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2 Historical Archaeology
Historical Archaeology
Meaning and Identity in a Greek LandscapeAn Archaeological EthnographyHamish ForbesUniversity of Nottingham
ForbesexploreshowGreekvillagershaveunderstoodandreactedtotheirlandscapesoverthecenturies.Basedondatagatheredover25years,Forbes’studycombinestherichdetailofethnographicfieldworkwithhistoricaland archaeological time. Written for archaeologists,humangeographersandhistoriansofancientGreece.
‘… one can only be grateful to Forbes that decades of experiencing the cultures of Methana from the inside allow him to share with us here both the ‘language’ and ‘literature’ of its landscapes.’CambridgeArchaeologicalJournal
2008228x152mm462pp 978-0-521-86699-6 Hardback £55.00
Plague and the End of AntiquityThe Pandemic of 541–750Edited by Lester K. LittleSmithCollege,Massachusetts
PlaguewasakeyfactorinthewaningofAntiquityandthebeginningoftheMiddleAges.Inthisvolume,thefirstonthesubject,twelvescholarsfromavarietyofdisciplines–history,archaeology,epidemiology,andmolecularbiology–haveproducedacomprehensiveaccountofthe
pandemic’sorigins,spread,andmortality, as well as its economic, social, political,andreligiouseffects.
‘… interesting and thought-provoking throughout. Each chapter has new ideas to provide the reader … this book is an indication that this fascinating topic is finally receiving the scholarly attention it deserves.’BMCR
2008228x152mm382pp 978-0-521-71897-4Paperback £15.99
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The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of JerusalemA CorpusVolume4:TheCitiesofAcreandTyrewithAddendaandCorrigendatoVolumesI-IIIDenys PringleCardiff School of History and Archaeology
Thisisthefourthandfinalvolumeinaserieswhichpresentsacompletecorpusofallthechurchbuildingsthatwerebuilt,rebuiltorsimplyinuseintheCrusaderKingdomofJerusalembetweenthecaptureofJerusalembytheFirstCrusadein1099andthelossofAcrein1291.ThisvolumedealswiththemajorcoastalcitiesofAcreandTyre,which were both in Frankish hands for almosttwocenturies,andalsocontainsaddendaandcorrigendatovolumes1–3.Itdescribesanddiscussessome120churchesandchapelsthatareattestedbydocumentaryorsurvivingevidence,accompaniedwherepossiblebyplans,elevationdrawingsandphotographs.Thisisanindispensablework of reference to all those concerned with the medieval archaeology of the
Classical Archaeology 3
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HolyLand,thehistoryoftheChurchintheCrusaderKingdomofJerusalemandtheartandarchitectureoftheLatinEast.The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem
2009276x219mm340pp148halftones 978-0-521-85148-0 Hardback £110.00
Classical Archaeology
A Social Archaeology of Households in Neolithic GreeceAn Anthropological ApproachStella G. Souvatzi
Thefirstvolumetoaddressthehouseholdasaprocessandasaconceptualandanalyticalmeansthroughwhichwecaninterpretsocialorganization. Using detailed case studiesfromNeolithicGreeceanddrawingoncontemporarysocialtheoryandthought,Souvatziexamineshowthehouseholdisdefinedsocially,culturally,and historically.Cambridge Studies in Archaeology
2008253x177mm320pp7tables 978-0-521-83689-0 Hardback £55.00
Art and Society in Cyprus from the Bronze Age into the Iron AgeJoanna S. SmithColumbiaUniversity,NewYork
Thisstudyemphasizestheplacementand scale of images and how they reveal thedevelopmentofeconomicandsocialcontrolatKitionfromitsestablishmentinthethirteenthcenturyBCEuntilthedevelopmentofacentralizedformofgovernment by the Phoenicians, backed bytheAssyrianking,in707BCE.2009253x215mm384pp39linefigures 61halftones2maps 978-0-521-51367-8 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication August 2009
The Cambridge Companion to the Aegean Bronze AgeEdited by Cynthia W. ShelmerdineUniversityofTexas,Austin
ThisCompanioncoversthehistoryandthematerialcultureofCrete,GreeceandtheAegeanIslandsfromc.3000–1100BCE,aswellastopicssuchastrade,religions, and economic administration. Contents are arranged chronologically andgeographicallytoallowthereadertoquicklycomparedifferentculturesandtimeperiods.2008228x152mm524pp95halftones 11maps 978-0-521-81444-7 Hardback £45.00
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Art and Identity in Dark Age Greece, 1100–700 BCSusan Langdon UniversityofMissouri,Columbia
Thisbookexploreshowartandmaterialculturewereusedtoconstructage,gender,andsocialidentityintheGreekEarlyIronAge,1100–700BC.ThisstudyoffersacomprehensiveviewofearlyGreecebyrecognizingtheplaceofchildrenandwomeninawarrior-focusedsociety.2008253x177mm406pp82halftones 978-0-521-51321-0 Hardback £50.00
Greek Art and the OrientAnn C. GunterSmithsonianInstitution,WashingtonDC
Scholarshavepreviouslyrecognisedan‘orientalisingperiod’inthehistoryofearlyGreekart,inwhichGreekartisansfashionedworksunderthestimulusofNearEasternimportsorresidentforeignartisans.AnnGunterinterrogatesthecategoriesof‘Greek’and‘Oriental’astheyrelatetothehistoryofearlyGreekart.2009253x177mm280pp 978-0-521-83257-1 Hardback £50.00
Classical Greece and the Birth of Western ArtAndrew StewartUniversity of California, Berkeley
What were the contexts, aims, achievements,andimpactofthe‘ClassicalRevolution’inGreekart?AndrewStewartintroducesstudents
tothesequestions,examiningGreekarchitecture,painting,andsculptureofthefifthandfourthcenturiesBCinrelationtothegreatpolitical,social,cultural,andintellectualissuesoftheperiod.2008253x177mm376pp 978-0-521-85321-7 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-61835-9Paperback £14.99
Art, Myth, and Ritual in Classical GreeceJudith M. BarringerUniversityofEdinburgh
WhatdoGreekmythsmeanandhow was meaning created for the ancientviewer?InArt,Myth,andRitualinClassicalGreece,JudithBarringerconsiderstheuseofmythonmonumentsatseveralkeysites–Olympia,Athens,Delphi,andTrysa–showingthatmythwasneitherrandomlyselectednorpurelydecorative.Themythologicalscenesonthesemonumentshadmeaning,theinterpretationofwhichdependsoncontext.2008253x177mm320pp159halftones 978-0-521-64647-5Paperback £16.99
Greek Vase Painting and the Origins of Visual HumorAlexandre MitchellUniversityofOxford
ThisbookisacomprehensivestudyofvisualhumourinancientGreece,withspecialemphasisonworkscreatedinAthens and Boeotia. Understanding whatvisualhumourwasandhowitfunctionedasatoolofsocialcohesionisonlyonefacetofthisstudy.Mitchell
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alsofocusesonthesocialtruthsthathisstudyofhumourunveils.2009253x215mm350pp96linefigures 48 halftones 12 tables 978-0-521-51370-8 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication October 2009
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Reading Greek VasesAnn SteinerFranklinandMarshallCollege,Pennsylvania
RepetitionandsymmetryarethefundamentalaestheticprinciplesunderlyingtheshapeanddecorationofancientAthenianvases.Thisbookisthefirstcomprehensivestudyoftheroleofrepetitionbeyonditsaestheticvalue,andaspartofacodethatconveysmeaningto the viewer.2009253x215mm364pp 978-0-521-73235-2Paperback £17.99
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Greek SculptureFunction, Materials, and Techniques in the Archaic and Classical PeriodsEdited by Olga PalagiaUniversityofAthens,Greece
ExploresthematerialaspectsofGreeksculptureatapivotalphaseinitsevolution.
‘The essays are admirably up to date, and amply demonstrate how recent research has refined our understanding of Archaic and Classical Greek sculpture: it can no longer be regarded as a unitary phenomenon … but is now seen as a complex scenario of interrelated developments, in which
varying materials, regional workshops and differences of function were the determinant factors.’Roger Ling, TheAntiquariesJournal
Contents:1.Sourcesandmodels;2.ArchaicAthensandtheCyclades;3.ArchaicandClassicalMagnaGraecia;4.ClassicalAthens;5.LateClassicalAsiaMinor:dynastsandtheirtombs;6.ArchaicandClassicalbronzes;7.Marblecarvingtechniques;8.GreekandRomanwhitemarbles.2008253x215mm350pp 978-0-521-73837-8Paperback £18.99
Art in Athens During the Peloponnesian WarEdited by Olga PalagiaUniversityofAthens,Greece
ExaminestheeffectsofthePeloponnesianWarontheartsofAthensand the historical and artistic contexts in whichthisartwasproduced.ThisisthefirstbooktofocusonthenewthemesandnewkindsofartintroducedinAthensasaresultofthethirty-yearwar.2009253x215mm296pp76halftones 8plates 978-0-521-84933-3 Hardback £50.00 Publication June 2009
The Furniture and Furnishings of Ancient Greek Houses and TombsDimitra AndrianouNationalHellenicResearchFoundation,Athens
Inthisbook,DimitraAndrianouanalyzesthefurnitureandfurnishingsfoundinlateClassicalandHellenistichouses,tombs,andinscriptionsofancientGreece.Questioningthewealthof
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imagesoffurnitureasportrayedonvases,shefocusesontheactualremainsoffurniturefoundinhouses;analyzesthesymbolicnatureofelaboratefurnitureusedineverydayandintheafterlife;discussestheirtypesandusesinhouses,tombs,andsanctuaries;andassemblestheirancientvocabulary.2009253x215mm350pp2linefigures 27halftones2maps 978-0-521-76087-4 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication September 2009
Lord Elgin and Ancient Greek ArchitectureThe Elgin Drawings at the British MuseumLuciana GalloUniversitàdegliStudi,Palermo,Italy
Thisbookanalysestherichandremarkable collection of archaeological drawings,nowhousedinTheBritishMuseum,drawninGreecebyateamof architects and artists in the service ofLordElginduringhisambassadorialexpeditiontotheLevant(1799–1803).LucianaGallooffersanewinterpretationofElgin’sinterestinantiquitiesandrevealstheaims,innovativeapproach,and significant achievements of this specialisedtour.2009279x215mm354pp201halftones 978-0-521-88163-0 Hardback £80.00 Publication June 2009
The Archaeology of Lydia, from Gyges to AlexanderChristopher RooseveltBoston University
InTheArchaeologyofLydia:FromGygesto Alexander,ChristopherRooseveltprovidesthefirstoverviewoftheregional archaeology of Lydia in western Turkey,includingmuchpreviouslyunpublishedevidenceaswellasafreshsynthesis of the archaeology of Sardis, theancientcapitaloftheregion.2009253x215mm346pp20linefigures 79halftones11maps8tables 978-0-521-51987-8 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication August 2009
Hellenistic and Roman Ideal SculptureThe Allure of the ClassicalRachel Meredith KousserBrooklynCollege,CityUniversityofNewYork
AnilluminatinganalysisshowingthepowerandallureofGreekClassicalpastin Hellenistic and Roman art.2008253x177mm214pp 978-0-521-87782-4 Hardback £45.00
Image and Text in Graeco-Roman AntiquityMichael SquireUniversityofCambridgeandHumboltUniversität, Berlin
Moderncriticsassumeabipartiteseparationbetweenimagesandtexts,whereasclassicalantiquitytoyedwithamoreplayfulandengagedrelationbetweenthetwo.Thisbookusestheancientworldtorethinkourownideologiesofthevisualandtheverbal,
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providinganewculturalhistoryofWesternvisualthinking.2009247x174mm450pp142halftones 25plates 978-0-521-75601-3 Hardback c. £75.00 Publication September 2009
Rome’s Cultural RevolutionAndrew Wallace-HadrillBritish School at Rome
Drawingequallyonarchaeologicaland literary evidence, this book offers anoriginalinterpretationofthefundamentaltransformationsofRome’ssociety,cultureandidentityduringtheperiodofitsimperialexpansion.Itrepresentstheculminationofalifetime’sworkbyoneofthemostimportantRoman historians alive today.
‘A brilliant analysis of cultural change, by a historian with an unrivalled mastery of both the literary and the archaeological evidence.’PeterWiseman,EmeritusProfessorofAncientHistory,UniversityofExeter
‘Rome’s Cultural Revolution uses the author’s deep knowledge of Italy and his involvement with excavations at Pompeii and Herculaneum to bring together the material evidence for changes in taste and lifestyle with the literary evidence. The result is a brilliant new analysis of the cultural and social history, not only of later Republican Rome, but of its wider Italian setting.’FergusMillar,CamdenProfessorofAncientHistoryEmeritus,UniversityofOxford
2008247x174mm526pp28linefigures 84halftones15maps40plates 978-0-521-72160-8Paperback £29.99
The Social History of Roman ArtPeter StewartCourtauldInstituteofArt,London
Morethaneverbefore,studentsandscholarsoftheclassicalworlduseRomanimagesandwishtounderstandthem.Usingselectedexamplesandthemes,StewartprovidesanintroductiontothestudyofancientRomanartinitssocialcontextandexplainshowandwhyRomanartwasmadeandused.Key Themes in Ancient History
2008228x152mm216pp43halftones 978-0-521-01659-9Paperback £17.99
Roman Imperialism and Local IdentitiesLouise RevellUniversityofSouthampton
WhatmadethepeopleoftheRomanprovincesRoman?Revell’scasestudiesofpublicarchitectureinseveralurbansettingsprovideanunderstandingofthewaysurbanism,theemperorandreligionwerepartofthedailyencountersofthepeoplesinthesecommunities.2009228x152mm236pp33halftones 978-0-521-88730-4 Hardback £45.00
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The Roman AmphitheatreFrom its Origins to the ColosseumKatherine E. WelchInstituteofFineArts,NewYorkUniversity
ThisisthefirstbooktoanalyzetheevolutionoftheRomanamphitheatreasanarchitecturalform.KatherineWelchaddressesthecriticalperiodinthehistoryofthisbuildingtype:its
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originsanddisseminationundertheRepublic,fromthethirdtofirstcenturiesBC;itsmonumentalizationasanarchitecturalformunderAugustus;anditscanonizationasabuildingtypewiththeColosseum(AD80).Sheexploresthesocialandpoliticalcontextsofeachofthesephasesindetail.ThestudythenshiftsfocustothereceptionoftheamphitheatreandthegamesintheGreekEast,apartoftheEmpirethatwas,initially,deeplyfracturedaboutthenewrealitiesofRomanrule.
‘Repeatedly, Welch’s book stirs the embers under simmering controversies, thereby giving us both good reading and adventurous scholarship.’JournaloftheSocietyofArchitecturalHistorians
Contents:Introduction:the‘imperial’interpretationofarenagames;1.ArenagamesduringtheRepublic;2.Originsofamphitheatrearchitecture;3.Stoneamphitheatresduringtherepublicanperiod;4.Theamphitheatrebetweenrepublicandempire:monumentalizationoftheamphitheatrebuilding;5.Thecolosseum:canonizationoftheamphitheatrebuildingtype;6.ThereceptionoftheamphitheatreintheGreekworldintheearlyimperialperiod;Conclusion;Appendix:amphitheatresofrepublicandate.2009253x215mm378pp 978-0-521-74435-5Paperback £28.99
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Concrete Vaulted Construction in Imperial RomeInnovations in ContextLynne LancasterOhioUniversity
ThisbookexaminesmethodsandtechniquesthatenabledbuilderstoconstructsomeofthemostimposingmonumentsofancientRome.
‘Lancaster‘s arguments mark a more sophisticated approach to the study of Roman architecture than has hitherto been possible. … [H]er extensive on-site studies and simple but handsomely executed line drawings show us how and why Roman vaults and domes stand; how the Romans calculated the strength of their constructions; how changes in materials affected the stability and character of concrete buildings, and how developments in contemporary society determined these changes.’BrynMawrClassicalReview
Contents:1.Introduction;2.Centeringandformwork;3.Ingredients:mortarandcaementa;4.Amphorasinvaults;5.Vaultingribs;6.Metalclampsandtiebars;7.Vaultbehaviorandbuttressing;8.Structuralanalysis:historyandcasestudies;9.Innovationsincontext.2009279x215mm296pp 978-0-521-74436-2Paperback £27.99
eBook available
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The Roman Imperial Mausoleum in Late AntiquityMark JohnsonBrighamYoungUniversity,Utah
Constructedbetweenca.AD244and450 and bridging the transition from paganismtoChristianitywithintheempire,theseimportantbuildingssharedacommondesign.MarkJohnsonexaminesthesymbolismandfunctionofthemausolea,demonstratingthatthesemonumentsservedastemplesandshrinestothedivinizedemperors.2009253x215mm324pp72linefigures 56halftones16plates 978-0-521-51371-5 Hardback £60.00 Publication June 2009
Private Worship, Public Values, and Religious Change in Late AntiquityKim BowesCornellUniversity,NewYork
ConventionalhistoriesoflateantiqueChristianitytellthestoryofapublicinstitution–theChristianChurch.Inthisbook,KimBowesrelatesanotherhistory,thatoftheChristianprivate.Usingtextualandarchaeologicalevidence,sheexaminestheChristianritualsofhomeandruralestate,whichtookplaceoutsidethesupervisionofbishopsandtheir agents.2008253x177mm376pp25halftones 10maps 978-0-521-88593-5 Hardback £50.00
Saints and Church Spaces in the Late Antique MediterraneanArchitecture, Cult, and CommunityAnn Marie YasinUniversityofSouthernCalifornia
PresentsanewapproachtothearchitectureanddecorationofearlyChristianchurchesoftheMediterranean,revealinghowthebuildingsfunctionedassocialspacesinwhichlocalcommunitiesdefinedasenseofgroupidentityandcommunicatedwiththedivinethroughprayerandritual.Greek Culture in the Roman World
2009247x174mm336pp82halftones 1map 978-0-521-76783-5 Hardback c. £55.00 Publication October 2009
Material Culture and Social Identities in the Ancient WorldEdited by Tamar HodosUniversity of Bristol
and Shelley HalesUniversity of Bristol
Recentstudieshavehighlightedthediversity,complexity,andpluralityofidentities in the ancient world. At the same time, scholars have acknowledged thedynamicroleofmaterialculture,notsimplyinreflectingthoseidentitiesbuttheir role in creating and transforming them.Thisvolumeexploresandcomparestwoinfluentialapproachestothestudyofsocialandculturalidentities,
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the model of globalization and theories ofhybridculturaldevelopment.2009253x215mm350pp24linefigures 24 halftones 978-0-521-76774-3 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication October 2009
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The Cambridge Dictionary of Classical CivilizationGraham ShipleyUniversity of Leicester
John VanderspoelUniversity of Calgary
David MattinglyUniversity of Leicester
and Lin FoxhallUniversity of Leicester
Thiskeywork,containingalmost1700entriesand500illustrations,surveysallthetraditionally-studiedareasoftheclassicalworld,aswellasexploringnewthemessuchasdress,housing,minoritygroupsandsocialrelations.Anessentialreferencetoolforstudentsandallthosewith an interest in ancient civilisation.
‘Like the OCD, The Cambridge Dictionary of Classical Civilization has literally dozens of marvellous entries, many of which are written by prominent experts in the field. No one will fail to encounter a new idea or new item of information in the work. Students, especially, will appreciate the efforts taken by the editors and contributors to make the analyses accessible and lively.’BrynMawrClassicalReview
2008247x174mm1010pp342halftones 978-0-521-73150-8Paperback £19.99
Archaeology of Europe and the Near and Far East
The Cave of FontéchevadeRecent Excavations and Their Paleoanthropological ImplicationsPhilip G. Chase University of Pennsylvania
André DebénathUniversitédePerpignan,France
Harold L. DibbleUniversity of Pennsylvania
and Shannon P. McPherronMax-Planck-InstitutfürEvolutionäreAnthropologie,Germany
Summaryofrecentexcavationsatthe Paleolithic site of Fontéchevade, France.ModernfieldandanalyticmethodsdemonstratedthattheTayacian‘industry’isaproductofsiteformationprocessesandthattheageoftheFontéchevadeIfossiliscompatiblewiththatofothermodernhumansinEurope.2009228x152mm288pp81halftones 1map48tables 978-0-521-89844-7 Hardback £50.00
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ArchaeologyofEuropeandtheNearandFarEast 11
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The Ancient Egyptian StateThe Origins of Egyptian Culture (c. 8000–2000 BC)Robert J. WenkeUniversity of Washington
BeginningfromthephasewhenEgyptiansfirstfarmedwheatandbarleyand ending as their central government fell into disorder, Wenke examines the cycleofancientEgypt’sdevelopment.Integratingevidencewithanthropology,geology, and archaeology, this text is idealforundergraduatesandgraduatestakingcoursesonearlycivilizationsandstates.Contents:1.ThesignificanceandinterpretationofAncientEgyptiancivilization;2.IntroductiontotheAncientEgyptiansandtheircountry;3.IntroductiontotheevidenceandinterpretationofEgyptianantiquity;4.Theneolithicandearlypredynasticoriginsofpharaoniccivilization;5.Lordsofthetwolands–theoriginsofthefirstpharaonicstates;6.Thepharaonicstateinearlymaturity;7.Egyptandgeneralanalyses of state origins.Case Studies in Early Societies, 8
2009228x152mm416pp98halftones 4maps6tables 978-0-521-57377-1 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-57487-7Paperback £15.99 Publication June 2009
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Ancient EgyptAn IntroductionSalima IkramAmerican University of Cairo
BeginningwithageographicaloverviewthatexplainsthedevelopmentofEgyptianbeliefsystemsaswellasitssubsequentpoliticaldevelopment,
thiscornerstonestudyexaminesmethodology, history, religion, social organization,urbanandrurallife,anddeath.Lavishlyillustrated,withmanyunusualphotographsofrarelyseensitesthatareseldomillustrated.Contents:1.Theblackandthered:geographyandenvironment;2.Travellers,thieves, and scholars: the history of EgyptologyandEgyptomania;3.RecreatingAncientEgypt:sourcesandmethodologies;4.Shadowsinthesand:Egypt’spast;5.MaintainingEgypt:religion;6.Kingsandcommoners:Egyptiansocietyandgovernment;7.Townandcountrylife;8.Fromsunrisetosunset:dailylifeoftheAncientEgyptians;9.Thelivingandthedead:mummies,tombs,andmortuary.2009253x215mm300pp102halftones 48plates 978-0-521-85907-3 Hardback c. £45.00 978-0-521-67598-7Paperback c.£16.99 Publication September 2009
Egyptian Mummies and Modern ScienceEdited by Rosalie DavidUniversityofManchester
A team of long-established scientists describehowtheircutting-edgeinvestigativemethodsandtheuniqueresourceoftheEgyptianMummyTissueBankarebeingusedforthenewmajorinternationalinvestigationsofdiseaseevolutionandancientEgyptianpharmacyandpharmacology.TheirresearchgivesusnewinsightintoancientEgypt.
‘ I found every chapter fascinating, giving real insight into the lives of the ancient Egyptians. … The work of the team at Manchester continues to be of great importance and their multidisciplinary approach is now
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being applied to international research projects on Egyptian mummies and the history of disease in general. Whilst this book will be absolutely essential for anyone interested in mummies, disease or medicine in ancient Egypt, the new perspective that this research brings to Egyptology will be of interest to the more general reader too.’AncientEgypt
2008228x152mm326pp4tables 978-0-521-86579-1 Hardback £60.00
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Egyptology TodayEdited by Richard H. Wilkinson University of Arizona
An essential companiontoEgyptologyexaminingallaspectsofancientEgypt.
‘This useful and informative publication adds a much needed new dimension to the study of ancient Egypt.’AncientEgypt
Contents:Introduction:thepastinthepresent:Egyptologytoday;Part I.Methods:Paths to the Past: 1. Archaeology and Egyptology;2.HistoryandEgyptology;3.MedicalscienceandEgyptology;Part II.Monuments:StructuresforthisLifeandtheNext:4.SitesurveyinEgyptology;5.Epigraphyandrecording;6.Monumentandsiteconservation;Part III. Art and Artifacts:ObjectsasSubject:7.ArtofancientEgypt;8.AncientEgyptinmuseumstoday;9.Artifactconservationand
Egyptology;Part IV.Texts:TheWordsofGodsandMen:10.TheEgyptianlanguage;11.AncientEgyptianliterature;12.Egyptianreligioustexts;Afterword:thepastinthefuture:tomorrow’sEgyptology.2008253x177mm298pp 978-0-521-86364-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-68226-8Paperback £16.99
The Ancient IndusUrbanism, Economy, and SocietyRita P. Wright
Inthisvolume,RitaP.WrightusesbothMesopotamiantextsandtheresultsof archaeological excavations and surveystodrawarichaccountoftheInduscivilisation’swell-plannedcities,itssophisticatedalterationstothelandscape,andthecomplexitiesofitsagrarianandcraft-producingeconomy.Contents:1.Alongforgottencivilization;2.Geographicalandenvironmentalsettings;3.Fromforagingtofarmingandpastoralism;4.Anexpandedworldofpeerpolities;5.Urbanismandstates:cities,regionsandedgezones;6.Agrarianandcraftproducingeconomies–intensificationandspecialization;7.Agrarianandcraftproducingeconomies–diversification,organizationofproduction,andexchange;8.Thelureofdistantlands;9.Landscapesoforderanddifference–theculturalconstructionofspace,placeandmaterialaccess;10.ThefinaldaysofurbanismandtheInduscivilization:decline,transitionandtransformation.Case Studies in Early Societies
2009228x152mm384pp55halftones 11maps 978-0-521-57219-4 Hardback c. £45.00 978-0-521-57652-9Paperback c.£15.99 Publication September 2009
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Social Complexity in Prehistoric EurasiaMonuments, Metals and MobilityEdited by Bryan HanksUniversityofPittsburgh
and Katheryn LinduffUniversityofPittsburgh
Challengescurrentinterpretationsoftheemergence,development,anddeclineofsocialcomplexityinthestepperegion of China and the former Soviet Union.Throughathematicinvestigationofarchaeologicalpatternsrangingfrommonumentconstructionanduseandproductionandconsumptionofmetalstothenatureofmobilityamongsocieties.2009228x152mm436pp52linefigures 41halftones21maps11tables 978-0-521-51712-6 Hardback c. £50.00 Publication September 2009
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The Horse in Human HistoryPita Kelekna
Thisbookassessestheimpactofthehorseonhumansocietyfrom4000BCtoAD2000,byfirstdescribinginitial horse domestication on the Pontic-Caspiansteppesandtheearlydevelopmentofdrivingandridingtechnologies.IttracestheradiationofnewlymobileequestrianculturesacrossEurope,Asia,andNorthAfrica.Itthendocumentsthetransmissionofsteppechariotry and cavalry to sedentary states, thehigheconomicimportanceofthehorse,andthesocio-politicalevolutionofequestrianempires,whichfrom
antiquityintothemoderneraexpandedacross continents.Contents:1.Introductiontoequestrianman and to Equus;2.EquusCaballus:horse domestication and Agro-Pastoralism acrosstheEurasiansteppes;3.Nomadichorsecultureofthesteppes;4.ExpansionfromthesteppestoSouthwesternandSouthernAsia;5.Chinaandthesteppesbeyonditsborders;6.EquestrianEurope–solaredifices,hippodromes,andArthurianchivalry;7.ArabianconquestfromtheSouth;8.Turkic-invaderconvertstoIslamandcrusaderopponents;9.Fromthesteppes,theAltaicnomadconquestofEurasia;10.FromEurope,Equusreturnstoitscontinentoforigin;11.Horsesareus.2009228x152mm474pp38halftones 5maps 978-0-521-51659-4 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-73629-9Paperback £19.99 Publication June 2009
Becoming HumanInnovation in Prehistoric Material and Spiritual CultureEdited by Colin RenfrewTheMacDonaldInstituteforArchaeologicalResearch, Cambridge University
Iain MorleyTheMacDonaldInstituteforArchaeologicalResearch, Cambridge University
Inthisvolume,fifteeninternationallyrenownedscholarscontributeessaysthatexploretherelationshipbetweensymbolism,spirituality,andhumanityintheprehistoricsocietiesofEuropeandtraditional societies elsewhere.2009253x177mm320pp42halftones 24plates 978-0-521-87654-4 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-73466-0Paperback £16.99
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Mesolithic EuropeEdited by Geoff BaileyUniversityofYork
and Penny SpikinsUniversityofYork
Up-to-dateregionalsynthesesonthearchaeologyofthehunter-gatherersocietiesthatinhabitedEuropebetween10,000 and 5,000 years ago. Written byexpertsineachregionandwithadiversityoftheoreticalperspectivestheauthorsrevealnewdata,whichdemonstratesthatthiswasaperiodofradical change and innovation.
‘… the book … will become the standard reference work on the subject for both specialists and non-specialists, the first port of call when any information is needed.’JournalofArchaeologicalScience
2008228x152mm488pp 978-0-521-85503-7 Hardback £55.00
Archaeology of Africa and the Americas
The Classic MayaStephen D. Houstonand Takeshi Inomata
InthefirstmillenniumAD,theClassicMayacreatedcourtlysocietiesinandaroundtheYucatanPeninsulathathave left some of the most striking intellectualandaestheticachievementsoftheancientworld,includinglargesettlementslikeTikal,Copan,andPalenque.Thisbookisthefirstin-depthsynthesisoftheClassicMaya.Itis
richlyinformedbynewdeciphermentofhieroglyphs,decadesofintensiveexcavationandsurvey.Structuredbycategoriesofpersoninsociety,itreportsonkings,queens,nobles,gods,andancestors, as well as the many millions offarmersandotherfigureswholivedinsocietiespredicatedonsacredkingshipandvaryingpoliticalprograms.TheClassicMayapresentsatandemmodelofsocietiesboundbymoralcovenantsandconvulsedbyunavoidabletensionsbetweengroups,affectedbydemographictrendsandchangingenvironments.ItwillserveasthebasicsourceforallreadersinterestedinthecivilisationoftheMaya.Contents: Part I.Setting:1.Introduction;2.Sociality;3.Beginnings;4.Theclassicperiod;Part II.SocialActors:5.Kingsandqueens,courtsandpalaces;6.Nobles;7.Gods,supernaturals,andancestors;8.Farmers;9.Craftspeopleandtraders;10.Endofanera;Epilogue.Cambridge World Archaeology
2009253x215mm350pp66linefigures 72 halftones 978-0-521-66006-8 Hardback c. £50.00 978-0-521-66972-6Paperback c.£15.99 Publication October 2009
Archaeology of Africa and the Americas 15
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The First AfricansAfrican Archaeology from the Earliest Toolmakers to Most Recent ForagersLawrence BarhamUniversityofLiverpool
and Peter MitchellSchoolofArchaeology,UniversityofOxford
A synthesis of the record left by Africa’searliestinhabitantscombiningarchaeology,geneticsandpalaeo-environmental science.Contents:1.IntroducingtheAfricanrecord;2.Frameworksinspaceandtime;3.Firsttoolusersandmakers;4.EarlyPleistoceneforagers;5.Mid-Pleistoceneforagers;6.Transitionsandorigins;7.TheBigDry:thearchaeologyofmarineisotope4-2;8.Hunting,gathering,intensifying:themid-Holocenerecord;9.Foragersinaworldoffarmers;10.ThefutureofthefirstAfricans’past.Cambridge World Archaeology
2008228x152mm602pp5tables 978-0-521-84796-4 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-61265-4Paperback £18.99
eBook available
Ancient TiwanakuJohn Wayne JanusekVanderbiltUniversity,Tennessee
ThefirstmajorsynthesisexploringTiwanakucivilizationinitsgeographicalandculturalsetting.Contents:1.UnravelingTiwanaku’smystery;2.Landandpeople;3.EarlycomplexityandTiwanaku’sascendance;4.ThecityofTiwanaku;5.Theruralhinterland;6.Tiwanakugeopolitics;7.WariandTiwanaku;8.Collapseandregeneration;9.Conclusions.Case Studies in Early Societies, 9
2008228x152mm378pp 978-0-521-81635-9 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-01662-9Paperback £15.99
A Population History of the Huron-Petun, A.D. 500–1650Gary Warrick
TheWendat-Tionontaté,ortheHuron-Petun,occupiedsouthernOntario,Canada, when they were contacted by the French in the early seventeenth century.ThisbookprovidesthefirstpopulationhistoryofaNativeAmericangroupfromtheirrecognizableoriginstotheirfirstcontactwithEuropeans.Studies in North American Indian History
2008228x152mm312pp22tables 978-0-521-44030-1 Hardback £55.00
16 ArchaeologyofAsia,Sub-SaharanAfricaandthePacific
The Archaeology of the CaribbeanSamuel M. WilsonUniversityofTexas,Austin
AcomprehensivesynthesisofCaribbeanprehistoryfrom4000BCtoAD1700.Contents:1.Introduction;2.ThefirsthumancolonizationoftheCaribbean;3.TheSaladoidphenomenon;4.TheTaino;5.TheCaribbeanontheeveofEuropeancontact;6.TheCaribbeanafterthearrivalofEuropeans;7.Conclusions.Cambridge World Archaeology
2007228x152mm224pp 978-0-521-62333-9 Hardback £50.00 978-0-521-62622-4Paperback £15.99
eBook available
Archaeology of Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and the Pacific
The Archaeology of Hindu RitualTemples and the Establishment of the GodsMichael WillisBritishMuseum,London
Willis examines how the gods of early Hinduismcametobeestablishedintemples,howtheircultswereorganized,andhowtherulingelitesupportedtheirworship.Examiningtheemergenceofthesekeyhistoricaldevelopments,WilliscombinesSanskrittextualevidencewith
archaeologicaldatafrominscriptions,sculptures,temples,andsacredsites.Contents:1.ThearchaeologyandpoliticsoftimeatUdayagiri;2.Theestablishmentofthegods;3.Ritualactionandritualactors.2009228x152mm392pp15linefigures 28halftones4maps 978-0-521-51874-1 Hardback £50.00 Publication June 2009
The Palaeolithic Settlement of AsiaRobin DennellUniversity of Sheffield
Authoritativesynthesisoftheevidenceof the earliest inhabitants of Asia before theappearanceofmodernhumans100,000yearsago.Dennellsetsoutastructuredframeworkofthefirst2million years of hominin settlement by integrating the archaeological, fossil and environmental evidence at continent level.Cambridge World Archaeology
2009228x152mm572pp166halftones 47 tables 978-0-521-84866-4 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-61310-1Paperback £29.99
China’s Early EmpiresA Re-appraisalEdited by Michael NylanPrinceton University, New Jersey
and Michael LoeweUniversity of Cambridge
Shows how archaeological discoveries of recent decades have widened and enrichedourperceptionofthepoliticalandculturalhistoryofChinaintheclassicalera(inparticular323BCE-316CE)andreflectstheverynewest
ArchaeologicalTheoryandMethod 17
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scholarshipbyateamofinternationalexperts.University of Cambridge Oriental Publications, 67
2009247x174mm700pp123halftones 9maps20plates 978-0-521-85297-5 Hardback c. £85.00 Publication September 2009
Archaeologi-cal Theory and Method
TexTbook
Questioning CollapseHuman Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of EmpireEdited by Patricia A. McAnanyUniversityofNorthCarolina,ChapelHill
and Norman YoffeeUniversityofMichigan,AnnArbor
QuestioningCollapse challenges thosescholarsandpopularwriterswho advance the thesis that societies –pastandpresent–collapsebecauseofbehaviorthatdestroyedtheirenvironmentsorbecauseofoverpopulation.Inaseriesofhighlyaccessibleandcloselyarguedessays,a team of internationally recognized scholars bring history and context to bear in their radically different analyses of iconic events.Contents:1.Whywequestioncollapseandstudyhumanresilience,ecologicalvulnerability,andtheaftermathofempire;Part I.HumanResilienceandEcologicalVulnerability:2.Ecologicalcatastrophe,collapse,andthemythof‘ecocide’on
RapaNui(EasterIsland);3.DidthemedievalNorsesocietyinGreenlandreallyfail?;4.Calamitieswithoutcollapse:environment, economy, and society in China,ca.1800–1949;Part II.SurvivingCollapse:StudiesofSocietalRegeneration:5.MarketingconquestandthevanishingIndian:anindigenousresponsetoJaredDiamond’sarchaeologyoftheAmericansouthwest;6.Bellicoserulersandclimatologicalperil?Retrofitting21stcenturywoeson8thcenturyMayasociety;7.CollapseinancientMesopotamia:whathappened,whatdidn’t;Part III. Societies intheAftermathofEmpire:8.AdvancedAndeansandbackwardEuropeans:structureandagencyinthecollapseoftheIncaempire;9.Rwandangenocide:towardsanexplanationinwhichhistoryandculturematter;10.‘Failed’states,societal‘collapse’,andecological‘disaster’:aHaitianlessonongrandtheory;11.Thepowerofthepast:environment, Aborigines, archaeology, and a sustainableAustraliansociety;12.Excusingthe haves and blaming the have-nots in the tellingofhistory;Part IV.ReflectionsonSustainability:13.Sustainablesurvival.2009228x152mm400pp29linefigures 62halftones22maps 978-0-521-51572-6 Hardback c. £25.99 978-0-521-73366-3Paperback c.£14.99 Publication October 2009
Cognitive Archaeology and Human EvolutionEdited by Sophie de BeauneUniversitéLyonIII
Frederick L. CoolidgeUniversityofColorado,ColoradoSprings
and Thomas WynnUniversityofColorado,ColoradoSprings
Thisbookpresentsnewdirectionsinthestudyofcognitivearchaeology.Seekingtounderstandtheconditionsthatledtothedevelopmentofavarietyofcognitiveprocessesduringevolution,
18 ArchaeologicalTheoryandMethod
itusesevidencefromempiricalstudiesandofferstheoreticalspeculationsabouttheevolutionofmodernthinkingaswell.Thevolumedrawsfromthefieldsofarchaeologyandneuropsychology,which traditionally have shared little in the way of theories and methods, even thoughbothdisciplinesprovidecrucialpiecestothepuzzleoftheemergenceandevolutionofhumancognition.Contents:1.Theemergenceofcognitiveabilities:thecontributionofneuropsychologytoarchaeology;2.TechnicalinventioninthePaleolithic:what if the answer comes from the cognitiveandneuropsychologicalsciences?;3.Innovationandcreativity:aneuropsychologicalperspective;4.Thearchaeologyofconsciousness;5.Prehistorichandednessandprehistoriclanguage;6.Howtothinkasimplespear;7.Long-termmemoryandmiddlepleistocene‘mysterians’;8.Thequestforacommonsemantics: observations on definitional criteriaofcognitiveprocessesinprehistory;9. Cognition and the emergence of language:acontributionfromlithictechnology;10.Languageandtheoriginofsymbolicthought;11.Implicationsofa strict standard for recognizing modern cognitioninthePaleolithic;12.Imaginationandrecursion:issuesintheemergenceoflanguage;13.Whitherevolutionarycognitivearchaeology?2009228x152mm200pp12linefigures 5 halftones 2 tables 978-0-521-76977-8 Hardback c. £40.00 978-0-521-74611-3Paperback c.£14.99 Publication August 2009
Lithic TechnologyMeasures of Production, Use and CurationWilliam Andrefsky, Jr.Washington State University
Thisvolumebringstogetheressaysthatmeasurethelifehistoryofstonetoolsrelativetoretouchvalues,rawmaterialconstraints,andevolutionaryprocesses.Collectively,theyexploretheassociationof technological organization with facetsoftoolformsuchasreductionsequences,toolproductioneffort,artifactcurationprocesses,andretouchmeasurement.2008228x152mm366pp30halftones 5maps30tables 978-0-521-88827-1 Hardback £48.00
eBook available
PalaeopathologyTony WaldronUniversity College London
Based on modern clinical knowledge Palaeopathologyisdesignedtohelpbonespecialistswithdiagnosisofdiseases in skeletal assemblages.Contents:1.Introduction,anddiagnosis;2.Bonemetabolismandpathology;3.Diseasesofjoints:osteoarthritis;4.Otherjointdiseases;5.BoneformingandDISH;6.Infectiousdiseases;7.Metabolicdiseases;8.Trauma;9.Tumours;10.Disordersofgrowthanddevelopment;11.Softtissuediseases;12.Dentaldisease;13.Anintroductiontoepidemiology.Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology
2008228x152mm298pp23halftones 42 tables 978-0-521-86137-3 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-67855-1Paperback £16.99
eBook available
ArchaeologicalTheoryandMethod 19
eBooksavailableatwww.cambridge.org/online
Quantitative PaleozoologyR. Lee LymanUniversityofMissouri,Columbia
Thefirstbookofitskindintwodecades, illustratinghowtheremainsofanimalsarestudiedandanalyzed.Contents:1.Tallyingandcounting:fundamentals;2.Estimatingtaxonomicabundances:NISPandMNI;3.Estimatingtaxonomicabundances:othermethods;4.Sampling,recovery,andsamplesize;5.Measuringthetaxonomicstructureandcomposition(’diversity’)offaunas;6.Skeletalcompleteness,frequenciesofskeletalparts,andfragmentation;7.Tallyingfortaphonomy:weathering,burning,corrosion,butchering;8.Finalthoughts.Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology
2008228x152mm372pp75tables 978-0-521-88749-6 Hardback £45.00 978-0-521-71536-2Paperback £17.99
eBook available
TexTbook
Approaches and Methodologies in the Social SciencesA Pluralist PerspectiveEdited by Donatella Della PortaEuropeanUniversityInstitute,Florence
and Michael KeatingEuropeanUniversityInstitute,Florence
A new textbook for masters and doctoral studentsintroducingthemajorresearchapproachesandmethodologiesinthesocial sciences.
‘This volume makes a strong and persuasive case for a pluralistic approach to social science. A wide variety of approaches are explicated by their leading exponents so that the
reader can judge in what ways, and to what extent, they might be enlisted in the study of markets, politics, and society. An immensely informative and intellectually stimulating journey.’JohnGerring,ProfessorofPoliticalScience,Boston University
Contents:Preface;1.Introduction;Part I.EpistemologyandPhilosophyoftheSocialSciences:2.Howmanyapproachesinthesocialsciences?Anepistemologicalintroduction;3.Normativepoliticaltheoryandempiricalresearch;4.Causalexplanation;5.Constructivism:whatitis(not)andhowitmatters;6.Cultureandsocialscience;7.Historicalinstitutionalism;8.Gametheory;9.Rationalityandrecognition;Part II.ResearchDesign:10.Conceptsandconceptformation;11.Comparativeanalysis:case-orientedversusvariable-orientedresearch;12.Casestudiesandprocesstracing:theoriesandpractices;13.Quantitativeanalysis;14.Thedesignofsocialandpoliticalresearch;15.Ethnographicapproaches;16.Comparingapproaches,methodologiesandmethods.Someconcludingremarks.2008247x174mm384pp5linefigures 21 tables 978-0-521-88322-1 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-70966-8Paperback £19.99
eBook available
TexTbook
ZooarchaeologySecond editionElizabeth J. ReitzUniversityofGeorgia
and Elizabeth S. WingFloridaMuseumofNaturalHistory
Anexpandededitionofanestablishedtextforstudentsaswellasfieldarchaeologists,reflectingcurrentdevelopmentsandadvancesinzooarchaeology.Revisedtopicsinclude:
20 ArchaeologicalTheoryandMethod
enamelultrastructureandincrementalanalysis, ancient genetics and enzymes, environmentalreconstruction,peopleas agents of environmental change, applicationsofzooarchaeologyinanimalconservation and heritage management.
‘Students of zooarchaeology and seasoned practitioners alike will derive great benefit from this new edition of a classic work. Reitz and Wing have combined their considerable talents and decades of experience to produce a volume that is useful at every level. Issues particular to zooarchaeology are covered with clarity and thoroughness, while matters of general concern to the discipline, such as sampling, are prominently featured, making the book an excellent reference work. … All archaeologists are indebted to the authors for producing such a worthy volume: I encourage them to repay the debt by purchasing it.’ JournalofArchaeologicalScience
Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology
2008253x177mm536pp 978-0-521-85726-0 Hardback £55.00
eBook available
Material Cultures, Material MindsThe Impact of Things On Human Thought, Society, and EvolutionNicole BoivinLeverhulmeCentreforHumanEvolutionaryStudies,Cambridge
Explorationofhowthephysicalityofthematerialworldshapesourthoughts,emotions, cosmological frameworks, socialrelations,andourbodies.Shedraws on the work of thinkers, from MarxandMerleau-PontytoDarwin,highlighting a wide selection of
newstudiesinarchaeology,culturalanthropology,history,cognitivescience,andevolutionarybiology.2009228x152mm288pp67halftones 2 tables 978-0-521-87397-0 Hardback £45.00
BirdsDale SerjeantsonUniversityofSouthampton
Birds is the first book to examine bird remains in archaeology and anthropology.Providingathoroughreviewoftheliteratureonthistopic,italsoservesasaguidetothemethodsofstudyofbirdremainsfromthepastandcoversawiderangeoftopics,includinganatomyandosteology,taphonomy,eggs, feathers, and bone tools.Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology
2009228x152mm494pp95linefigures 76halftones1map61tables 978-0-521-86617-0 Hardback £55.00 978-0-521-75858-1Paperback £29.99 Publication July 2009
ArchaeologicalTheoryandMethod 21
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The Scientific Investigation of Mass GravesTowards Protocols and Standard Operating ProceduresEdited by Margaret CoxUniversityofSouthampton
Ambika FlavelInforceFoundation,Bournemouth
Ian HansonBournemouthUniversity
Joanna LaverDorsetPoliceService
and Roland WesslingInforceFoundation,Bournemouth
Thefirstbooktodescribetheessentialprocessesandtechniquesforthescientific investigation of genocide andwarcrimes,includingmethodsforthelocation,evaluation,excavation,recovery, and recording of mass graves. Theauthorsprovideenoughdetailtoguidetheinexperiencedandenoughsynopsesandprocedurestoaidexperiencedpractitioners.
‘Cox and colleagues have produced a volume that will undoubtedly be a useful tool and teaching aid.’ JournalofArchaeologicalScience
2008228x152mm592pp123tables 978-0-521-86587-6 Hardback £95.00
22 Index
A AncientEgypt ........................................11AncientEgyptianState,The....................11AncientIndus,The .................................12AncientTiwanaku ..................................15Andrefsky, Jr., William ............................18Andrianou,Dimitra ..................................5ApproachesandMethodologiesinthe
Social Sciences ...................................19ArchaeologyofHinduRitual,The ...........16ArchaeologyofLydia,fromGygestoAlexander,The ......................................6
ArchaeologyoftheCaribbean,The ........16ArtandIdentityinDarkAgeGreece,1100–700BC ......................................4
ArtandSocietyinCyprusfromtheBronzeAgeintotheIronAge ................3
ArtinAthensDuringthePeloponnesianWar ......................................................5
Art,Myth,andRitualinClassicalGreece ..4
B Bailey,Geoff ..........................................14Barham, Lawrence .................................15Barringer,JudithM. .................................4BecomingHuman ..................................13Birds .....................................................20Boivin, Nicole ........................................20Bowes,Kim .............................................9
C CambridgeCompaniontotheAegeanBronzeAge,The ....................................3
CambridgeDictionaryofClassicalCivilization,The ..................................10
CaveofFontéchevade,The .....................10Chase,PhilipG. ....................................10China’sEarlyEmpires ............................16ChurchesoftheCrusaderKingdomofJerusalem,The ......................................2
ClassicMaya,The ..................................14ClassicalGreeceandtheBirthof
Western Art ..........................................4CognitiveArchaeologyandHumanEvolution ............................................17
ConcreteVaultedConstructioninImperialRome ......................................8
Coolidge, Frederick L. ............................17Cox,Margaret .......................................21
D David,Rosalie .......................................11deBeaune,Sophie .................................17Debénath,André ...................................10DellaPorta,Donatella ............................19Dennell,Robin .......................................16Dibble,HaroldL. ....................................10
E EgyptianMummiesandModernScience 11EgyptologyToday ..................................12
F FirstAfricans,The ..................................15Flavel, Ambika .......................................21Forbes, Hamish ........................................2Foxhall, Lin ............................................10FurnitureandFurnishingsofAncientGreekHousesandTombs,The ...............5
G Gallo,Luciana ........................................6GreekArtandtheOrient .........................4GreekSculpture.......................................5GreekVasePaintingandtheOriginsofVisualHumor .......................................4
Gunter,AnnC. .........................................4
H Hales, Shelley ..........................................9Hanks, Bryan ........................................13Hanson,Ian ...........................................21HellenisticandRomanIdealSculpture .....6Hodos,Tamar ..........................................9HorseinHumanHistory,The ..................13Houston,StephenD. ..............................14
Index 23
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I Ikram,Salima ........................................11ImageandTextinGraeco-RomanAntiquity ..............................................6
Inomata,Takeshi ...................................14
J Janusek,JohnWayne .............................15Johnson,Mark ........................................9
K Keating,Michael ...................................19Kelekna,Pita .........................................13Kousser,RachelMeredith .........................6
L Lancaster, Lynne ......................................8Langdon,Susan ......................................4Laver, Joanna ........................................21Linduff,Katheryn ...................................13LithicTechnology ...................................18Little,LesterK. .........................................2Loewe,Michael .....................................16LordElginandAncientGreekArchitecture 6Lyman, R. Lee ........................................19
M MaterialCultureandSocialIdentitiesin
the Ancient World .................................9MaterialCultures,MaterialMinds ..........20Mattingly,David ....................................10McAnany,PatriciaA. ..............................17McPherron,ShannonP. ..........................10MeaningandIdentityinaGreekLandscape ............................................2
MesolithicEurope..................................14Mitchell,Alexandre ..................................4Mitchell,Peter .......................................15Morley,Iain ...........................................13
N Nylan,Michael ......................................16
P PalaeolithicSettlementofAsia,The ........16Palaeopathology ...................................18Palagia,Olga ...........................................5PlagueandtheEndofAntiquity ...............2PopulationHistoryoftheHuron-Petun,A.D.500–1650,A ..............................15
Pringle,Denys .........................................2PrivateWorship,PublicValues,andReligiousChangeinLateAntiquity ........9
Q QuantitativePaleozoology .....................19QuestioningCollapse ............................17
R ReadingGreekVases ...............................5Reitz,ElizabethJ. ...................................19Renfrew, Colin .......................................13Revell,Louise ..........................................7RomanAmphitheatre,The ........................7RomanImperialMausoleuminLateAntiquity,The .......................................9
RomanImperialismandLocalIdentities ...7Rome’sCulturalRevolution ......................7Roosevelt,Christopher .............................6
S SaintsandChurchSpacesintheLateAntiqueMediterranean .........................9
ScientificInvestigationofMassGraves,The ....................................................21
Serjeantson,Dale ..................................20Shelmerdine, Cynthia W. ..........................3Shipley,Graham ....................................10Smith, Joanna S. ......................................3SocialArchaeologyofHouseholdsinNeolithicGreece,A ...............................3
SocialComplexityinPrehistoricEurasia ..13SocialHistoryofRomanArt,The ..............7Souvatzi,StellaG. ....................................3Spikins,Penny .......................................14Squire,Michael ........................................6Steiner, Ann .............................................5
24 Index
Stewart, Andrew ......................................4Stewart, Peter ..........................................7
V Vanderspoel,John .................................10
W Waldron,Tony .......................................18Wallace-Hadrill, Andrew ..........................7Warrick,Gary ........................................15Welch,KatherineE. .................................7Wenke, Robert J. ....................................11Wessling, Roland ...................................21Wilkinson , Richard H. ...........................12Willis,Michael .......................................16Wilson,SamuelM. ................................16Wing,ElizabethS. ..................................19Wright, Rita P. .......................................12Wynn,Thomas .......................................17
Y Yasin,AnnMarie .....................................9Yoffee,Norman .....................................17
Z Zooarchaeology.....................................19
25Notes
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26 Notes
27Notes
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Uncover the latest research…
Volume 89 • 2009
Published for the society of AntiquAries of london
The Antiquaries JournalPublished for the Society of Antiquaries of London
Editor: Kate OwenAssistant Editor: Christopher Catling
Refl ecting the multi-disciplinary nature of the study of material culture, publishing papers from all periods, from prehistory to the recent past.
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New to Cambridge in 2009
Archaeological DialoguesEditors: Ton Derks, Michael Dietler,Fokke Gerritsen
One of the leading journals for debating innovative issues in archaeology.
journals.cambridge.org/ard
Cambridge Archaeological JournalPublished for the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Editor: John Robb
The primary forum for work in cognitive and symbolic archaeology.
journals.cambridge.org/cajAncient MesoamericaEditor: William R. Fowler
The international forum for the method, theory, substance and interpretation of Mesoamerican archaeology, art history and ethnohistory.
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