Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_E - European Low Countries Archaeology
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

81. Trade Relations Among European And African Nations | Special Topics Page | Timel
Iberian Peninsula, 16001800 AD, low countries, 1600-1800 AD Europeancompanies quickly developed mercantile ties with these indigenous powers and
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/aftr/hd_aftr.htm
Related Timeline Content Timelines British Isles, 1600-1800 A.D. Central Africa, 1600-1800 A.D. Central Africa, 1800-1900 A.D. Central Europe (including Germany), 1600-1800 A.D. Eastern Africa, 1800-1900 A.D. Eastern Europe and Scandinavia, 1600-1800 A.D. France, 1600-1800 A.D. Guinea Coast, 1600-1800 A.D. Guinea Coast, 1800-1900 A.D. Guinea Coast, 1900 A.D.-present Iberian Peninsula, 1600-1800 A.D. Low Countries, 1600-1800 A.D. Southern Africa, 1600-1800 A.D. Southern Africa, 1800-1900 A.D. Western North Africa, 1600-1800 A.D. Western and Central Sudan, 1600-1800 A.D. Special Topics Afro-Portuguese Ivories The Portuguese in Africa, 1415-1600 The Age of Iron in Africa Asante Textile Arts Europe and the Age of Exploration Exhange of Art and Ideas: The Benin, Owo,and Ijebu Kingdoms Kingdoms of Madagascar: Malagasy Textile Arts Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and Merina Kingdoms of the Savanna The Luba and Lunda Empires Political African Women of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries Portraits of African Leadership: Royal Ancestors Textile Production in Europe, 1600-1800

82. Neoclassicism | Special Topics Page | Timeline Of Art History | The Metropolitan
16001800 AD, low countries, 1600-1800 AD, North America New England, 1600-1800AD Playing with Fire european Terracotta Models, 1740–1840
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/neoc_1/hd_neoc_1.htm
Related Timeline Content Timelines Balkan Peninsula, 1600-1800 A.D. British Isles, 1600-1800 A.D. Central Europe (including Germany), 1600-1800 A.D. Eastern Europe and Scandinavia, 1600-1800 A.D. Florence and Central Italy, 1600-1800 A.D. France, 1600-1800 A.D. Iberian Peninsula, 1600-1800 A.D. Low Countries, 1600-1800 A.D. Rome and Southern Italy, 1600-1800 A.D. United States, 1600-1800 A.D. Venice and Northern Italy, 1600-1800 A.D. Special Topics American Neoclassical Sculptors Abroad American Revival Styles, 1840-1876 Antoine Watteau (1684-1721) Art of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries in Naples Athenian Vase Painting: Black- and Red-Figure Techniques The Augustan Villa at Boscotrecase Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907) Boscoreale: Frescoes from the Villa of P. Fannius Synistor Coffee, Tea, and Chocolate in Early America Empire Style, 1800-1815 Francois Boucher (1703-1770) The French Academy in Rome Giambattista Tiepolo (1696-1770) Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) The Grand Tour Interior Design in England, 1600-1800 A.D. Italian Porcelain in the Eighteenth Century Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875) Jean-Honore Fragonard (1732-1806) John Townsend (1733-1809) Late Eighteenth-Century American Drawings The Neoclassical Temple Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665) Palmyra Paul Revere, Jr. (1734-1818)

83. Areas Of Concertration
Lecture courses provide an overview of classical art and archaeology from Geometric especially in France and the low countries, involving questions of
http://history-of-art.osu.edu/pages/areas_of_concentration/areas_of_concentratio
The graduate program of the Department of History of Art at The Ohio State University offers studies leading to the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in a broad range of areas, both Western and non-Western. The department is particularly strong in Modern and other areas of Western History of Art, as well as Asian, which has recently been enhanced by a FIPSE grant for the creation of interactive CD-ROMs to be developed as teaching aids. Students may also take advantage of programs in conjunction with the Columbus Museum of Art and the Wexner Center for the Arts, as well as participate in the University excavations at Isthmia in Greece.
Specializations are currently offered in the following areas and periods which can be used as major and/or minor areas for graduate degrees. In addition, the History of Art Department cooperates with other interdisciplinary programs offered at the University including the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, programs in East Asian, Near and Middle Eastern, Byzantine, Slavic and East European, Women's and Black Studies.
Ancient Near East and Islamic
Lecture courses are offered in the art of the Ancient Near East (Mesopotamia, Pre-Islamic Iran, Anatolia and Syria), Ancient Egypt, and the Islamic world. Graduate seminars focus on literary and documentary sources on the art and architecture of the period and region.

84. Centre For Historical Studies : Course Unit Information
Aspects of the History of the low countries, This course provides a general Roman Britain History and archaeology, The Iron Age background to Roman
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/centreforhistoricalstudies/coursemaster.php
Accessibility Privacy Advanced Search Help ... Contact
Course Units
The following pages list the course units associated with History.
Either browse through the course lists or search through the database.
Type in a Course Code Type in a keyword To search by department, choose a department from the drop down list, and Click on go Archaeology Dutch French Geography German Hebrew and Jewish Studies History History of Art Italian Modern European Studies Scandinavian SSEES History
Course Code Title Course Description Module Value Aspects of the History of the Low Countries This course provides a general survey of political, cultural, social and economic developments in Dutch and Belgian history from the late Middle Ages to the First World War. No competence in Dutch is required. 0.5 unit Introduction to Dutch and Belgian Contemporary History An introduction to contemporary Dutch and Belgian history and politics (20th and 21th centuries). Reading knowledge in Dutch or French is useful but not required. 0.5 unit

85. Medieval Urbanist
as well as on the British isles, in the low countries, Russia and so forth . Thesis and Papers in archaeology 2, Stockholm 1989; TS Noonan,
http://viking.hgo.se/articles/Nisse.html
@import "http://viking.hgo.se/style_huvud.css"; NILS BLOMKVIST Yet Another Viking Archetype
- The Medieval Urbanist As a keyword, the "Viking" today tends to signify social and economic development in dark age Scandinavia as well as on the British isles, in the Low Countries, Russia and so forth. But who were the Vikings? What did they represent? Sailors and pirates? Yes. Colonizers and nation builders? Yes, that too - and even merchants and town builders, depending on whom you are asking. The traditional explanation was the centre-peripheral one. In its simplest form it claimed that the savages of the North picked up progressive ideas while attacking more developed neighbours only to be pacified with the help of Christendom, and reduced to their proper insignificant historical role as Scandinavians. The stimulating lectures this morning on urban archaeology and early urbanization in north-western Europe have again shown that the "Viking achievement" does not follow such a simple pattern of explanation. As a historian with a "holistic" and interdisciplinary disposition -including some experience of archaeological work - I am anxious that we should not only study the separate towns or sites and by comparing them establish a non-Roman, Germanic or Viking Age type of town; but that we should also pay attention to the role of the towns in the large scale development of the period, which includes the establishment of states and some sort of commodity market in these parts of the world. More specifically I mean that we should never entirely forget the question that Henri Pirenne raised long ago about interaction between the economic worlds of Islam and Western Europe. Even if a lot of what has been said in this ever lasting dispute is rather obsolete, the fundamental questions must be saved for our new era of "world economies" la Fernand Braudel and Immanuel Wallerstein.

86. 2nd EUROPEAN MAXIBASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Greece lacks coal, and its lignite is of low quality. The country does have The countries of the european Union account for more than 60 per cent of
http://www.embc.gr/english_ver/info_country.htm
Country information ...back Land and Resources Energy Climate ... Defence
Greece (in Greek, Hellas), officially known as the Hellenic Republic (in Greek, Ellinikí Dimokratía), country in south-eastern Europe, occupying the southernmost part of the Balkan Peninsula and numerous islands.
It is bordered on the north-west by Albania, on the north by the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) and Bulgaria, on the north-east by Turkey, on the east by the Aegean Sea, on the south by the Mediterranean Sea, and on the west by the Ionian Sea. The total area is 131,957 sq km (50,949 sq mi), of which about one-fifth is composed of islands in the Aegean and Ionian seas.
Athens is the capital and largest city.

87. Richard Unger - Faculty Member Home Page - History Department - University Of Br
Feeding low countries Towns the Grain Trade in the Fifteenth Century, Revue (with Robert Allen) Allen Unger Database, european Commodity Prices
http://www.history.ubc.ca/ungerr.htm
UNGER , Richard
Ph.D., Yale, 1971
richard.unger@ubc.ca

Buchanan Tower 1225
Medieval and Early Modern economic history; History of technology. Principal publications Books Beer in Europe in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance , Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, June, 2004. Co-editor, Armed Force at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Power and Theories of Domination, A History of Dutch Brewing 900-1900 Economy, Technology and the State , Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2001. Ships and Shipping in the North Sea and Atlantic, 1400-1800 Basingstoke, Variorum Press, 1998. Chapters in Books "Ships in the Baltic and the North Seas, and Dutch decline," In het kielzog Maritime-historische studies aangeboden aan Jaap R. Bruijn bij vertrek also hoogleraar zeegeschiedenis aan de Universiteit Leiden , Leo Akveld et al ., eds., Amsterdam: De Bataafsche Leeuw, 2003, 513-522. "The origins of navies in the Late Middle Ages," Maritime Warfare in Northern Europe Technology, Organisation, Logistics, and Administration 500BC - 1500AD

88. Richard Unger, Curriculum Vitae
Beer, Wine and Land Use in the Late Medieval low countries, Bijdragen tot de Sources of food supplies for european capitals in the eighteenth century
http://www.history.ubc.ca/unger/htm_files/cv.htm
HISTORY DEPT Administration Awards and Fellowships Publications Public Service
OFFICE:
Department of History University of British Columbia 1297, 1873 East Mall Vancouver, B. C. V6T 1Z1 Canada Tel: (604) 822-5178 Fax: (604) 822-6658 E-mail: richard.unger@ubc.ca EDUCATION:
  • B. A. Haverford College 1963 A.M. University of Chicago 1965 M. A. Yale University 1967 (Economics) M. Phil. Yale University 1969 Ph. D. Yale University 1971
EMPLOYMENT:
  • University of British Columbia, Assistant Professor, 1969-1976; Associate Professor 1976-1981, Professor, 1981- Central European University, Visiting Professor, 1999
ADMINISTRATION: UBC:
  • Faculty of Arts Medieval Studies Coordinating Committee, 1976-78, 1983-85, 1992-1994, 1998-2001; Program Committee, Medieval Studies Workshop, 1976-78, 1980-83, 1992-1996, Program Committee Chair, 1977 and 1983 and 1993 Department Graduate Committee, 1980-84, 1992-1994; Chair, 1983-84

89. Archaeology In Europe: 09/01/2004 - 09/30/2004
Archaeological news from the archaeology in Europe web site reasonably commonfinds in the mudflats of the Thames and low countries but not in Scotland.
http://www.archaeology.eu.com/weblog/2004_09_01_archaeologyeu_archive.html
@import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?blogID=6185618"); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/main.css); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/2.css); BlogThis!
Archaeology in Europe
Archaeological news from the Archaeology in Europe web site
Thursday, September 30, 2004
6,000-year-old intact tomb found in France
A French-English team of archaologists have discovered a 6,000-year-old tomb in France. Human bones and ceramic pottery were found inside the tomb. The discovery may help better understanding of Neolithic social structures, according to the French Research Council bulletin.
The tomb was found at the Priss© la Charriere site, where excavations have been carried out since 1992. The newly-discovered tomb is the first one to have been unearthed completely intact.
Six human skeletons (two men, a woman and three children) were found inside the tomb, placed one on top of the other. The researchers also identified two ceramic pots (one of them could date back to 4,300 BCE), a spear and a jewel.
Stonepages

posted by David Beard @ 1:52 PM
Wednesday, September 29, 2004

90. European Ceramic Tiles Circle: Bulletin #5
in The low countries Arts and Society in Flanders and the Netherlands. Edited by Stichting Vrienden van het Nederlands Tegelmuseum european
http://www.tiles.org/pages/tileorgs/bul0298.htm
stichting van vrienden van het nederlands tegelmuseum
European Ceramic Tiles Circle
Belgium
Canada England
France
... USA
BELGIUM
Study.
Hollands Porselein uit Gent (Dutch porcelain in Genth), in : Stadsarcheologie, bodem en monument in Gent. Gentse Vereniging voor Stadsarcheologie. jrg. 20, nr. 3. pp. 5-55.
Catalogue.
Article.
OOST, Tony - Een belangrijke aanwinst voor het Museum Vleeshuis: vijf Antwerpse majolicategels uit de vroege 16de eeuw (An important acquisition for the Museum Vleeshuis : five Antwerp majolica tiles of the early 16th c.), in : J. VEECKMAN (ed.), Berichten en Rapporten over het Antwerps Bodemonderzoek en Monumentenzorg , 2, Antwerpen, 1998 (in print) (with summary in French). Order: Stad Antwerpen, Kunsthistorische Musea, Afdeling Opgravingen, Godefriduskaai 36, 2000 Antwerpen.
Article. SCHAAP, Ella B. - A brief history of Dutch tiles , in : The Low Countries: Arts and Society in Flanders and the Netherlands. Bruges, 1997-1998, pp. 108-117.
Correction. Roelantsmuseum, Sint Bernardusabdij Hemiksem. New opening hours: from April 1 to September 30, each first Sunday of the month, 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Check by telephone +32 3 887.70.59 (M. Van de Vreken) before visiting.
CANADA Book.

91. University Of Minnesota Libraries
Durham University Journal Dutch Crossing A Journal of low countries Studies Section C. archaeology, Celtic studies, history, linguistics, literature
http://www.lib.umn.edu/libdata/link.phtml?page_id=1419&element_id=46496

92. UIC: Department Of Art History, Undergraduate Courses
The development of european architecture, urbanism, and architectural theory from1750 The art and architecture of the low countries, Germany, France,
http://www.uic.edu/depts/arch/ah/undergradcourses.htm
The information below lists undergraduate courses approved in this subject area effective Fall, 2002. Not all courses will necessarily be offered this term. Please consult the Timetable for a listing of courses offered for a specific term. Introduction to Art and Art History. 3 Hours. Forms, meanings, and purposes of art. Discussion of techniques, styles, and content as well as historical and social contexts, in various media and cultures. Art History I. 4 Hours. Survey of world art and architecture from prehistoric times to the end of the Middle Ages. Art History II. 4 Hours. Survey of world art and architecture from the Renaissance to the present. History of Chicago Architecture. 3 Hours. Survey of Chicago's architecture and built environment from 1803 to the present. Trends in International Contemporary Art since 1960. 3 Hours. Surveys international trends in art since 1960. Emphasis is on movements, new media, intermedia, criticism and theory. Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor or Major in Studio Arts.

93. Module And Programme Catalogue
ADUL1520, Introduction to the archaeology of Britain from the Palaeolithic Periodto the ADUL1687, An Introduction to Painting in the low countries
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/modules/200203/ug/adul.htm
Search
2002/03 Undergraduate Module Catalogue School of Continuing Education Contact: Mrs Pat Dixon
Phone:
E-mail:
P.M.Dixon@leeds.ac.uk Index of ADUL modules Information and Communication Technology Academic and Personal Development Vocational Studies Beginners' Latin 1 Family History Images of the City: Painting in France 1860-1900 Painting in Italy 1300-1430 The Unending Quest: An Introduction to Philosophy What Should I Do? An Introduction to Ethics Changing Behaviour Psychology in Health and Illness Introduction to Psychology and Counselling Skills Making of the British Landscape From Prehistoric to Modern Times Representations of Gender in Film and Literature Philosophy and the Greeks Theories of Human Nature The Prehistory of Yorkshire Roman, Anglo-Saxon and Viking Yorkshire Modern Art and Modernism: Painting and Sculpture in Britain 1900-1950 Family History 2 Introduction to Art Historical Studies Women into Management Negotiated Independent Study 1 Ways into Writing Stuart Britain 1603-1714 Origin and Nature of Trade Unions (ODL paperbased) The Reflective Practitioner (1) Community Work and Health Issues The Geological Resources of Northern England Paris and its Painters, 1800-1900

94. Undergraduate Record, Chapter 6 College Of Arts And Sciences
and architecture of the seventeenth century in Italy, the low countries, Survey of european painting and sculpture from the late Baroque period to
http://www.virginia.edu/~regist/99ugradrec/chapter6/uchap6-3.5a.html

95. GCMRS Staff
archaeology of early medieval Scotland with particular interest in carved stonemonuments The history of later medieval France and the low countries;
http://www.gla.ac.uk/centres/mars/CMRSsta2.htm
Staff research interests Prof Alison Adams (French)
Emblems studies, especially textual criticism; particular interest in study of vernacular translations in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Descriptive bibliography.
e-mail: A.Adams@french.arts.gla.ac.uk Dr Stuart Airlie (History)
The political and cultural development of the barbarian kingdoms in the post-Roman/early medieval west; specifically, the nature of authority and power in the royal and aristocratic families in Carolingian Europe; the construction and 'use' of the Middle Ages in modern culture.
e-mail: S.Airlie@medhist.arts.gla.ac.uk Dr Donal Bateson (Hunterian Museum)
Medieval numismatics.
e-mail: J.D.Bateson@museum.gla.ac.uk Chris Black (History)
Early Modern Italian history, especially socio-religious and cultural. Significant publications on Perugia and the Papal State (15th-16th centuries), then on Italian Confraternities (15th-17th centuries), Rome in the age of Bernini; currently researching for books on A Social History of Early Modern Italy , and The Counter Reformation in Italy
e-mail: C.Black@modhist.arts.gla.ac.uk

96. Collegium Budapest - Current Research Projects
The project is a winning FP6 Project awarded by the european Commission to a in addition to Southeast Europe, also Scandinavia and the low countries.
http://www.colbud.hu/programme/currentprojects.shtml
ez_codePath = "/include/" document.write(""); showPermPanel('Bar', 150, 120) Current Research Projects ECAgents: (Embodied and Communicating Agents), with the Hungarian team headed by Permanent Fellow Eörs Szathmáry Currently, there are three projects running in Collegium Budapest's ECAgents group, each targeting subsequent levels of systems necessary for communication. The project 'Prerequisites of Communication' aims at setting up an evolutionary scenario for the origin of language by performing an analysis on a collection of criteria established upon historical and biological constraints, and on the recent results of artificial life research and game theory. The target of the second project is to understand the neural bases of rule learning by means of a statistical learning paradigm. Finally, in the third project an evolutionary neurogenetic algorithm is being developed through which constraints established by the evolutionary scenario can be applied to the evolution of neural networks performing calculations necessary for language production. For more details of this research project please visit Collegium Budapest's EC Agents Group website or the EC Agents research consortium website CB Fellows working on the project: Péter Ittzés (Biology), Máté Lengyel (Biology), Gergõ Orbán (Physics), Szabolcs Számadó (Biology), Zoltán Szatmáry (Computer Science), Eörs Szathmáry (Biology)

97. Netherlands Resources
An article in archaeology magazine, in conjunction with an exhibit at the Middle Bronze Age communities in the southern part of the low countries.
http://archaeology.about.com/library/atlas/blnetherlands.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Archaeology Homework Help ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
FREE Newsletter
Sign Up Now for the Archaeology newsletter!
See Online Courses
Search Archaeology
The Netherlands
Sites Universities Researchers Culture History ... Geography and Maps Archaeological Sites Bodies of the Bogs
An article in Archaeology magazine, in conjunction with an exhibit at the Silkeborg Museum, when almost all of the bog bodies of northwestern Europe were gathered together in one place. Includes information about bog bodies from Denmark, the Netherlands, England, and Germany. Maaskant
University of Leiden, Late Neolithic through the Roman Period occupations in the southern Netherlands, English and Dutch. Megaliths in the Netherlands
From Jan Bily's Megalith Pages, photographs by Hans Meijer of numerous dolmen throughout the country; further information can be gained by following the links. Vliegent Hart
A shipwreck of a VOC (Dutch East India Company) merchant ship off the Dutch coast in 1735 provides the VOC Shipwreck Project with some interesting work.

98. Oxbow Books/David Brown Book Company
introduction of the rabbit to the low countries (RCGM Lauwerier JT Zeiler);Roman well at Piddington, Browse other Environmental archaeology books
http://www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm/ID/31696;$3FV$0A$?/Location/Oxbow

99. Western European Archaeology

http://www.arts.kuleuven.be/wea/Publications/
Home Aerial Archaeology Early
Farmers
... Nederlands Recent Publications on the
Archeaology of Western Europe
Marc Lodewijckx, editor
Bruc ealles well
Archaeological Essays concerning the Peoples of North-West Europe
in the First Millennium AD
Acta Archaeologica Lovaniensia, Monographiae 15, 2004
Marc Lodewijckx (ed.)
Content 1 - Marc Lodewijckx
Introduction: Bruc ealles well 2 - Jos Bazelmans - Menno Dijkstra - Jan de Koning
Holland during the First Millennium 3 - Ria Berkvens - Ernst Taayke 4 - Linda Boye 5 - Wim De Clercq - Ernst Taayke 6 - Alain Dierkens 7 - Bruce Eagles - Barry Ager A Mid 5th to Mid 6th-Century Bridle-Fitting of Mediterranean Origin from Breamore, Hampshire, England, with a Discussion of its Local Context 8 - Eliza Fonnesbech-Sandberg 9 - Jan Peder Lamm 10 - Karel Leenders The Start of Peat Digging for Salt Production in the Zeeland Region (NL) 11 - Dirk Meier 12 - Lieve Opsteyn - Marc Lodewijckx The Late Roman and Merovingian Periods at Wange (Central Belgium) 13 - Alexandra Pesch Formularfamilien kontinentaler Goldbrakteaten Huy (B) zur Zeit der Merowinger: die Sachlage 16 - Bergljot Solberg Ritual Feasts: Glass Vessels in Norwegian Graves of the Late Roman and Migration Period 17 - Wulf Thieme ISBN 90 5867 368 5 D/2004/1869/20 219 pages Tel: 0032/ (0)16/32.53.45

100. The Society For Historical Archaeology - Publications
Furthermore, terrestrial historical archaeology has largely ignored the and the Civil War Battlefield Landscape A South Carolina low Country Example
http://www.sha.org/Publications/ha37ca.htm
Home News About Membership ... Style Guide Historical Archaeology
Vol. 37, No. 1 Spring Contents Abstracts Vol. 37, No. 2 Summer Contents Abstracts Vol. 37, No. 3 Fall Contents Abstracts Vol. 37, No. 4 Winter Contents Abstracts
VOL. 37, N0. 1 CONTENTS
Vol. 37 Menu

ARTICLES
Historical Archaeology in the Antipodes
SUSAN LAWRENCE AND GRACE KARSKENS
"In-Sites," Historical Archaeology in Australasia: Some Comparisons with the American Colonial Experience
NEVILLE A. RITCHIE
Exporting Culture: Archaeology and the Nineteenth-Century British Empire
SUSAN LAWRENCE
Revisiting the Worldview: The Archaeology of Convict Households in Sydney's Rocks Neighborhood
GRACE KARSKENS
"The Absence of Ghosts": Landscape and Identity in the Archaeology of Australia's Settler Culture
TRACEY IRELAND
The Ethos of Return: Erasure and Reinstatement of Aboriginal Visibility in the Australian Historical Landscape
DENIS BYRNE
(Re) Constructing a Lost Community: "Little Lon," Melbourne, Australia
TIM MURRAY AND ALAN MAYNE
Annales-Informed Approaches to the Archaeology of Colonial Australia
MARK STANIFORTH
Showdown in the Pacifi c: A Remote Response to European Power Struggles in the Pacifi c, Dawes Point Battery, Sydney, 1791-1925

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-100 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter