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2. Struggling Pasts: A Commentary.
- Author
-
Sam Spiers
- Subjects
ANTIQUITIES ,AUXILIARY sciences of history ,ARCHIVES ,HISTORY - Abstract
This commentary is organized into three parts. The first discusses the papers presented in this volume, notably divided into two themes: those that looked at past struggles and those that look at struggling in the present. The second part deals more critically with the unifying analytical theme of the papers: a dialectical approach to historical archaeology and how it can be implemented through the theory of internal relations. The final section of this commentary takes this idea and applies it to the archaeology of landscape and the production of social space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An International Scottish Historical Archaeology?
- Author
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Dalglish, Chris and Driscoll, Stephen
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,SCOTTISH history ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,SCOTTISH national character ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
This paper serves as an introduction to the special edition of the International Journal of Historical Archaeology on the theme of Scottish historical archaeology in its international context. The introduction aims to provide a context for the individual papers in the collection by briefly outlining some of the main characteristics of Scottish historical archaeology—as it has developed in the past, as it is at present and as it might develop in the future. The paper also discusses the ambiguous relationship between Scottish historical archaeology and wider historical archaeology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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4. Introduction to the Volume.
- Author
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Katherine L. Hull
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Preface.
- Author
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Randall H. McGuire and LouAnn Wurst
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Views and Commentaries: The Emergency Conservation of Waterlogged Bibles from the Memorabilia Assemblage Following the Collapse of the Texas A&M University Bonfire.
- Author
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C. Wayne Smith and Sylvia Grider
- Subjects
FOLKLORE ,CRYOBIOLOGY ,PILGRIMS & pilgrimages ,SACRED space - Abstract
Four Bibles were recovered from the spontaneous shrines at the site of the bonfire tragedy that claimed the lives of 12 students at Texas A&M University. Having been exposed to rain and wind for several weeks, these books were severely deteriorated. Inscriptions, photographs, and poems included with the Bibles, however, are an important part of the material culture assemblage that folklorists and anthropologists need to preserve and study. As part of an emergency recovery effort, the Bibles were collected and preserved using inexpensive and innovative techniques, using Lysol-treated absorbent paper and freeze-drying techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Developing Complex Societies in Southeast Asia: Using Archaeological and Historical Evidence.
- Author
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Wright, Henry
- Abstract
A number of archaeologists are making significant advances in the historical archaeology of Southeast Asia. The papers presented in this issue, and the one that preceded it, provide new insights and exciting directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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8. The Transition to History in Southeast Asia: An Introduction.
- Author
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Stark, Miriam and Allen, S.
- Abstract
Studies of the transition from prehistory to history in Southeast Asia have traditionally relied primarily on documentary sources, which tend to emphasize foreign influences, rather than on the archaeological record, which suggests a series of indigenous developments. The papers in this journal issue and the next discuss strategies for using both documentary and archaeological evidence to study the transition to history and the emergence of early states in the region. These papers investigate how political units were structured and integrated in Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, and South China, and illustrate how historical and archaeological data can cross-check each other to inform on Southeast Asian sociopolitical and economic developments during the early historic period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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9. Going Places: The Historical Archaeology of Travel and Tourism.
- Author
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O'Donovan, Maria and Carroll, Lynda
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,HERITAGE tourism - Abstract
This paper briefly introduces the topics of tourism, consumption, and heritage management considered in this special issue. Contributors to the special issue focus on tourism within nineteenth- and twentieth-century America and its connections to industrial capitalism and the creation of a culture of consumption. These issues are addressed in case studies of tourist sites, including archaeological sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. Zooarchaeology and Modernity in Iceland.
- Author
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Hambrecht, George
- Subjects
ZOOARCHAEOLOGY ,ENVIRONMENTAL archaeology ,COMMODIFICATION ,DOMESTICATION of animals ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,MEDIEVAL civilization ,HISTORY of Iceland - Abstract
This paper follows the lead of the increasing numbers of scholars utilizing the methods and theory of environmental archaeology within historical archaeology. This paper addresses the issue of 'modernity' in early modern Iceland through the analysis of faunal assemblages from historic sites in Iceland. It examines the idea of modernity through the ideas of commoditization of animals as well as the improvement of domestic animals as seen through these faunal assemblages. There are a number of possible faunal indications of processes associated with modernity in the existing historic assemblages of Iceland though at least some of these have deep roots in the medieval period. Examining the idea of modernity through the faunal assemblages of historic-period Iceland both help refine the idea of modernity as well as reveal the medieval roots of much of what we term 'modern'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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11. Archaeology, Memory and Oral Tradition: An Introduction.
- Author
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Jones, Siân and Russell, Lynette
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE memory ,ORAL history ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
This paper serves as an introduction to this special edition of the International Journal of Historical Archaeology on the theme of archaeology, memory and oral history. Recent approaches to oral history and memory destabilise existing grand narratives and confront some of the epistemological assumptions underpinning scientific archaeology. Here we discuss recent approaches to memory and explore their impact on historical archaeology, including the challenges that forms of oral and social memory present to a field traditionally defined by the relationship between material culture and text. We then review a number of themes addressed by the articles in this volume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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12. Commentary: Medieval and Post-Medieval Archaeology of Greece.
- Author
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Gregory, Timothy
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,LAND settlement ,ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY ,SOCIAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGY methodology ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,GREEK antiquities ,BYZANTINE Empire - Abstract
Recent work by archaeologists emphasized the contributions of archaeological fieldwork to the study of post-classical Greece. This marks a significant departure from traditional approaches to the archaeology of Byzantium that tended to focus on art historical methods and architectural history. Despite these changes in the study of post-classical Greece, the issues of abandonment, continuity and change continue to play an important role both in ongoing debates and will undoubtedly influence future research priorities. Only collaboration among scholars who study historical archaeology in Greece and elsewhere will ensure the continued relevance of this field even as these long-standing debates wane in relevance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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13. Reading Pottery: Literature and Transfer-Printed Pottery in the Early Nineteenth Century.
- Author
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Gavin Lucas
- Subjects
POTTERY ,SAGGERS ,NOVELISTS ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The use of illustrations from literary sources, specifically fiction, on transfer-printed earthenwares in the early nineteenth century is addressed through an example of a household dump in Buckinghamshire, England. This paper examines such ceramics in terms of the nature of fiction and the reading public in Britain during this period and how the production and consumption of literary ceramics is connected to the changing perception of fiction and its accompanying illustrations. The paper argues that the use of literary scenes as patterns on transfer-printed vessels had to mediate both changing perceptions of fiction and ideals of the picturesque and suitable subjects for transfer print patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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14. Views and Commentaries: What Difference Does Feminist Theory Make?
- Author
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Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
- Subjects
FEMINIST theory ,CULTURE ,FEMINISM - Abstract
This discussion explores what difference a feminist perspective makes in our understandings of the past in two ways. The first section examines to what extent feminist research questions were asked in the preceding papers by Lu Ann De Cunzo, Eleanor Casella, and Susan Piddock. The second section shows what difference feminist theory has made in asking new questions that have produced new gendered understandings of the global historical context of these papers. As a whole, this discussion shows how feminist theoretical approaches change our understanding of the lives of historic women and men in nineteenth century reform institutions within their larger gendered cultural context. While the introduction to this volume presents the broader ungendered historical context, this discussion focusses on the gendered cultural context that was foundational to the gender relationships embodied in the arrangement of architectural spaces and material culture at the sites in the preceding three papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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15. The Archaeology of German and British Colonial Entanglements in Kpando-Ghana.
- Author
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Apoh, Wazi
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,ETHNOLOGY ,EUROPEANIZATION ,ETHNICITY ,BRITISH colonies ,GERMAN colonies ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
In talking about the cultural diversity of Africa's past, the archaeological assessment of West African sites with mangled tangible and intangible fragments of German and British and/or French colonial encounters should not be ignored but rather discussed. This research explores how specific daily material cultural practices of German and British colonizers and Kpando indigenes in the Volta Region of Ghana were enmeshed in a medley of geopolitical, ideological and exchange connections. Through the use of archaeological, archival and ethnographic sources, this paper examines how daily practices of the people of Kpando were impacted by pre-colonial and dual colonial political economic pressures from the seventeenth through the twentieth centuries. This paper archaeologically explores how colonial officials maintained and renegotiated the norms of domesticity/gentility/Europeaness in their encounter with Akpini domestic technology, foodways and cultural practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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16. The Measures and Materiality of Improvement in Ireland.
- Author
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Forsythe, W.
- Subjects
IRISH history ,IRISH history -- 19th century ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,SOCIAL problems ,LIBERALISM ,SOCIAL attitudes ,ECONOMIC reform ,ISLANDS ,SEVENTEENTH century ,EIGHTEENTH century - Abstract
This paper examines the impact and evidence of Improvement thinking on domestic and social spheres. Taking the example of Ireland it examines the origin and development of improving strategies and methodologies from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, in particular the widening application of reform to incorporate domestic, educational and moral concerns. Improvement measures were imposed on communities often by a land-owning class of differing social and religious origin, engendering socio-political tension still evident in Ireland today. Equally it was a period of new commercial opportunities and social betterment creating new class divisions that have been previously undervalued. This paper draws on work on a group of islands on the northern periphery of the country, where archaeological and historical evidence demonstrate that the reforms associated with the Improvement project were still underway well into the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Banality of Gilding: Innocuous Materiality and Transatlantic Consumption in the Gilded Age.
- Author
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Mullins, Paul and Jeffries, Nigel
- Subjects
FIGURINES ,WEALTH ,ART objects ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) -- History ,HISTORY of material culture ,DECORATION & ornament ,SYMBOLISM ,AESTHETICS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines Gilded Age affluence by focusing on apparently inconsequential decorative goods and assessing how such goods were part of shared transatlantic patterns that reached beyond the Gilded Age and the confines of urban America. The paper focuses on figurines recovered from nineteenth-century sites in London and underscores how the American Gilded Age amplified many early nineteenth-century material patterns and ideological practices that were well-established in the United Kingdom and continued after the height of Gilded Age affluence. This study examines the symbolism of such aesthetically eclectic goods and focuses on the socially grounded imagination that was invested in them borrowing from dominant ideologies and idiosyncratic personal experiences alike. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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18. Mobile Communities: The Gathering and Sorting of Sheep in Skútustaðarhreppur, Northeast Iceland.
- Author
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Aldred, Oscar
- Subjects
LANDSCAPES ,SHEEPFOLDS ,FARMERS ,SHEPHERDS ,ANIMALS ,SHEEP ,RANGELANDS ,HISTORICAL archaeology - Abstract
This paper concerns the mobilities associated with the gathering and sorting of sheep within the community of Skútustarðarhreppur, northeast Iceland in the recent historic period. It examines the relationships between people, animals, and landscape in terms of their movements. It presents an argument based on examining the mobilities on the surface and in the depths of a continual, in-the-making landscape, and considers the dwelling of farmers and their movements in attending to sheep as both place-forming and identity-forming processes. I present a hypothetical gathering and sorting of sheep based on historical and archaeological sources and explore the relations that are formed on-the-move. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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19. 'Some in Rags and Some in Jags and Some in Silken Gowns': Textiles from Iceland's Early Modern Period.
- Author
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Smith, Michèle
- Subjects
TEXTILES ,WEAVING ,TEXTILE industry ,TEXTILE design ,TEXTILE exports & imports ,HOME economics ,HANDICRAFT ,EARLY modern history ,MATERIAL culture ,HISTORY of Iceland - Abstract
The Danish trade monopoly of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries resulted in the implementation of strict regulations and controls on textile production, the introduction of weaving workshops equipped with new horizontal looms, and a deliberate attempt to phase out the production of homespun cloth on the warp-weighted loom. What was the fate of homespun cloth in this era of introduced industrialization in Iceland? Archaeological textile collections from Iceland's early modern period are abundant though understudied. This paper reports current research on these collections and suggests that homespun cloth did not die out in the late medieval period, but that it continued into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, declining slowly thereafter. Moreover, homespun cloth of the early modern period evolved into something that was structurally different than its earlier medieval version, possibly in response to increased climatic fluctuations during the Little Ice Age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Small Things Forgotten Now Included, or What Else Do Things Deserve?
- Author
-
Pétursdóttir, Þóra
- Subjects
MATERIAL culture ,ATLANTIC herring fisheries ,HISTORY ,MEMORY ,FISHERY processing plants ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
We have turned to things, it is argued in different contexts by social and cultural scholars. The previously neglected stuff of life is back and now deserves to be embraced and included in our histories and democracies. This paper discusses our efforts to include these others and seeks to reflect on how some of our gestures of inclusion may not be as humble and tolerant as we like to argue. With reference to an ongoing archaeological research of a recently abandoned herring station in Iceland's northwest the paper discusses how the archaeological remembering of this site, and its inclusion in historical narration, can in fact easily result in the active forgetting of things, their fragmented and discontinuous memory and their utter silence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Living in the Industrial City: Housing Quality, Land Ownership and the Archaeological Evidence from Industrial Manchester, 1740-1850.
- Author
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Nevell, Michael
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL housing ,LAND tenure ,WORKSHOPS (Facilities) -- Design & construction ,HOUSING ,URBAN growth ,BASEMENTS ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,HISTORY of urban planning ,HISTORY ,ECONOMICS ,HISTORY of land tenure ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This paper looks at the recent archaeological evidence for industrial housing in Manchester, United Kingdom. The paper argues that a fragmented land-holding pattern developed in a number of city-centre areas during the second half of the eighteenth century. This land-holding pattern gave rise to overcrowding as a result of the domestic redevelopment of back yard plots and the conversion of older housing to tenements. This redevelopment was at its most acute during the peak decades of population growth in the city, 1800-40, and this led to the conditions of poverty, disease, and overcrowding recorded in contemporary accounts from the mid-nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Nineteenth-Century Colonial Archaeology of Suakin, Sudan.
- Author
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Rhodes, Daniel
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,URBAN growth ,SOCIAL control ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,BRITISH colonies ,ADMINISTRATION of British colonies ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
This paper seeks to examine the role of the built environment as a tool of nineteenth-century British colonial expression within the Red Sea island town of Suakin, Sudan. Within Suakin and its environs, four major European focal points were examined through the use of archaeological survey and excavation. These were; (1) waterfront development (2) centers of colonial management, (3) terrestrial and maritime communication and (4) defense. The central argument of the paper is that economic and social control was maintained through the creation of new urban morphologies and European domination of existing urban space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mission-Based Indigenous Production at the Weipa Presbyterian Mission, Western Cape York Peninsula (1932–66).
- Author
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Morrison, Michael, McNaughton, Darlene, and Shiner, Justin
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN missions ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,FOOD production ,HONEY - Abstract
Previous research on remote nineteenth-and early twentieth-century Indigenous missions in northern and central Australia point to their often tenuous existence and the complex nature of engagements between Christian Missionaries and Indigenous people. This paper explores the contribution and significance of Indigenous production of wild foods in the context of one such settlement located at Weipa on Cape York Peninsula, north eastern Australia. It is premised on the assertion that investigation of the economies of these often remote settlements has the potential to reveal much about the character of cross-cultural engagements within the context of early mission settlements. Many remote missions had a far from secure economic basis and were sometimes unable to produce the consistent food supplies that were central to their proselytizing efforts. In this paper it is suggested that Indigenous-produced wild foods were of significant importance to the mission on a day-to-day basis in terms of their dietary contribution (particularly in terms of protein sources) and were also important to Indigenous people from a social and cultural perspective. We develop this argument through the case study of culturally modified trees that resulted from the collection of wild honey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Magunkaquog Materiality, Federal Recognition, and the Search for a Deeper History.
- Author
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Mrozowski, Stephen, Herbster, Holly, Brown, David, and Priddy, Katherine
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT relations with Native Americans ,NATIVE American tribal governments ,MATERIALITY (Accounting) ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,COLONIZATION - Abstract
This article explores the manner in which archaeology can address some of the issues that confront contemporary Native American groups trying to gain federal recognition. Often frustrating and at times capricious, the federal recognition process privileges documentary evidence over other forms of information in determining the political and cultural continuity demanded of groups seeking recognition. Demonstrating cultural continuity is hindered by the antiquated, assimilationist views that underpin the recognition process which equate the adoption of European cultural practices with the loss of Indian identity. This issue of authenticity is linked to even broader questions concerning materiality and the construction of identity. Drawing on archaeological and documentary investigations of the Christian Indian community of Magunkaquog, this paper explores the ambiguities of an archival record that can be challenged by material evidence. Archaeological evidence of cultural persistence discussed in the paper supports the political arguments of contemporary Native American groups that their ancestors maintained their political and cultural identity in the face of European colonization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Beyond Consumption: Functionality, Artifact Biography, and Early Modernity in a European Periphery.
- Author
-
Herva, Vesa-Pekka and Nurmi, Risto
- Subjects
ANTIQUITIES ,ANTIQUES ,MATERIAL culture ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL finds ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,SEVENTEENTH century ,PREHISTORIC antiquities - Abstract
This paper considers the functionality and biographies of artifacts in the context of historical archaeology. It is argued that in order to understand how human life in the recent past unfolded in relation with material culture, artifacts must be recognized to perform various unobvious functions and also be conceived as processes rather than bounded physical objects. The paper begins with a theoretical discussion and then focuses on the post-acquisition life of artifacts and human-artifact relations in the seventeenth-century town of Tornio, northern Finland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Microwear Analysis of Retouched Glass Fragments from Fortlet Miñana, Azul, Argentina, 1860–1863.
- Author
-
Ignacio Conte and Facundo Romero
- Subjects
HISTOLOGY ,MILITARY bases ,ETHNOLOGY ,RAW materials - Abstract
Abstract This paper presents the results of a microscopic analysis conducted on supposedly retouched glass fragments that were likely used as tools. The pieces were recovered in a series of excavations performed at the historical site of Fortlet Miñana (1860–1869), a military settlement used during the war against the Indians on the southern border of Buenos Aires province, Argentina. The use of glass as raw material in archaeological sites of the historic period has frequently been reported in the Pampas and Patagonian regions. In this paper we present a review of ethnohistoric and ethnographic sources concerning the use of glass side scrapers, end scrapers, and arrowheads by aboriginal groups throughout the world. In order to perform the analysis, the glass fragments from Fortlet Miñana were compared to a series of experimental pieces on which traces of deliberate use on two kinds of raw material, wood and hide, were identified. The experimental approach and the microscopic analysis demonstrate that the retouched glass fragments recovered at Fortlet Miñana were not used as tools. Therefore, we conclude that microscopic analysis is of significant use to all researchers working with materials of this kind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. On the Particularism of English Landscape Archaeology.
- Author
-
Matthew Johnson
- Subjects
LANDSCAPE archaeology ,PARTICULARISM (Political science) ,NATURAL monuments - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to explore the question: why is the archaeology of English historic landscapes apparently so provincial? Inevitably the response must be that matters are more complex. In this paper, I examine the work of W. G. Hoskins, the “father of English landscape history,” and draw attention to: the complex way in which landscape is embedded in nationalism; the relations between locale, province, and nation; and the way wider tensions, in particular of colonialism are embedded within Hoskins's own discourse. In conclusion, I examine ways in which this problematic continues to structure enquiry into the English landscape today and to inhibit a genuinely international and comparative approach to historic landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Zooarchaeology, Improvement and the British Agricultural Revolution.
- Author
-
Richard Thomas
- Subjects
ZOOARCHAEOLOGY ,ANIMAL culture ,DOMESTIC animals - Abstract
This paper seeks to revisit the debate concerning the nature and timing of the British Agricultural Revolution. Specifically, it considers how zooarchaeological evidence can be employed to investigate later-medieval and post-medieval “improvements” in animal husbandry. Previous studies of animal bone assemblages have indicated that the size of many domestic species in England increases from the fifteenth century—an observation that has been used to support the writings of those historians that have argued that the Agricultural Revolution occurred several centuries prior to the traditionally ascribed date of 1760–1840. Here, zooarchaeological data are presented which suggest that the size of cattle, sheep, pig and domestic fowl were increasing from as early as the fourteenth century. However, it is argued that the description of these changes as revolutionary is misleading and disguises the interplay of factors that influenced agricultural practice in the post-Black Death period. This paper concludes with a plea for greater awareness of the value of collecting and analysing faunal data from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to enable the historically attested productivity increases of the traditionally dated Agricultural Revolution to be examined archaeologically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Gothic and the Gaelic: Exploring the Place of Castles in Irelands Celtic Revival.
- Author
-
Andrew Tierney
- Subjects
ARCHITECTURE ,ROMANTICISM in literature ,COMPARISON (Psychology) - Abstract
Abstract This paper examines the conflict in early nineteenth century Ireland that emerged between the way castles were portrayed in academia on the one hand and romantic literature on the other. Focusing on a key text of the Celtic Revival, Sydney Owensons The Wild Irish Girl, the paper explores how this novel (with its strong gothic influences) established a lens through which Gaelic Ireland could be understood and how this in turn affected the representation of castles. The second part of the paper ties these themes into an analysis of the relationship between architecture, literature and identity in the occupation of Leap Castle, Co. Offaly during the changing political climate of nineteenth and early twentieth century Ireland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Teaching the Craft of Archaeology: Theory, Practice, and the Field School.
- Author
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Mark Walker and Dean J. Saitta
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGISTS ,ANTIQUITIES ,RITES & ceremonies ,MARKET penetration - Abstract
Field schools are a rite of passage for archaeologists, the first experience of what for many is the defining activity of the discipline: fieldwork. While teaching competence in practical techniques is the minimum goal of any field school, this technical training must be situated within the broader goals that drive the fieldwork. The University of Denver Archaeological Field School provides the fieldwork for the Colorado Coal Field War Archaeological Project. This project is an experiment in archaeology as political action in the present. It explores the possibility of an emancipatory archaeology through engagement with contemporary audiences and struggles. In this paper we discuss some of the ways we try to link technical training with the admittedly unusual theoretical and political goals of the project, teaching not only skills but an awareness of the responsibilities these skills should bring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Views and Commentaries: Struggling with the Past: Some Views of African-American Identity.
- Author
-
Brian W. Thomas
- Subjects
SLAVERY ,CRIMES against humanity ,ABOLITIONISTS ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Identity has been, and remains, central to African-American struggles with inequalities in the United States. In this paper I address various portrayals of African-American identity, and consider how these views of the past articulated with contemporary struggles. These portrayals range both in time and authorship, and include the views of former slaves, black intellectuals, and archaeologists. Taken together, they reflect the dynamic nature of identity, as well as the shifting importance of Africa as a root of identity and source of strength in struggles, past and present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Almshouse in Dutch and English Colonial North America and its Precedent in the Old World: Historical and Archaeological Evidence.
- Author
-
Paul R. Huey
- Subjects
HISTORY ,ALMSHOUSES ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,IRON Age - Abstract
To establish historical and archaeological contexts for the case studies presented in this volume, this paper presents a review of the literature on the history and archaeology of almshouses. Because both English and Dutch colonial almshouses were based on European precedents, this paper examines historical research and archaeological work conducted in The Netherlands and England, as well as their North American colonies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An Irregular and Inconvenient Pile of Buildings: The Destitute Asylum of Adelaide, South Australia and the English Workhouse.
- Author
-
Susan Piddock
- Subjects
ASYLUMS (Institutions) ,EXCAVATION ,TUNNEL design & construction - Abstract
The Destitute Asylum of Adelaide, South Australia, was the subject of a rescue excavation in 1983. This paper seeks to explore the possibilities for further archaeological research that can arise from a reconsideration of reports generated by such excavations. Using documents, plans, photographs, and the Asylum buildings as material culture in much the same way as artifacts are used, the research focuses on the questions of space and room use within the Destitute Asylum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Preface.
- Author
-
Kelly, Kenneth and Hauser, Mark
- Subjects
PREFACES & forewords ,HISTORICAL archaeology - Abstract
A preface for the 2009 issue of the "International Journal of Historical Archaeology" is presented.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Excavating Ephemeral Remains of Life in a Time of Witchcraft: New Insights into the Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Occupations at Leokwe and Nyindi Hills in the Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area, South Africa.
- Author
-
Schoeman, Maria
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,SOUTH African politics & government ,ORAL history ,WITCHCRAFT ,HISTORY - Abstract
Scholarly knowledge of the historical settlements in the Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area in northern South Africa is fundamentally entangled with narratives told to N. J. Van Warmelo by two women, Sekgobogobo and Mphengwa. The account based on these stories narrated elements of Sekgobogobo's life history, and pointed to the at times lethal effects of internal political processes combining with regional instability and an approaching colonial frontier. This paper establishes a recursive relationship between this narrative and archaeological excavations to deepen the understanding of the sociopolitical dynamics in the Shashe-Limpopo Confluence Area in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Doing Business: Chinese and European Socioeconomic Relations in Early Cooktown.
- Author
-
Rains, Kevin
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,HISTORY of material culture ,ECONOMIC activity ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,HISTORY ,ETHNIC relations - Abstract
This paper is an historical archaeological examination of the socioeconomic relations of the Chinese and European communities of Cooktown in north Queensland during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It looks at the social landscape and production, exchange and consumption of material culture to show that the Chinese were not a disengaged group, as depicted in conventional understandings of colonial life, but integral to the town's socioeconomic fabric. This close relationship arose out of a process of negotiation between Chinese and Europeans which responded to the strengths, weaknesses and resources of their individual business networks, and the particular conditions of Cooktown's frontier environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Under the Boards: Archaeological Site Formation Processes at the Commissariat Store, Brisbane.
- Author
-
Murphy, Karen
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,RETAIL stores ,FLOODS ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,HISTORY - Abstract
The study of archaeological site formation processes, although routinely undertaken for prehistoric sites, is only carried out in historical archaeology in a limited way. Understanding the processes which formed the archaeological record of a site is an important first step towards developing justifiable inferences about past behavior and past societies regardless of the age of the site. This paper identifies and examines the cultural and non-cultural processes that formed the archaeological record at the Commissariat Store, Brisbane. The history of the site, from its construction in 1829 as part of the Moreton Bay penal settlement to the present, is examined and the expected impacts and processes on the archaeological record are identified. Archaeological evidence from the salvage excavation of the site undertaken in 1978 and 1979 is analyzed to identify the cultural and non-cultural site formation processes. This study identifies the presence of cultural formation processes including discard, loss, abandonment and re-use from an examination of the historical and archaeological evidence. Non-cultural formation processes at work in the site include faunalturbation, floralturbation, flooding, and aquaturbation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mount Shamrock: A Symbiosis of Mine and Settlement.
- Author
-
Mate, Geraldine
- Subjects
GOLD miners ,GOLD mining ,LANDSCAPES ,GROUP identity ,HISTORY - Abstract
Mount Shamrock township was one of the earliest gold mining towns in the Upper Burnett district of Queensland, Australia. A study of the township and associated industrial area demonstrates the integration of town and mine in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This paper examines the relative permanence of the mining settlement and reveals a multifaceted landscape influenced not only by miners but by the women, children and other non-mining residents operating within distinct social and administrative frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Light Shows and Narratives of the Past.
- Author
-
Villalobos Acosta, César
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,SPECIAL effects in lighting ,NATIONALISM ,TOURISM & archaeology ,TOURISM ,TEOTIHUACAN Site (San Juan Teotihuacan, Mexico) ,UXMAL Site (Mexico) ,CHICHEN Itza Site (Mexico) - Abstract
This paper discusses Mexican light and sound shows at archaeological sites, with a focus on clashing narratives in the relationship between archaeology, nationalism, and tourism. My analysis of light shows reveals the confluence and contradiction of two opposing narratives about the use and presentation of the past. This article is divided into three parts. The first provides the context for the analysis of light shows. The second analyzes the earliest shows in México (1968-90), with a focus on how nationalists converted light shows in the face of criticism. This second part particularly examines light shows installed at Teotihuacan, but also includes light shows installed at other sites. The third section discusses the latest developments in the installation of light shows in México (2000-09). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Politics of Archaeology in North Korea: Construction and Deterioration of Toh's Knowledge.
- Author
-
Lee, Hyeong
- Subjects
POLITICS & archaeology ,NATIONALISM ,MARXIST philosophy ,CULTURAL property ,NORTH Korean politics & government ,IDEOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
This paper considers how North Korean archaeology developed during the 1950-60s. Archaeological implementation, under the law of historical process in North Korea, was not perfectly compatible with true Marxist ideology; the actual archaeological movement went in a different direction. Archaeological activity in the North was not free from political constraints. Thus, it is more appropriate to say that the regime and archaeologists shared the same goal: to build a national identity. Emulating Marxist archaeology was the ostensible goal, whereas adopting the culture-historical approach was the more practical goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Heritage Tourism, Identity and Development in Peru.
- Author
-
Herrera, Alexander
- Subjects
HERITAGE tourism ,TOURISM & archaeology ,GROUP identity ,TOURISM ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,SOCIAL development ,CULTURAL property ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
In this paper the linkages between archaeology, identity, and tourism in Peru are discussed in the context of economic and social development. The role of archaeologists in the heritage process ( patrimonialización) is shown to transcend the production of narratives and destinations pivotal to the touristic experience. Engagements beyond the material remains of the pre-Colonial past have been hampered by the complex role of the indigenous in the national mythology, as much as by the perceived mandate of the discipline. Promise and pitfalls of ethical practices leading to locally grounded strategies are explored in two case studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Confessions of an Archaeological Tour Guide.
- Author
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Joyce, Rosemary
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGICAL tours ,TOUR guides (Persons) ,TOURISM & archaeology ,HERITAGE tourism ,CULTURAL property ,ARCHAEOLOGISTS - Abstract
This article examines the contradictions, responsibilities and opportunities that inhere when the authenticity of the tourist experience results at least in part from having an archaeologist guide. It is argued that archaeologists are always participants in tourism, through the visions of the past they offer in even the most scholarly of papers, that make their way to tourists and tour guides through a wealth of secondary literature. It is argued that, even if most are not aware of it, archaeologists are engaged with the cultural heritage industry and it would be irresponsible to try to step aside. It is argued that archaeologists should take responsible action in light of the undeniable influence of archaeologists in defining the routes and meanings of site tours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Indo-Hispanic Dynamics: From Contact to Colonial Interaction in the Greater Antilles.
- Author
-
Valcárcel Rojas, Roberto, Samson, Alice, and Hoogland, Menno
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples of the West Indies ,CROSS-cultural studies ,CULTURE diffusion ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,SPANISH colonies ,HISTORY of the West Indies ,HISTORY ,INDIGENOUS peoples of the Americas -- First contact with Europeans ,ANTIQUITIES ,HISTORY of the Americas - Abstract
Indo-Hispanic interaction is an essential issue in the colonial period in the Caribbean, but its study is currently marginalized as an offshoot of pre-Columbian archaeology. This state of affairs denies the indigenous contribution to the past and present ethnocultural composition of the region and privileges a colonial approach in scholarship. This paper reviews important aspects of the history of archaeological research on contact and colonial interaction in the Greater Antilles and its theoretical underpinnings. It also presents two recent archaeological case studies that show different facets of the interaction processes using new methodological approaches: El Cabo, Dominican Republic, with evidence of early contact, and El Chorro de Maíta, Cuba, a context of interethnic interaction under colonial conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Zooarchaeology for the City: An Urban Case, La Boca, Buenos Aires City, circa 1860.
- Author
-
Chichkoyan, Karina
- Subjects
ZOOARCHAEOLOGY ,URBAN archaeology ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,HISTORY of food ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,URBAN history ,URBAN life ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,HISTORY - Abstract
Zooarchaeological works in the city lack of a specific theoretical and methodological framework to understand its faunal assemblages. The different analyses were done in most cases following procedures that had been developed for hunter-gatherer contexts. In this paper, we evaluate some questions related to this issue, encompassed in the acquisition mode and the characteristics of the archaeological record. Finally, an example from two sites in La Boca, Buenos Aires city, Argentina is given in order to understand some of these questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Landscapes of Desire: Parks, Colonialism, and Identity in Victorian and Edwardian Ireland.
- Author
-
Brück, Joanna
- Subjects
PARKS ,CULTURAL landscapes ,IMPERIALISM ,MATERIAL culture ,CULTURAL identity ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,IRISH history -- 1837-1901 ,IRISH history -- 1901-1910 - Abstract
Ireland's Victorian and Edwardian public parks were landscapes in which normative models of class, gender, and colonial identities were constructed. This paper will explore how the materiality of these landscapes-their drinking fountains, railings, bandstands, and benches-facilitated forms of social practice that underpinned an ideology of improvement, creating regulated spaces of display and consumption in which the natural world and the urban populace could be objectified, domesticated and their moral worth evaluated. Yet, parks have always been sites of transgression so that from their earliest years, vandalism and other forms of subversive behavior created alternative narratives of identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Landlord Villages of Iran as Landscapes of Hierarchy and Control.
- Author
-
Nashli, Hassan and Young, Ruth
- Subjects
VILLAGES ,LAND tenure ,LAND use -- History ,LAND reform ,LANDLORDS ,LANDLORD-tenant relations ,SOCIAL control ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,ETHNOLOGY ,PAHLAVI dynasty, 1925-1979 ,IRANIAN history -- 20th century ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper analyses the walled landlord villages of the Tehran Plain in terms of hierarchy and control, and how these structures are created and expressed through the spatial landscape of the villages. Drawing on original fieldwork, the ways in which landlords used the physicality of the villages to maintain and reinforce control over farmers is explored. We suggest that the 'success' or at least longevity of the land tenure system in Iran prior to the later twentieth century can be attributed at least in part to the buildings and spaces of the villages themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Gilded Ages and Gilded Archaeologies of American Exceptionalism.
- Author
-
Matthews, Christopher
- Subjects
HISTORIC preservation ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,RACE relations in the United States ,AMERICANIZATION ,AMERICAN national character ,UNITED States civilization - Abstract
Archaeology's ties to an interest in America's natural and cultural resources, enshrined in the Antiquities Act of 1906, can be tied to the development of the presumed entitlements associated with gilded age-era conceptions of America's cultural and racial exceptionalism. Archaeology, historic preservation, and related interests in the materiality of America's past were in fact among the mechanisms used to legitimize America's global emergence in the modern era. Considering elite ideas about race and a fear of 'race suicide' as well as the rise of the environmental conservation and the historic house movement, this paper argues that archaeology and related pursuits of historic materiality have been regularly deployed to enforce Anglo-Saxon racial values. Explicitly formed in the historical context of mass-immigration, this dynamic is explored in a discussion of two archaeological sites in Jamaica, Queens connected to gilded-age discourse on Americanization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Gilded Age Wasn't So Gilded in the Anthracite Region of Pennsylvania.
- Author
-
Shackel, Paul and Roller, Michael
- Subjects
MASSACRES ,MINES & mineral resources ,HISTORY of industrialization ,HISTORY of labor ,AMERICAN exceptionalism ,IMMIGRATION opponents ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,HISTORY of race relations in the United States ,UNITED States history - Abstract
The Lattimer Massacre occurred in September of 1897 in the anthracite coalfields of Northeast Pennsylvania. This tragic event saw the death of 19 miners, fired upon by local law enforcement and a posse gathered from local businessmen. This paper will situate this event amidst the deeply turbulent themes underlying the Gilded Age: race, American exceptionalism and Empire and labor struggle. A project undertaken by archaeologists from the University of Maryland seeks to restore the memory of the massacre, highlighting the implications of this history within the current anti-immigrant politics extant in its contemporary setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Later Historical Archaeology in Iceland: A Review.
- Author
-
Lucas, Gavin
- Subjects
HISTORICAL archaeology ,ACADEMIC discourse ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL research ,HISTORY of archaeology ,NATIONALISM ,ARCHAEOLOGY publishing - Abstract
This paper offers a general review of past and present archaeological work on the later historic period of Iceland, i.e. from the sixteenth century to the present day. Introduced by a brief sketch of the nature of Iceland's history and archaeology, a chronological approach is taken in presenting previous and current research on sites and material of the later historic period. Starting in the mid-twentieth century, with minor work focused on a single ordinary farmstead, the 1970s and 1980s witnessed a growth of excavations largely on elite residences. Since the 1990s and into the present, such a focus has continued while also seeing a rise in development-led projects. Despite this, lack of publication or even general discussion of the archaeology of this period dominates the field in Iceland, problems which are only now being addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Archaeology of Capitalism in Iceland: The View from Viðey.
- Author
-
Lucas, Gavin and Hreiðarsdóttir, Elín
- Subjects
GHOST towns ,HISTORY of fisheries ,COLONIES ,CAPITALISM ,COMMERCIAL products ,HISTORICAL archaeology ,HISTORY of Iceland ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper examines the particular nature of Icelandic capitalism as it emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing on a recent project investigating the material processes surrounding the rise and fall of an early capitalist venture in the fishing industry, the role of commodities and their intersection with issues of colonialism and nationalism is explored. The study centers on a village community established in 1907 on an island in the bay of Reykjavík, which saw two periods of boom and bust in its short life before the village was abandoned in 1943. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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