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E-grāmata: Neolithic of Mainland Scotland

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Edinburgh University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780748685752
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Edinburgh University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780748685752
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Archaeologists show us how the Neolithic human lived in mainland Scotland What was life like in Scotland between 4000 and 2000BC? Where were people living? How did they treat their dead? Why did they spend so much time building extravagant ritual monuments? What was special about the relationship people had with trees and holes in the ground? What can we say about how people lived in the Neolithic and early Bronze Age of mainland Scotland where much of the evidence we have lies beneath the ploughsoil, or survives as slumped banks and ditches, or ruinous megaliths? Each contribution to this volume presents fresh research and radical new interpretations of the pits, postholes, ditches, rubbish dumps, human remains and broken potsherds left behind by our Neolithic forebears. From the APF What was life like in Scotland between 4000 and 2000BC? Where were people living? How did they treat their dead? Why did they spend so much time building extravagant ritual monuments? What was special about the relationship people had with trees? Why was so much time and effort spent digging holes and filling them back up again? What can we say about how people lived in the Neolithic and early Bronze Age of mainland Scotland where much of the evidence we have lies beneath the plough soil, or survives as slumped banks and filled ditches, or ruinous megaliths? This book will draw together leading experts and young researchers to present fresh research and outline radical new interpretations of the pits, postholes, ditches, rubbish dumps, human remains and broken potsherds left behind by our Neolithic forebears. Much of this evidence has come to light in the past few decades, putting the emphasis very much lowland, mainland Scotland as opposed to more famous Orcadian Neolithic sites. Inspired by the work of Gordon Barclay, the leading scholars of Scotland's Neolithic in the last 40 years, the chapters in this book offer a wide-ranging analysis of the evidence we have for the first farmers in Scotland.
List of Tables and Figures
vii
Notes on the Contributors x
Acknowledgements xiii
Foreword: `The prehistory of my own lands, the lowlands' xv
Part I Scotland's Mainland Neolithic in Context
1 Gordon Barclay: A Career in the Scottish Neolithic
3(18)
Ian Ralston
2 Neolithic Pasts, Neolithic Futures: The Contemporary Socio-politics of Prehistoric Landscapes
21(20)
Gavin MacGregor
3 `Very real shared traditions'? Thinking about Similarity and Difference in the Construction and Use of Clyde Cairns in the Western Scottish Neolithic
41(16)
Vicki Cummings
4 Who Were These People? A Sideways View and a Non-answer of Political Proportions
57(17)
Alex Gibson
5 Pathways to Ancestral Worlds: Mortuary Practice in the Irish Neolithic
74(23)
Gabriel Cooney
Part II Non-megalithic Monuments
6 Hiatus or Hidden? The Problem of the Missing Scottish Upland Cursus Monuments
97(19)
Roy Loveday
7 Making Memories, Making Monuments: Changing Understandings of Henges in Prehistory and the Present
116(23)
Rebecca K. Younger
8 Seeing the Wood in the Trees: The Timber Monuments of Neolithic Scotland
139(32)
Kirsty Millican
Part III Pits, Pots and Practice
9 Life is the Pits! Ritual, Refuse and Mesolithic-Neolithic Settlement Traditions in North-east Scotland
171(29)
Gordon Noble
Claire Christie
Emma Philip
10 On Ancient Farms: A Survey of Neolithic Potentially Domestic Locations in Lowland Scotland
200(36)
Kenneth Brophy
11 The Neolithic Pottery from Balfarg/Balbirnie Revisited
236(25)
Ann MacSween
12 Pursuing the Penumbral: The Deposition of Beaker Pottery at Neolithic and Ceremonial Monuments in Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Scotland
261(58)
Neil Wilkin
Index 319