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A Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland and its Associated Grave-Goods

A Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland and its Associated Grave-Goods

A Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland and its Associated Grave-Goods

Volume 1:
John Abercromby
March 2015
1
Available
Paperback
9781108082556
£28.00
GBP
Paperback

    The fifth Baron Abercromby (1841–1924), a soldier and keen archaeologist, published this two-volume work in 1912. His especial interest was prehistoric pottery, and he introduced the word 'beaker' as a term to indicate the late Neolithic/Chalcolithic western European culture which produced these characteristic clay drinking vessels. His aim was to produce a chronological survey of British and Irish ceramics from the late Neolithic to the end of the Bronze Age, to classify these by type and geographical area, and to examine the goods associated with dateable pottery in burials and cremation urns. This heavily illustrated work also puts the British beakers into their European context and considers the possible indications of movements of people given by variations in style. Volume 1 examines burials, the associated grave-goods, and skeletal remains, especially skulls, which may provide ethnographic information.

    Product details

    March 2015
    Paperback
    9781108082556
    232 pages
    297 × 210 × 12 mm
    0.57kg
    61 b/w illus. 8 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. Introductory
    • 2. British ceramic
    • 3. Continental and British ornamentation compared
    • 4. Objects found with beaker interments
    • 5. Ethnographical and historical
    • 6. Colonization and diffusion of the invaders
    • 7. The food-vessel class
    • 8. Pottery types
    • 9. Pottery types (cont.)
    • 10. Pottery types (cont.)
    • 11. Ornamentation
    • 12. Objects found with food vessels
    • 13. Ethnographical section
    • 14. Ethnographical
    • Plates.
      Author
    • John Abercromby