Beschreibung
This volume of Analecta Praehistorica Leidensia focuses on how local communities in prehistory define themselves in relation to a bigger social world. Communities from the deep past managed to make a living in landscapes we tend to perceive as inconvenient, build complex and elaborate monuments with relatively simple tools, and by shaping their landscape carved out a place for themselves in a much bigger social world. The contributions in this volume underscore how small worlds can be big at the same time. Contents Preface Social memories and site biographies: construction and perception in non-literate societies Johannes Müller The Dutch abroad? Interpreting the distribution of the 'beaker' culture John C. Barrett Early Bronze Age boat graves in the British Isles Richard Bradley The nature of a Bronze Age World Anthony Harding A triangular Middle Bronze Age trade system of amber, copper and tin 1500-1300 BC Kristian Kristiansen, Johan Ling Wetland knowledges: resource specialization and denial Christopher Evans Maintaining fertility of Bronze Age arable land in the northwest Netherlands Corrie Bakels Bronze Age ancestral communities - new research of Middle Bronze Age burials in the barrow landscapes of Apeldoorn-Wieselseweg David Fontijn, Arjan Louwen, Quentin Bourgeois, Liesbeth Smits, Cristian van der Linde And the river meanders on. The intertwined habitation and vegetation history of the river area Maaskant and adjacent sand area of Oss (Netherlands) in Late Prehistory till Early Roman Period Richard Jansen, Corrie Bakels Metal surprises from an Iron Age cemetery in Nijmegen-Noord Peter W. van den Broeke, Emile Eimermann
Autorenporträt
Prof. Dr. Corrie Bakels has held the chair in palaeoeconomy at Leiden University, the Netherlands, since 1988. Her specialisations are prehistoric and early historic agriculture, archaeobotany and vegetation history. She graduated in 1978 on an analysis of early farming societies in the Netherlands and Bavaria, Germany. Since then she has participated in many archaeological projects in Western Continental Europe. A synthesis of her work on the agrarian history of the Western European loess belt, 5300 BC - AD 1000 has appeared in 2009.