The Best Training Ground for Archaeologists
Francis Haverfield and the Invention of Romano-British Archaeology
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxbow Books
Published:10th Dec '07
Should be back in stock very soon
To his contemporaries, Francis John Haverfield was the 'father of Romano-British studies', and his death on September 30th 1919 was greeted with widespread lamentation. In the decades immediately following his death, Haverfield's reputation survived largely undiminished, in fact his view of the Romanisation of Britain became so widely accepted that it held sway for almost a century, and is only now being re-examined by both positive and negative interpreters of his views. What is clear however, is that his immense contribution to the study of Roman Britain is worthy of attention.
Freemans work represents an important contribution to the study of an extremely interesting period - not just in Romano-British archaeology but in archaeology in general.' -- Collingwood and British Idealism Studies Collingwood and British Idealism Studies This is an authoritative and comprehensive history of the development of Romano-British archaeology during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (and beyond)... should have a significant impact on the field and become a standard work of reference and point of departure for future scholarship on the history of Romano-British archaeology. -- Britannia Britannia
ISBN: 9781842172803
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
688 pages