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Public Images, Private Readings: Multi-Perspective Approaches to the Post-Palaeolithic Rock Art - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rediscovering Heritage through Artefacts, Sites, and Landscapes: Translating a 3500-year Record at Ritidian, Guam - Mike T. Carson - Bog -

Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 23 - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 22 - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

‘Our Lincolnshire’: Exploring public engagement with heritage - Dominic Symonds - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Assessing Iron Age Marsh-Forts - Shelagh Norton - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Assessing Iron Age Marsh-Forts - Shelagh Norton - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Iron Age marsh-forts are large, monumental structures located in low-lying waterscapes. Although they share chronological and architectural similarities with their hillfort counterparts, their locations suggest that they may have played a specific and alternative role in Iron Age society. Despite the availability of a rich palaeoenvironmental archive at many sites, little is known about these enigmatic structures, and until recently, the only acknowledged candidate was the unusual, dual-enclosure monument at Sutton Common, near Doncaster. Assessing Iron Age Marsh-Forts considers marsh-forts as a separate phenomenon within Iron Age society through an understanding of their landscape context and palaeoenvironmental development. At the national level, a range of Iron Age wetland monuments has been compared to Sutton Common to generate a gazetteer of potential marsh-forts. At the local level, a multi-disciplinary case-study is presented of the Berth marsh-fort in North Shropshire, incorporating GIS-based landscape modelling and multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental analysis (plant macrofossils, beetles and pollen).The results of both the gazetteer and the Berth case-study challenge the view that marsh-forts are simply a topographical phenomenon. These substantial Iron Age monuments appear to have been deliberately constructed to control areas of marginal wetland and may have played an important role in the ritual landscape.

DKK 451.00
1

CAA2014: 21st Century Archaeology - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Archaeologies & Antiquaries: Essays by Dai Morgan Evans - David Morgan Evans - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Laying the Foundations: Manual of the British Museum Iraq Scheme Archaeological Training Programme - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rome and Barbaricum: Contributions to the Archaeology and History of Interaction in European Protohistory - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Spatial Analysis of Housing and Economic Complexes in the Upper Palaeolithic of Transbaikal (Southern Siberia) - Irina I. Razgildeeva - Bog -

Environment, Archaeology and Landscape: Papers in honour of Professor Martin Bell - Dr Thomas (visiting Research Fellow Walker - Bog - Archaeopress -

Goytepe: Neolithic Excavations in the Middle Kura Valley, Azerbaijan - Farhad Guliyev - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Fires in Gunaikurnai Country - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Medieval Settlement Research No. 38, 2023 - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Medieval Settlement Research No. 37, 2022 - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Social Interactions and Status Markers in the Roman World - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

The Poole Iron Age Logboat - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Travellers in Ottoman Lands - - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rhodes in Ancient Times - Cecil Torr - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Qidfa‘ 1: Excavation of a Late Prehistoric Tomb, Fujairah Emirate, United Arab Emirates - Walid Yasin Al Tikriti - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Investigations into the Dyeing Industry in Pompeii - Dr Heather Hopkins Pepper - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rural Cult Centres in the Hauran: Part of the broader network of the Near East (100 BC–AD 300) - Francesca Mazzilli - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rural Cult Centres in the Hauran: Part of the broader network of the Near East (100 BC–AD 300) - Francesca Mazzilli - Bog - Archaeopress - Plusbog.dk

Rural Cult Centres in the Hauran: Part of the broader network of the Near East (100 BC–AD 300) challenges earlier scholars’ emphasis on the role played by local identities and Romanisation in religion and religious architecture in the Roman Empire through the first comprehensive multidisciplinary analysis of rural cult centres in the Hauran (southern Syria) from the pre-Roman to the Roman period. The Hauran is an interesting and revealing area of study because it has been a geographical cross-point between different cultures over time. Inspired by recent theories on interconnectivity and globalisation, the monograph argues that cult centres, and the Hauran itself, are part of a human network at a macro level on the basis of analysis of archaeological, architectural, sculptural and epigraphic evidence and landscape. As a result of this multi-disciplinary approach, the text also re-assesses the social meaning of these sanctuaries, discusses the identity of the elite group that contributed financially to the building of sanctuaries, and attempts to reconstruct ritual and economic activities in cult centres. This book re-evaluates the significance of contacts between the elite of the Hauran and other cultures of the Near East in shaping cult sites; it includes a first catalogue of rural cult centres of the Hauran in the appendix.

DKK 380.00
1

A Vanishing Landscape: Archaeological Investigations at Blakeney Eye, Norfolk - Naomi (senior Archaeological Consultant Field - Bog - Archaeopress -

A Vanishing Landscape: Archaeological Investigations at Blakeney Eye, Norfolk - Naomi (senior Archaeological Consultant Field - Bog - Archaeopress -

A Vanishing Landscape: Archaeological Investigations at Blakeney Eye, Norfolk documents the results of several archaeological investigations undertaken on Blakeney Eye on behalf of the Environment Agency after the decision was taken for a managed retreat of the area. The Eye is a part of the north Norfolk coastline that has been under constant pressure of erosion for centuries.Excavation revealed evidence for multi-period occupation, with abandonments driven by the ever-changing climate. Neolithic features and artefacts were the earliest remains present. Fragmentary remains of an enclosed 13-14th century farmstead were identified, mainly preserved beneath the two-celled flint building of 16th-17th century date (the scheduled monument known locally as Blakeney Chapel). Archaeological evidence for the function of this building is discussed in conjunction with the documentary sources. The archaeological remains throw light on the trading links between the medieval and post-medieval port of Cley and the Continent, as well as the storms and tidal influxes of the past that resulted in repeated abandonments of the area.This volume includes contributions by Kathryn Blythe, Michael Clark, Jacqueline Churchill, Jane Cowgill, John Giorgi, Alison Locker, Adrian Marsden, Graham Morgan, Quita Mould, Andrew Peachey, Sara Percival, James Rackham, Ian Rowlandson, Zoe Tomlinson, Alan Vince†, Hugh Willmott, Jane Young.

DKK 534.00
1