Archaeology in Africa and in Museums

An Inaugural Lecture given in the University of Cambridge, 22 October 2002

David W Phillipson author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:10th Jul '03

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Archaeology in Africa and in Museums cover

An outline of archaeology's relevance in Africa and Africa's relevance to World archaeology.

In this passionately argued lecture, Phillipson makes the case for the importance of African archaeology, highlighting the contribution that archaeology can make to the understanding of that continent and its people. He also defends the vital role of museums as custodians of a significant part of our international cultural heritage.David Phillipson is the first Professor of African Archaeology to be appointed at any UK university, and is Director of Cambridge University's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. In the first part of this passionately argued lecture, he makes the case for the importance of 'archaeology in Africa' and 'Africa in archaeology'. Africa was almost certainly the birthplace of the first hominids and has an archaeological record longer than any other continent. Drawing on examples from the archaeology of Ethiopia, specifically the ancient civilisation of Aksum, Phillipson highlights the contribution that archaeology can make to the understanding of that continent and its people, and demonstrates the relevance of African archaeology to mankind as a whole. In the second part of this lecture, Phillipson defends the vital role of museums as custodians of a significant part of our international cultural heritage and as an essential resource for the furtherance of international scholarship.

ISBN: 9780521537223

Dimensions: 188mm x 125mm x 7mm

Weight: 36g

30 pages