The Element considers historiography – the extent to which insular prehistorians have integrated their findings with the archaeology of mainland Europe; and the ways in which Continental scholars have drawn on British material. An important theme is the cultural and political relationship between this island and the mainland. The other component is an up-to-date account of prehistoric Britain and her neighbours from the Mesolithic period to the Iron Age, organised around the seaways that connected these regions. It emphasises the links between separate parts of this island and different parts of the Continent. It considers the links across the Irish Sea as only one manifestation of a wider process and treats Ireland on the same terms as other accessible regions, from France to the Low Countries. It shows how different parts of Britain were separate from one another and how they can be studied in a European framework.
By:
Richard Bradley (University of Oxford) Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom Weight: 271g ISBN:9781009557825 ISBN 10: 1009557823 Series:Elements in the Archaeology of Europe Pages: 90 Publication Date:29 May 2025 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Almost the utmost border of the earth; 2. Isolation and inclusion (4000–2500 BC); 3. Far and near (2500–1200 BC); 4. Questions of time and space (1200 BC–54 BC); 5. Conclusions: The known world; References.