| Price: | £25.00 |
|---|---|
| Published: | 1 December 2007 |
| ISBN: | 978-1-905119-17-2 |
| Details: | 256 pp; 51 figures |
As the essays in this book demonstrate, Prehistoric and Romano-British landscape studies have come a long way since Hoskins, whose work reflected the old view that the prehistoric and Roman periods did not have much lasting impact on the landscape. The contributors present a stimulating survey of the subject as it is in the early twenty-first century, where new ideas about identity and the 'other' are explored, and new research techniques are transforming our understanding.
1955 and all that: prehistoric landscapes in The Making (Andrew Fleming); A new downland prehistory: long term environmental change on the southern English chalklands (Michael J. Allen & Rob Scaife);Making strange: monuments and the creation of the earlier prehistoric landscape (Richard Bradley); Geophysical survey and the emergence of underground archaeological landscapes: the Heart of Neolithic Orkney World Heritage Site (Nick Card, John Gater, Chris Gaffney & Emma Wood); Bronze Age field systems and the English Channel-North Sea cultural region (David Yates); Claylands revisited: the prehistory of W. G. Hoskins’s Midlands Plain (Patrick Clay); Hillforts and human movement: unlocking the Iron Age landscapes of mid Wales (Toby Driver) The Roman landscape of Britain: from Hoskins to today (Richard Hingley); Beyond the economic in the Roman Fenland: reconsidering land, water, hoards and religion (Adam Rogers): What did the Romans ever do for us? Roman iron production in the East Midlands and the Forest of Dean (Irene Schrüfer-Kolb); Roman towns, Roman landscapes: the cultural terrain of town and country in the Roman period (Steven Willis).
Landscape History after Hoskins, Volume 1.
Series editor Christopher Dyer
You have no items in your shopping cart
Published twice yearly Landscapes is a peer reviewed journal with a distinguished editorial board.
Windgather Press website adheres to standards set by W3C.
