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Holiday Reading – The Buried Circle by Jenni Mills | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/2015/07/31/holiday-reading-the-buried-circle-by-jenni-mills
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. Holiday Reading – The Buried Circle by Jenni Mills. July 31, 2015. It’s possible I’m developing an obsession with books about Avebury. This is the 2. Or is it the 3. The Village in the Stones. Having come down firmly on the side of low-brow writing I would point out that while on one level. This community with his vision of the past. Having spent a lot of time there, I find it difficult to imagine Avebury as anything other than a rather quaint, extrem...
bardiac.blogspot.com
Bardiac: Red Head
http://bardiac.blogspot.com/2015/05/red-head.html
Just another academic blogger. Friday, May 15, 2015. Here's a Red-Headed Woodpecker. I also saw my first Bobolink today, and got a couple of very blurry pictures. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). I profess literature. More specifically, I'm a feminist, female Shakespearean who also teaches composition regularly, early modern literature, Chaucer on occasion, graduate classes in writing and research, literary theory, poetry, drama. Welcome to my world. Email Bardiacblogger AT yahoo DOT com. The adventur...
harngroup.wordpress.com
Member Publications | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/member-publications
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. A place to post information and links about publications by HARN members. Please send updates to. RECENT PUBLICATIONS BY HARN MEMBERS. Leach, S., 2016,. A Russian Perspective on Theoretical Archaeology: the life and works of. Leo S Klein,. López-Romero, E. 2014. ‘Out of the box’: exploring the 3D modelling potential of ancient image archives. Virtual Archaeology Review. 5(10): 107-116. http:/ varjournal.es/doc/varj05 010 11.pdf. London: Pluto Press, 2011.
harngroup.wordpress.com
HARN Weblog | Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog | Page 2
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/page/2
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. July 20, 2016. ARLIS/Committee for Art and Design Archives Symposium ‘Matter and Meaning: Materiality and the Visual Arts Archive’. DATE: Friday 23 September 2016. TIME: 10.00am 6.30pm. VENUE: University of Brighton, Room M2, Grand Parade, BN2 0JY. To view the full event page for the Symposium, including the programme, please visit the University of Brighton website:. Please note that lunch is not provided. From → Uncategorized. July 19, 2016. HARN member...
birminghamegyptology.co.uk
Further reading - Birmingham Egyptology
http://birminghamegyptology.co.uk/virtual-museum/a-ready-intelligence/further-reading
Objects Come to Life. Bes: Development of a Deity. Bierbrier, M. 2012. Who Was Who in Egyptology. Drower, M. 1985. Flinders Petrie: A Life in Archaeology. Edwards, A. 1873. A Thousand Miles Up the Nile. James, T. G. H. (ed). 1982. Excavating in Egypt: The Egypt Exploration Society 1882-1982. Moon, B. 2006. More Usefully Employed: Amelia B. Edwards, writer, traveller and campaigner for ancient Egypt. Shepheard, K. 2015. Emily Paterson, General Secretary of the Egypt Exploration Fund.
birminghamegyptology.co.uk
A ready intelligence - Birmingham Egyptology
http://birminghamegyptology.co.uk/virtual-museum/a-ready-intelligence
Objects Come to Life. Bes: Development of a Deity. A ready intelligence: Emily Paterson, 1861-1947. Click below to explore further:. Is a final year PhD candidate in Egyptology at the University of Birmingham and also the Education and Public Engagement Manager at the Egypt Exploration Society. The author would like to thank The Egypt Exploration Society. For inspiring further research into Miss Emily Paterson – let’s hope this goes further! Bello theme by WeGraphics. This site uses cookies: Find out more.
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W. J. Varley | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/2015/01/08/w-j-varley
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. January 8, 2015. The indefatigable Jonathan Trigg is presenting a paper on W.J. Varley in Manchester on the 10th of February – details here. Varley was a lecturer in geography at the University of Liverpool and also an archaeologist, he excavated many sites including Old Krieg with V.G. Childe, Eddisbury hillfort, Old Oswestry hillfort and Maiden Castle (the one in Cheshire not Dorset) and the Bleasdale Circle. Go along, it’ll be fascinating! You are comm...
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Manchester Museum – review | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/2015/03/27/manchester-museum-review
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. Manchester Museum – review. March 27, 2015. Warning – this post is picture heavy so may take a while to load. Welcome to the first, and quite possibly the. Entry in a series which, with my usual lack of inventiveness, I’ve decided to call Museum Review. I had thought about calling it Museum of the Month, MuOM for short? Maybe not. It doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, does it? F orté either, there are days when I wonder what my f orté. They’ve als...
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What we are talking about when we talk about Tutankhamun’s beard | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/2015/01/29/what-we-are-talking-about-when-we-talk-about-tutankhamuns-beard
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. What we are talking about when we talk about Tutankhamun’s beard. January 29, 2015. Has written an excellent article here. Which, if I were more skilled, I’d be able to link to. While you’re clicking links, go here too if, like me, you managed to miss this. Post back in August. From → Uncategorized. Larr; HARN WELCOMES NEW MEMBERS. HARN Conference 2015, BHA →. Leave one →. January 29, 2015 7:43 pm. Reblogged this on Adventures in History and Archaeology.
harngroup.wordpress.com
Museum Review: Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn USA | HARN Weblog
https://harngroup.wordpress.com/2015/07/09/museum-review-brooklyn-museum-brooklyn-usa
Histories of Archaeology Research Network Weblog. Museum Review: Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn USA. July 9, 2015. Brooklyn Museum, USA. Vary widely, and are not strictly archaeological, so you get all the benefits of a big museum without having to spend 3 days being jostled among hundreds of people to see everything. Admission is technically free, but they suggest a donation of $16 for Adults. You should give a donation, but can give anything you want. Schenck House, top: exterior, bottom: interior. The 3rd ...