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Material Culture and Social Practice: Archaeology and History in Understanding Europe’s ‘Celtic Fringe
by
Houston, Robert A.
in
Archaeology
/ Art history
/ Celtic languages
/ Celts
/ Cooperation
/ Culture
/ Ethnography
/ Everyday life
/ Focus: How can History and Archaeology be Handmaidens in Defining a National or Regional (in this Case European) Identity?
/ Food consumption
/ Historians
/ Identity
/ Industrial buildings
/ Land use
/ Local knowledge
/ Material culture
/ Middle Ages
/ Morphology
/ National identity
/ Rapprochement
2020
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Material Culture and Social Practice: Archaeology and History in Understanding Europe’s ‘Celtic Fringe
by
Houston, Robert A.
in
Archaeology
/ Art history
/ Celtic languages
/ Celts
/ Cooperation
/ Culture
/ Ethnography
/ Everyday life
/ Focus: How can History and Archaeology be Handmaidens in Defining a National or Regional (in this Case European) Identity?
/ Food consumption
/ Historians
/ Identity
/ Industrial buildings
/ Land use
/ Local knowledge
/ Material culture
/ Middle Ages
/ Morphology
/ National identity
/ Rapprochement
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Material Culture and Social Practice: Archaeology and History in Understanding Europe’s ‘Celtic Fringe
by
Houston, Robert A.
in
Archaeology
/ Art history
/ Celtic languages
/ Celts
/ Cooperation
/ Culture
/ Ethnography
/ Everyday life
/ Focus: How can History and Archaeology be Handmaidens in Defining a National or Regional (in this Case European) Identity?
/ Food consumption
/ Historians
/ Identity
/ Industrial buildings
/ Land use
/ Local knowledge
/ Material culture
/ Middle Ages
/ Morphology
/ National identity
/ Rapprochement
2020
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Material Culture and Social Practice: Archaeology and History in Understanding Europe’s ‘Celtic Fringe
Journal Article
Material Culture and Social Practice: Archaeology and History in Understanding Europe’s ‘Celtic Fringe
2020
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Overview
In recent years there has been a rapprochement between history and archaeology in Britain and Ireland. Two formerly quite distinct disciplines have learned to appreciate how documents and artefacts together can enrich our understanding of everyday life. Always important to understandings of classical, Dark Age, and medieval society, archaeology has also opened up new horizons for appreciating domestic and industrial buildings, burial patterns, urban morphology, land use and environment, and the consumption of both food and objects in the early modern period. I look at some recent research that has enhanced our knowledge of local, regional, national and transnational identities in a sometimes poorly understood ‘fringe’ area of Europe.
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