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         Germany Archaeology:     more books (100)
  1. The Failure of Illiberalism: Essays On the Political Culture of Modern Germany by Fritz Stern, 1992-09-10
  2. Gcse History: The Schools History Project: The History of Medicine: The American West 1840-95, Germany 1919-45 (Studymates) by Mary Kinoulty, 2002-08
  3. The Double-edged Sword: The Cult Of Bildung, Its Downfall And Reconstitution In Fin-de-siecle Germany (rudolf Steiner And Max Weber (German Linguistic and Cultural Studies, V. 11) by Perry Myers, 2004-12
  4. Roman Gaul and Germany (Exploring the Roman World) by Anthony King, 1990-08-10
  5. German Ideology: From France to Germany and Back by Louis Dumont, 1996-06-01
  6. Challenging Racism in Britain and Germany (Migration, Minorities and Citizenship)
  7. The Gypsies In Germany by Konrad Bercovici, 2005-12-08
  8. Berlin in Focus: Cultural Transformations in Germany
  9. Institutions and Institutional Change in the Federal Republic of Germany
  10. The New Germany in the East: Policy Agendas and Social Developments since Unification by Chris Flockton, 2000-11-12
  11. Excavations at Great Holts Farm, Boreham, Essex, 1992-94 (East Anglian Archaeology,) by Mark Germany, 2003-01
  12. Romans on the Rhine: Archaeology in Germany by Paul MacKenrick, 1970
  13. Proceedings of the University of Durham Philosophical Society by Peter Salway, 1959
  14. Horæ ferales; or, Studies in the archaeology of the northern nations; by John Mitchell Kemble, 1863

21. The Archaeology Of France, Germany, And Italy
There are so many websites on European archaeology that we have to subdivide themback out of the EU. Here is a collection of webpages on German, French,
http://archaeology.about.com/od/francegermanyitaly/
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There are so many websites on European archaeology that we have to subdivide them back out of the EU. Here is a collection of webpages on German, French, and Italian archaeology. Up a category Topic Index Email to a Friend
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22. Marchand, S.: Down From Olympus: Archaeology And Philhellenism In Germany, 1750-
archaeology and Philhellenism in germany, 17501970. Suzanne L. Marchand. Paper 2003 $27.95 / £17.95 ISBN 0-691-11478-1
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/5932.html
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NEW IN PRINT E-BOOKS ... HOME PAGE One of Choice 's Outstanding Academic Books of 1997
Down from Olympus:
Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany, 1750-1970
Suzanne L. Marchand
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Reviews Table of Contents Since the publication of Eliza May Butler's Tyranny of Greece over Germany Down from Olympus , Suzanne Marchand attempts to come to grips with German Graecophilia, not as a private passion but as an institutionally generated and preserved cultural trope. The book argues that nineteenth-century philhellenes inherited both an elitist, normative aesthetics and an ascetic, scholarly ethos from their Romantic predecessors; German "neohumanists" promised to reconcile these intellectual commitments, and by so doing, to revitalize education and the arts. Focusing on the history of classical archaeology, Marchand shows how the injunction to imitate Greek art was made the basis for new, state-funded cultural institutions. Tracing interactions between scholars and policymakers that made possible grand-scale cultural feats like the acquisition of the Pergamum Altar, she underscores both the gains in specialized knowledge and the failures in social responsibility that were the distinctive products of German neohumanism. This book discusses intellectual and institutional aspects of archaeology and philhellenism, giving extensive treatment to the history of prehistorical archaeology and German "orientalism." Marchand traces the history of the study, excavation, and exhibition of Greek art as a means to confront the social, cultural, and political consequences of the specialization of scholarship in the last two centuries.

23. THE COMPARATIVE ARCHAEOLOGY WEB ©
Comparative archaeology is an interregional approach to prehistoric A 30 000Year Old Ivory Horse Sculpture from South germany (Added July 31, 2000 .
http://www.comp-archaeology.org/
Updated July 17, 2005 GMT US Eastern Time Corruption of links repaired June 3, 2005 For quick dissemination of archaeological information across the continents Comparative Archaeology is an interregional approach to prehistoric culture change and communication. The Comparative Archaeology WEB© is dedicated to further quick publication of archaeological information across continents. Its ultimate aim is to promote detailed comparisons between large cultural regions. Its purpose is to ascertain the causes for similarities and differences in human development in different parts of the world. Publications include news bulletins, announcements, professional quality abstracts, reports, research papers, dissertations, and databases (including chronologies). Emphasis is placed on color illustrations.
MAIN TABLE OF CONTENT News Bulletins New Russian Megalithic Tombs: 5000 Year Old Gallery-Graves in the Southern Urals? (Added July 10, 2005 Religion at Nazareth 8000 years before Christ. (Added October 25, 2003 . Updated October 26, 2003

24. Cornelius Holtorf: Germany: Gisela Graichen’s Adventure Archaeology
Since the 1990s, public television archaeology in germany has been influenced C 14 was the first ever dedicated TV series about archaeology in germany.
http://traumwerk.stanford.edu:3455/populararchaeology/33
Germany: Gisela Graichen’s adventure archaeology Cornelius Holtorf Key Pages Cornelius Holtorf
Table of Contents

Popular Culture

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Changes [Sep 14, 2005]: Archaeology: a tren... Newspapers References Detective/scholar a... ... MORE Find Pages Since the 1990s , public television archaeology in Germany has been influenced a great deal by the work of a single person and her collaborators: the writer Gisela Graichen. Her most significant TV series and subsequent book publications were C 14 – Advances into the Past: Archaeological Discoveries in Germany (several series, broadcast since 1992) and later Schliemann’s Heirs (several series, broadcast since 1996). C 14 was the first ever dedicated TV series about archaeology in Germany. In each 30-minutes long episode, several short reports about different archaeological projects were presented. The featured sites were chosen in close co-operation with the various state archaeology services in Germany. At least two of the associated books also contained prefaces by Dieter Planck, then President of the Association of German State Archaeologists. Possibly as a side-effect of the cooperation with official bodies which is typical for the work of Graichen, the TV series was awarded the German Prize for Heritage Preservation. The C 14 series effectively married ordinary state archaeology and its high-tec methodologies with existing popular stereotypes of archaeology emphasising exciting quests for historical treasures and revelations by scientists about secrets of the past. Up to 1,7 million viewers turned on their television sets for each episode, corresponding to around 10% of the vital adult market (14-49 years old). Graichen demonstrated in this series that she understands that selling archaeological research works best by emphasising gold and treasures, even if this clich© needs to be modified somewhat now (see also Graichen 1995: 11). She explained once (Graichen 1999: 17, my translation) that:

25. Archaeological Sites
were found in 1856 near Duesseldorf, germany in the Neander Valley. in the cave near Duesseldorf were examined by Rudolf Vichow, a German Anatomist.
http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/archaeology/sites/europe/neanderthal.html
Neander Valley
Modern man was really forced to stop and think when unusual fossils (bones) were found in 1856 near Duesseldorf, Germany in the Neander Valley. Workers were mining for limestone in a cave when they came across a skull, and other various bones. This is, of course, how Neanderthal gets its name. This was not the first discovery of Neanderthal fossils though. It was about 1829 or 1830 when fragments from the skull of a Neanderthal child were found in Belgium, and in 1848 a full skull of an adult was found in Gibraltar. But the find in the Neander Valley began all of the excitement, it stirred up many questions and theories. These remains found in the cave near Duesseldorf were examined by Rudolf Vichow, a German Anatomist. He concluded that it was just a Homo sapien (modern human) with rickets. Vichow claimed that the flattened head was due to some form of injury. A biologist named Thomas Huxley declared that it was an ancestor of modern humans. Paleontologist Marcellin Boule argued that Neanderthals were not direct ancestors of Homo sapien sapiens and so called them Homo neanderthalensis. Boule also gave the impression that these creatures were stupid. Of course this is disputable with the evidence of the average brain size of a Neanderthal compared with that of a modern human. There was a dispute to whether Neanderthals were direct ancestors or an extinct species of their own. Immediately, they were portrayed as slouched over, violent, brute/ape-like cavemen. And this image was carried on until almost 1960. At this time, scientists realized that the first found Neanderthal had arthritis, and they did in fact walk upright. It is said that if you were to put a "cleaned up" Neanderthal with a group of modern day humans, there would not be much difference at all.

26. THE UB POST - Leading Newswire Of Mongolia
Mongolian Empire reaches germany in archaeology exhibition. (TheUBPost, 09 Jun2005 0930 am. 0 comments). By Anna Huebner The year 2006 will mark the 800th
http://ubpost.mongolnews.mn/travel.php?subaction=showfull&id=1118284223&archive=

27. Underwater Archaeolgy Societies, Workgroups & Institutes
Presenting societies and workgroups dealing with underwater archaeology. 32, D86551 Aichach, germany; Verein für Unterwasserarchäologie
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/uwa/societie.htm
Nordic European Americas World ... Authorities Worldwide
Nordic

28. Underwater Archaeology Museums
Listing of museums in the world dealing with underwater archaeology. WikingerMuseum Haithabu, germany. In this old Viking Age trading port,
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/uwa/museums.htm
Nordic Europe World
Underwater archaeology museums
These are museums of general underwater archaeology interest. Other European museums are listed under Authorities
Nordic
  • Swedish National Maritime Museum , Stockholm. Research projects are headed by Bert Westenberg, e.g. investigation of reported wrecks. The museum hosts a fine collection of old ship models as well as Sweden's largest UW archaeology library, photo archive, and the national wreck register, which is partially on computers but not on internet Vasa Museum , Stockholm, Sweden. Exhibits the 64 gun battleship sunk in 1628. Researcher placed it on a search list and finally found it. Salvaged in one piece in 1961, helped by private donors and sponsors. Conservation with PEG took nearly 30 years. Despite that, the museum ship now suffers from sulphur acid attacks. Swedish Naval Museum , Karlskrona. The museum has a large collection of figureheads and its own 18th century underwater wreck fully visible below the building. Kalmar County Museum , Sweden. Exhibiting finds from the ongoing excavation of the battleship

29. WEMSK21 Archaeology
EnglishGerman Dictionary, Art History - archaeology, Mary L. and Romans onthe Rhine archaeology in germany, all available from NY Funk and Wagnalls.
http://www.the-orb.net/wemsk/archaeologywemsk.html
WEMSK21:Archaeology
Archaeology This is the most difficcult of the WEMSKs to write. Archaeology is
such a huge and popular subject, and it is often difficult to know
whether to label a work as `display archaeology', semi-popular or
haute vulgarisation. Our bookstores have several magazines in
archaeology on display, such as Discovering Archaeology (CTI
Publishing) and Archaeology (The Archaeological Institute of
America). In addition, other journals such as Scientific American
and National Geographic contain often quite scholarly
contributions. For Scientific American, these are often gathered
and put out as books, e.g. Old World Archaeology: Foundations of Civilization, Readings from Scientific American (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1972), and some are put out separately as reprints. National Geographic, which often contains important archaeological articles, such as Cameron's report on making a squeeze of Bisitun, is now available on CD-ROM, including their marvelous maps. Many of the series will contain a book on archaeology, such as Early Man.

30. Oman Archaeology : German Archaeological Expedition To The Sultanate Of Oman
Title, Oman archaeology German Archaeological Expedition to the Sultanate of Oman.Author, Yule, Paul. Language, English. Country (Server), germany
http://ssgdoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/vlib/ssgfi/infodata/001151.html
Bibliographic Data Title Oman Archaeology : German Archaeological Expedition to the Sultanate of Oman Author Yule, Paul Language English Country (Server) Germany Format of data text/html Keywords archaeology; Oman; excavations; al-Maysar; maps Description This page contains a short report on the fieldwork in the Sultanat Oman conducted by the German Archaeological Expedition between 1977 and 1998. URL http://www.i3mainz.fh-mainz.de/oman/archaeology/ Classification Source Type Research Projects SSGC Oman: Cultural History BK Date DC.Date Availability Access free Restrictions none Evaluation Contents Clarity Index Links Level undergraduate; graduate; professional Statistics
SSG-FI Home ALMISBAH Source Type Subject This document created using allegro-C V20

31. CINARCHEA - Experimentelle Archäologie In Deutschland
This may serve to explain why experimental archaeology in germany, compromisedas it was since World War 2, was never able to win public support for
http://www.uni-kiel.de/cinarchea/text/exparch-e.htm
  • News Symposium Texts Movie Production ... Kunst Experimental Archaeology Exhibition "Laterna Magica..." CINARCHEA '96:
    Reflecting on a Concept
    Print Version ... Sitemap CINARCHEA
    Texts on CINARCHEA
    Experimental Archaeology in Germany
    by Prof. Dr. M. Fansa
    Man has used experiment for hundreds of years, as an attempt to throw light on the early and pre-historic conditions of different cultures. Experimental archaeology is an inclusive term encompassing all theories and experiments, ancillary technology, devices and procedures used for reconstruction, testing and explanation.
    It is true that Experimental Archaeology is about reconstructing the living conditions of pre-historic times; however, not every reconstruction is an experiment - although every experiment may lead to a reconstruction.
    Initial experiments in the 19th century were still rather unsystematic; but as time went by, experimental archaeology developed into a methodical discipline within ancient history research.
    Experimental archaeology is scientific work, utilizing measuring instruments and documentation media. Archaeological theses, at first merely based on theoretical deliberations, are systematically verified in practice, in controlled environments.
    The goal of each such experiment has to be precisely defined in advance. By using the derived information on life in the past - e.g. the use of tools, or the amount of time and energy consumed for specific activities - pre-historians are able to produce approximate reconstructions of our ancestors` life circumstances.

32. AREA - Archives Of European Archaeology
AREA project German archaeology and excavations before and during the Second A history of German archaeology during the Nazi period has still to be
http://www.area-archives.org/germany.htm
AREA project: German archaeology and excavations before and during the Second World War, 1933-1945
Ahnenerbe
Bundesarchiv
DAI
Excavations
Referat für Kunstschutz Participant institution:
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Zentrale Berlin contact :
Dr. Martin Maischberger,
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut,
Zentrale, Podbielskiallee 69-71, D-14195 Berlin,
Tel: +49/1888/7711-0
Fax: +49/1888/7711-191 E-Mail: archiv@dainst.de cooperation : The project is carried on in strong cooperation with Prof. Dr. Achim Leube, section of prehistory at the Humboldt-Universität in Berlin, Hausvogteiplatz 5-7, 10117 Berlin The project is being sponsored by the European Union. The Berlin Head Office of the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut is working together in this network with several institutions of various countries. abstract : A history of German archaeology during the Nazi period has still to be written, in spite of various contributions that have been published over the last years. New informations and new interpretations are to be gained from the evidence of archival sources which have become much better accessible after 1990. aim and current work : After the reunification of Germany, from 1990 onward, several archives have become accessible which were formerly not. Notably of importance for the archaeology between 1933 and 1945 in Germany and Europe are the contents of the unified Bundesarchiv, the central state archive formerly divided between East (Potsdam, Merseburg) and West (Koblenz, Freiburg, Berlin and elsewhere). Other archives such as those of universities, academies and different kinds of institutions are also being considered. The most curious one is certainly that created by the »Staatssicherheit« (Secret Service, ‘Stasi’) of the German Democratic Republic.

33. Antiquity Vol 76:291, 2002 Pp 209-218 - Martin Maischberger - German Archaeology
German archaeology during the Third Reich, 1933–45 a case study based on archivalevidence Keywords germany, Nazi period, archaeological biographies,
http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/076/Ant0760209.htm

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34. Art Bulletin, The: Down From Olympus: Archaeology And Philhellenism In Germany,
Down from Olympus archaeology and Philhellenism in germany, 17501970 - Review.Art Bulletin, The, June, 1998 by Peter Jelavich
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0422/is_2_80/ai_54073973/pg_2
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Art Bulletin, The June 1998
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Afterimage American Drama American Music Teacher ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Down from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany, 1750-1970 - Review Art Bulletin, The June, 1998 by Peter Jelavich
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Continued from page 1.
Just as the "discourse" of classicism suffused many more regions than those cited by Marchand, there also was a pervasive appreciation of archaeology, not only among the elite, but also in popular and mass culture. Marchand hints at its importance whenever she speaks of the popularity or public-relations success of figures like Schliemann or other archaeologists. Here too, Marchand could have improved her argument by giving a better sense of the rather massive publicity given to some of their finds. That publicity was not confined to the printed page, but spilled over into the decorative arts, right down to the level of everyday kitsch: the proliferation of Egyptian, Babylonian, and other non-Hellenic knickknacks and advertising images provided mundane visual shock troops that hammered away at the neo-classical aesthetic. In short, the battle for and against classical values was fought on a much wider front than Marchand indicates.

35. Archaeology On The Net - Archaeology Resources On The Internet - Academic Depart
Turku University Department of archaeology. germany. AlbertLudwigs-Universität University of Bamberg Department of Medieval and Modern archaeology
http://members.tripod.com/~archonnet/dept.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dukes of Hazzard Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Back to Main Page ACADEMIC DEPARTMENTS ARGENTINA: Universidad de Buenos Aires: Facultad de Filosofía y Letras AUSTRALIA: Australia National University: Department of Archaeology and Anthropology James Cook University: Department of Anthropology and Archaeology Konstanz University: Research program in literary anthropology Macquarie University: Department of Anthropology ... University of Western Australia: Department of Anthropology BELGIUM: University of Ghent: Department of Archaeology and Ancient History Katholieke Universiteit Leuven: Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology Program Université de Liège: Centre de Recherche Archéologique CANADA: University of Department of ArchaeologyCalgary Ancient Studies Collaborative Program ARCRA: Cercle de Ressources en Archéologie, Montreal Universities University of Manitoba : Anthropology Department ... University of Western Ontario, Classics CH: University of Geneva: Groupe de Recherches en Archéologie Préhistorique University of Lausannne: Department of Classical Studies University of Neuchatel University of Zurich: Department for Prehistory and Early History CHILE: Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Chile

36. Index Of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/stuttgart/wurtemburgisches_landesmuseum/arch
Index of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/stuttgart/wurtemburgisches_landesmuseum/archaeology. Icon Name Last modified Size
http://rubens.anu.edu.au/raid4/europe.0602/germany/stuttgart/wurtemburgisches_la
Index of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/stuttgart/wurtemburgisches_landesmuseum/archaeology
Name Last modified Size Description ... Parent Directory 21-Aug-2002 12:20 - 21-Aug-2002 12:20 - hellenism/ 21-Aug-2002 12:20 - 21-Aug-2002 12:20 - 21-Aug-2002 12:20 - Apache/2.0.40 Server at rubens.anu.edu.au Port 80

37. Index Of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/karlsruhe/badisches_landesmuseum/archaeology
Index of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/karlsruhe/badisches_landesmuseum/archaeology.Icon Name Last modified Size
http://rubens.anu.edu.au/raid4/europe.0602/germany/karlsruhe/badisches_landesmus
Index of /raid4/europe.0602/germany/karlsruhe/badisches_landesmuseum/archaeology
Name Last modified Size Description ... Parent Directory 21-Aug-2002 12:12 - hallstat/ 21-Aug-2002 12:12 - urartu/ 21-Aug-2002 12:12 - 21-Aug-2002 12:12 - Apache/2.0.40 Server at rubens.anu.edu.au Port 80

38. Craftygal Stump - Personal Archaeology: Travels In Germany
Craftygal brings you fresh content on a broad range of crafting topics; encouragingselfexpression through essays and articles covering craft instruction,
http://www.craftygal.com/archives/november/stump1100.htm
Town of Buedingen Town of Trier Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier
Artifacts
by Jan Maybe I had been sold a MasterCard commercial fantasy: plane tickets to Germany $900, rental car with automatic transmission $800, finally understanding where you came from priceless.
In retrospect, I realize that I wanted to feel the current of German life and to see places that I had once been but now had no recollection of. But more than that, I wanted to know what had brought my parents together in the first place, what had led my anti-war father to volunteer for the Army, and what had inspired them to create a child. My parents divorced when I was in college. Somehow, in the chaos of growing up, I never really got around to asking about the details of their courtship or the creation of our family. My brothers and I knew the basic details: our parents met at a library picnic to which they had each brought a guitar. They married. My father joined the army and was shipped off to Germany. My mother followed him over some time later, and eventually I appeared on the scene, joined by brothers three and seven years later. I guess I thought that the details surrounding my creation lay somewhere in the German countryside. So, off we went, my father and I. We reached that small town, and spent a day walking its streets. I tried to begin unraveling the mysteries of my past by pressing my father for details, but it ended up feeling awkward. How could I know so little about the man who brought me into this world? And, with over thirty years of history passed, how could I even hope to glimpse that long-ago reality? We left the little town and my many unasked questions behind.

39. BUBL LINK: Germany
Subjects albania, archaeology links, austria, belgium, bulgaria, croatia, cyprus, Subjects european libraries, germany, library information networks
http://bubl.ac.uk/link/g/germany.htm
BUBL LINK Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus Countries ... Z
Germany
Titles Descriptions
  • A Concrete Curtain: The Life and Death of the Berlin Wall Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe Geographical Index Axis History Factbook Berlin Airlift ... World Travel Guide: Germany
  • Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    A Concrete Curtain: The Life and Death of the Berlin Wall
    History of the Berlin Wall and the significant events of the cold war. Offers maps, exhibitions, a timeline of key events and excerpts from books and speeches offering first person accounts of events at the Wall. Includes a bibliography of fiction and non-fiction texts.
    Author: Le Memorial de Caen
    Subjects: germany
    DeweyClass:
    Resource type: bibliography, documents, images, interactive maps
    Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe Geographical Index
    Extensive index to European archaeological resources, organised by country.
    Author:
    Subjects: albania, archaeology links, austria, belgium, bulgaria, croatia, cyprus, czech republic, denmark, estonia, finland, france, germany, greece, hungary, iceland, ireland, italian history, lithuania, luxembourg, macedonia, malta, netherlands, norway, poland, portugal, romania, russian history, serbia and montenegro, slovakia, slovenia, spain, sweden, switzerland, turkey, vatican city
    DeweyClass:
    Resource type: index
    Axis History Factbook
    A collection of facts relating to the Third Reich including information on groups and organisations within Nazi Germany such as Deutsche Jungvolk (DJ) and Hitler Jugend (HJ). Covers the branches of the German military, Germany's allies, and the Holocaust. Also provides details of flags and ranks within various divisions of the German army, and features the political and private wills of Adolf Hitler.

    40. JOURNAL OF ROMAN ARCHAEOLOGY SUPPLEMENTARY SERIES NO
    This volume also belongs to the International Roman archaeology Conference Series The Roman army in SW germany as an instrument of colonisation the
    http://www.journalofromanarch.com/supplements3.html

    Click here to browse earlier Tables of Contents
    32. ROMAN GERMANY: STUDIES IN CULTURAL INTERACTION
    edited by J. D. Creighton and R. J. A. Wilson This volume also belongs to the International Roman Archaeology Conference Series based upon biennial conferences organized by THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF ROMAN STUDIES
    R. J. A. Wilson and J. D. Creighton
    Introduction: recent research on Roman Germany
    Angelika Wigg
    Confrontation and interaction: Celts, Germans and Romans in the Central German Highlands
    D. Krausse
    Romanization in the Middle Rhine and Moselle region: new evidence from recent excavations in Luxembourg, Rhineland-Pfalz and Saarland
    A. Kreuz
    How to become a Roman farmer: a preliminary report on the environmental evidence from the Romanization project
    David G. Wigg C. Sebastian Sommer
    From conquered territory to Roman province: recent discoveries and debate on the Roman occupation of SW Germany
    Michael Mackensen
    Late Roman fortifications and building programmes in the province of Raetia: the evidence of recent excavations and some new reflections
    Index
    ISBN 1-887829-32-6. Paperback. 6 x 9 inch. 248 pages, 41 halftones, 83 line drawings. Published April 1999.

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