Results 251 to 260 of about 341,166 (341)
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Maritime Claims and Underwater Archaeology: When History Meets Politics

Maritime Claims and Underwater Archaeology, 2021
Among other circumstances relevant to maritime delimitations, some States have recently used the protection of underwater cultural heritage (UCH) as grounds for advancing jurisdictional or sovereignty claims over different maritime areas.
Mariano J. Aznar
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Constructing the Future History: Prefiguration as Historical Epistemology and the Chronopolitics of Archaeology

Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 2019
Archaeology is a process for, at minimum, constructing history from the material record. The decisions about what to use to create that history is unavoidably political. This political act primarily serves to construct and enforce the power of the state,
Lewis Borck
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Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 23

Medieval Archaeology
Articles must be in English, and printed out on A4 paper (or its nearest equivalent). A brief abstract of no more than 200 words should be included at the head of the article.
E. Brownlee
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History, archaeology and culture.

2022
Abstract This chapter discusses: (1) the etymology of the fig; (2) the domestication, dispersal and archaeological evidence of the fig; (3) fig in ancient Egypt; (4) the fig in Neolithic Levant and East Mediterranean; (5) figs in Greece and West Mediterranean in the Iron Age; (6) the fig in Roman culture; and (7) the fig tree in the Holy Books.
F. Spagnoli, A. Yavari
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Anarchy and Archaeology

Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 2019
Anarchist theory is having a ‘moment’ in the social sciences. A growing number of scholars draw on anarchist thought to conceptualize human history and offer solutions grounded in direct democracy for a range of modern ills, including racism, sexism, and
J. Flexner, Edward Gonzalez-Tennant
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What Happened in History


PROFESSOR V. GORDON GHILDE, who died in the Blue Mountains of his native Australia in 1957 soon after retiring from the Directorship of the London University Institute of Archaeology, was one of the great pre-historians of the world.
Gordon Childe, G. Clark, Gordon Ghilde
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Film History as Media Archaeology

, 2016
Since cinema has entered the digital era, its very nature has come under renewed scrutiny. Countering the 'death of cinema' debate, Film History as Media Archaeology presents a robust argument for the cinema's current status as a new epistemological ...
T. Elsaesser
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Archaeology and History

2005
Abstract The lost world of Mesopotamia would not have been found had it not been for the curiosity of travelers, the zeal of archaeologists, and the diligence of philologists. Without their efforts and writings, the ruined sites, buried treasures, and dead languages of the Sumerians, Babylonians, and Assyrians would have remained ...
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Archaeology and History

2001
Abstract Traditionally the academic study of Celtic northern Italy has divided into two strands—Celtic prehistory and Roman history. The former has dealt principally with the evidence for the presence of the Celts in Italy. It has used this evidence to treat such questions as the explanation and dating of the original Celtic presence ...
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