Artefacts and Archaeology: Aspects of the Celtic and Roman World
By (Author) Miranda Aldhouse-Green
Edited by Peter Webster
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
6th November 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ancient history
Archaeology by period / region
936.29
Hardback
256
Width 189mm, Height 246mm
984g
Archaeologists excavate structures and objects, but they can and should aim to reconstruct the societies of the past and seek to understand them. Artefacts and Archaeology brings together essays written by leading scholars in the fields of Iron Age and Roman archaeology and material finds in Britain in order to examine the ways in which the study of sites, artefacts and ancient societies are interdependent. Artefacts and Archaeology deals with the wide range of objects produced by the Iron Age and Roman cultures, from ironwork, defences and the Roman army and Roman finds. It emphasises the role of the archaeologist as interpreter of people, not things, and shows how object studies can move beyond pure description and instead attempt to communicate with the past. Individual essays discuss Iron Age and Romano-British religion, the Roman army in Wales, Roman bronze, pottery and glass objects, the Roman economy and museum objects, and the collection as a whole offers a fascinating overview of the material culture of Iron Age and Roman western Europe.
'...a most delightful and well-edited tribute.' (Archaeologia Cambrensis, Vol 150)
Miranda Aldhouse-Green is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Wales College, Newport. She is author of numerous books and articles on Celtic art, material culture and myth, including Celtic Wales (2000) for UWP. Peter Webster is a senior lecturer in the Cardiff University Centre for Lifelong Learning and the author of Roman Samian Ware in Britain (1996) Miranda Aldhouse-Green (Department of Archaeology, University of Wales College, Newport), Peter Webster (School of History and Archaeology, Cardiff University), Philip Macdonald, Mary Davis, Ian Scott, Evan Chapman, Jeffrey L. Davies (Archaeology, University of Wales, Aberystwyth), Hilary Cool, Paul Nicholson (School of History and Archaeology, University of Wales, Cardiff), Denise Allen, Vivien Swan, Ralph Jackson, Janet Webster, Richard Brewer, Kevin Greene, Catherine Johns,