Series 1
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Nov-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1842175130
  • ISBN-13: 9781842175132
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 124 pages, col illus
  • Serija: Swedish Rock Art Research Series 1
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Nov-2012
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1842175130
  • ISBN-13: 9781842175132
"Rock Art and Seascapes in Uppland presents a fresh approach to the detailed study of a selection of over 80 rock art panels located close to the present coastline of Uppland, Sweden, which include some 2000 ship depictions among the varied figurative art. Using GPS measurement combined with detailed study of the terrain, topography and relative sea level data in order to present accurate maps of the panels, the location and significance of the original positioning of rock art images in relation to theircontemporaneous coastline is demonstrated and modelled. The implications in terms of chronology, typology, landscape, social practice and iconography are discussed and new interpretations for the relationship between Bronze Age rock art, shore displacement, settlement and burial sites presented. This is the first volume in a collaborative series of regional and case studies (The Swedish Rock Art Research Series) with the Swedish Rock Art Research Archive (SRARA), University of Gothenburg."--Publisher's website.

Rock Art and Seascapes in Uppland presents a fresh approach to the detailed study of a selection of over 80 rock art panels located close to the present coastline of Uppland, Sweden, which include some 2000 ship depictions among the varied figurative art.

Rock Art and Seascapes in Uppland presents a fresh approach to the detailed study of a selection of over 80 rock art panels located close to the present coastline of Uppland, Sweden, which include some 2000 ship depictions among the varied figurative art. Using GPS measurement combined with detailed study of the terrain, topography and relative sea level data in order to present accurate maps of the panels, the location and significance of the original positioning of rock art images in relation to their contemporaneous coastline is demonstrated and modelled. The implications in terms of chronology, typology, landscape, social practice and iconography are discussed and new interpretations for the relationship between Bronze Age rock art, shore displacement, settlement and burial sites presented. This is the first volume in a collaborative series of regional and case studies (The Swedish Rock Art Research Series) with the Swedish Rock Art Research Archive (SRARA), University of Gothenburg.

Recenzijos

[ Ling's] discussion of why the figurative art associated with Uppland's Bronze Age graves is so much less vivid than that found at these open-air sites is particularly thought-provoking. -- Current World Archaeology Current World Archaeology

Abbreviations vii
List of Figures
viii
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(14)
Background
1(4)
Aim
5(2)
Theory
7(2)
Methods: Chronology/Typology, Altitude, GIS and Shore Displacement
9(6)
Chapter 2 History of Research
15(14)
Shore Displacement and Rock Art in Southwestern Uppland
15(6)
Rock Art and Other Bronze Age Remains in the Landscape
21(8)
Chapter 3 Seascapes in Uppland
29(52)
Introduction
29(1)
The Rock Art in the Rickeby and Hemsta Areas
29(31)
Boglosa 138:1
31(7)
Boglosa 141:1
38(2)
Boglosa 155:1-3
40(7)
Boglosa 131:1
47(6)
Boglosa 128:1-3, 129:1-2, 130:1
53(7)
The Harkeberga Area
60(5)
Aspects of Prominent Rock Art Sites and Landscapes
65(1)
The Extraordinary Ship in Brandskog, Boglosa 109:1
65(4)
The Maritime Panels in Boglosa By, Boglosa 160:1, 260:1, 261:1, 264:1, 265:1, 281:1, 282:1 & 283:1
69(3)
The Litslena Area
72(5)
Biskopskulla 111:1
77(4)
Chapter 4 Conclusions
81(22)
Rock Art and Chronology
81(7)
Social Praxis in the Bronze Age Landscape of Uppland
88(3)
Spatial and Societal Dimensions of Rock Art
91(6)
Coda: East and West Maritime Praxis
97(6)
References 103
Johan Ling is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of Archaeology and Ancient History in Gothenburg. His research interests are primarily in rock art, its chronology and landscapes, particularly the relationship between rock art and shore displacement in Bronze Age Sweden; and in the use of lead isotope analyses on bronze items to investigate the possibility of copper extraction in Sweden at that time.