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OverviewThe Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean offers new insights into the material and social practices of many different Mediterranean peoples during the Bronze and Iron Ages, presenting in particular those features that both connect and distinguish them. Contributors discuss in depth a range of topics that motivate and structure Mediterranean archaeology today, including insularity and connectivity; mobility, migration, and colonization; hybridization and cultural encounters; materiality, memory, and identity; community and household; life and death; and ritual and ideology. The volume's broad coverage of different approaches and contemporary archaeological practices will help practitioners of Mediterranean archaeology to move the subject forward in new and dynamic ways. Together, the essays in this volume shed new light on the people, ideas, and materials that make up the world of Mediterranean archaeology today, beyond the borders that separate Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. Full Product DetailsAuthor: A. Bernard Knapp (University of Glasgow) , Peter van Dommelen (Brown University, Rhode Island)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 22.60cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 28.70cm Weight: 2.170kg ISBN: 9780521766883ISBN 10: 0521766885 Pages: 700 Publication Date: 12 January 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of Contents1. A little history of Mediterranean island prehistory; 2. Inside out? Materiality and connectivity in the Aegean archipelago; 3. Early island exploitations: productive and subsistence strategies on the prehistoric Balearic Islands; 4. Islands and mobility: exploring Bronze Age connectivity in the South-Central Mediterranean; 5. Sicily in Mediterranean history in the second millennium BC; 6. Late Bronze Age Sardinia: acephalous cohesion; 7. Corridors and colonies: comparing fourth-third millennia BC interactions in Southeast Anatolia and the Levant; 8. The Anatolian context of philia material culture in Cyprus; 9. Bronze Age European elites: from the Aegean to the Adriatic, and back again; 10. Greece in the Early Iron Age: mobility, commodities, polities, and literacy; 11. Before 'the gates of Tartessos': indigenous knowledge and exchange networks in the Late Bronze Age far west; 12. Colonizations and cultural developments in the central Mediterranean; 13. The Iron Age in South Italy: settlement, mobility, and culture contact; 14. Migration, hybridization, and resistance: identity dynamics in the Early Iron Age Southern Levant; 15. Cultural interactions in Iron Age Sardinia; 16. Myth into art: foreign impulses and local responses in archaic Cypriot sanctuaries; 17. Mobility, interaction, and power in the Iron Age Western Mediterranean; 18. Sensuous memory, materiality, and history: rethinking the 'rise of the palaces' on Bronze Age Crete; 19. Beyond iconography: meaning-making in Late Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean visual and material culture; 20. Changes in perceptions of the 'other' and expressions of Egyptian self-identity in the Late Bronze Age; 21. The lure of the artifact? The effects of acquiring Eastern Mediterranean material culture; 22. Stone worlds: technologies of rock-carving and place-making in Anatolian landscapes; 23. Rethinking the late Cypriot built environment: households and communities as places of social transformation; 24. Households, hierarchies, territories, and landscapes in Bronze Age and Iron Age Greece; 25. Connectivity beyond the urban community in central Italy; 26. Long term social change in Iron Age northern Iberia (ca.700–200 BC); 27. Who lives there? Settlements, houses, and households in Iberia; 28. Landscapes and seascapes of Southwest Iberia in the first millennium BC; 29. Domestic and settlement organization in Iron Age Southern France; 30. Beyond the general and the particular: rethinking death, memory, and belonging in Early Bronze Age Crete; 31. From the nineteenth century to the twenty-first: understanding the Bronze argaric lifecourse in the Mediterranean 'far west'; 32. Crossing borders: death and life in second millennium BC southern Iberia and North Africa; 33. An entangled past: island interactions, mortuary practices, and the negotiation of identities on Early Iron Age Cyprus; 34. The violence of symbols: ideologies, identity, and cultural interaction in central Italian cemeteries; 35. The Early Bronze Age Southern Levant: the ideology of an aniconic reformation; 36. Ritual as the setting for contentious interaction: from social negotiation to institutionalized authority in Bronze Age Cyprus; 37. Cult activities among central and north Italian protohistoric communities; 38. Ritual and ideology in Early Iron Age Crete: the role of the past and the east.ReviewsAdvance praise: 'A magnificently multi-faceted, intellectually challenging collection of scholarly voices and interpretations that matches the complexity and dynamism of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean itself. This book will be a stimulus to fresh thinking in and beyond the Middle Sea for many years to come, as well as an ideal point of access for the less familiar.' Cyprian Broodbank, John Disney Professor of Archaeology, University of Cambridge Advance praise: 'The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean is ambitious, comparative, thematic, challenging, informative and bang up-to-date, helping readers to grasp the similarities and diversity of Mediterranean communities and societies in the last two millennia BC. The clarity of presentation makes it a pleasure to read.' Bob Chapman, University of Reading Advance praise: 'Widely ranging knowledgeable syntheses of Mediterranean later prehistory that are also theoretically informed are rare; those seeking not to shelter in a regional ghetto but engaging with wider archaeology and history rarer still. This welcome volume is all of the above, and thus both important and special.' Sturt W. Manning, Goldwin Smith Chair of Classical Archaeology and Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies, Cornell University 'A magnificently multi-faceted, intellectually challenging collection of scholarly voices and interpretations that matches the complexity and dynamism of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean itself. This book will be a stimulus to fresh thinking in and beyond the Middle Sea for many years to come, as well as an ideal point of access for the less familiar.' Cyprian Broodbank, John Disney Professor of Archaeology, University of Cambridge 'The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean is ambitious, comparative, thematic, challenging, informative and bang up-to-date, helping readers to grasp the similarities and diversity of Mediterranean communities and societies in the last two millennia BC. The clarity of presentation makes it a pleasure to read.' Bob Chapman, University of Reading 'Widely ranging knowledgeable syntheses of Mediterranean later prehistory that are also theoretically informed are rare; those seeking not to shelter in a regional ghetto but engaging with wider archaeology and history rarer still. This welcome volume is all of the above, and thus both important and special.' Sturt W. Manning, Goldwin Smith Chair of Classical Archaeology and Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies, Cornell University 'A magnificently multi-faceted, intellectually challenging collection of scholarly voices and interpretations that matches the complexity and dynamism of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean itself. This book will be a stimulus to fresh thinking in and beyond the Middle Sea for many years to come, as well as an ideal point of access for the less familiar.' Cyprian Broodbank, John Disney Professor of Archaeology, University of Cambridge 'The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean is ambitious, comparative, thematic, challenging, informative and bang up-to-date, helping readers to grasp the similarities and diversity of Mediterranean communities and societies in the last two millennia BC. The clarity of presentation makes it a pleasure to read.' Bob Chapman, University of Reading 'Widely ranging knowledgeable syntheses of Mediterranean later prehistory that are also theoretically informed are rare; those seeking not to shelter in a regional ghetto but engaging with wider archaeology and history rarer still. This welcome volume is all of the above, and thus both important and special.' Sturt W. Manning, Goldwin Smith Chair of Classical Archaeology and Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies, Cornell University A magnificently multi-faceted, intellectually challenging collection of scholarly voices and interpretations that matches the complexity and dynamism of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean itself. This book will be a stimulus to fresh thinking in and beyond the Middle Sea for many years to come, as well as an ideal point of access for the less familiar. Cyprian Broodbank, John Disney Professor of Archaeology, University of Cambridge The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean is ambitious, comparative, thematic, challenging, informative and bang up-to-date, helping readers to grasp the similarities and diversity of Mediterranean communities and societies in the last two millennia BC. The clarity of presentation makes it a pleasure to read. Bob Chapman, University of Reading Widely ranging knowledgeable syntheses of Mediterranean later prehistory that are also theoretically informed are rare; those seeking not to shelter in a regional ghetto but engaging with wider archaeology and history rarer still. This welcome volume is all of the above, and thus both important and special. Sturt W. Manning, Goldwin Smith Chair of Classical Archaeology and Director of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies, Cornell University Author InformationA. Bernard Knapp is Emeritus Professor of Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Glasgow and Honorary Research Fellow at the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute in Nicosia. He has held research appointments at the University of Sydney, the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute, the University of Cambridge, and Macquarie University (Sydney). His research interests include archaeological theory (such as insularity and island archaeology, social identity, gender, hybridization practices), archaeological landscapes and regional archaeologies, and Bronze Age Mediterranean prehistory generally. He is co-editor of the Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology and editor of the series Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology. His most recent book is The Archaeology of Cyprus: From Earliest Prehistory through the Bronze Age (Cambridge University Press, 2013). Peter van Dommelen is Joukowsky Family Professor of Archaeology and Professor of Anthropology at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. Between 1997 and 2012, he taught Mediterranean Archaeology in the Department of Archaeology of the University of Glasgow. He was visiting professor in the Department of History of the University of the Balearics (Palma de Mallorca) in 2012, in the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Cagliari (Italy) in 2011, and in the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology at the University of Valencia (Spain) in 2005–6. His research interests include colonialism, rural households, and landscapes in the (west) Mediterranean, in both ancient and more recent times. In practical terms, he has long been engaged in field survey and ceramic studies in Sardinia, Italy. Founding co-editor of the journal Archaeological Dialogues until 2006, he currently co-edits the Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology and sits on the editorial board of World Archaeology. He is co-author of Rural Landscapes of the Punic World (2008). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |