Skip to main content
BAR Publishing
  • Help
  • About
  • Publish with BAR
  • Newsletter
Get access to more books. Log in with your institution.

Your use of this Platform is subject to BAR’s End User License Agreement. Please read it carefully. Materials on the Platform are for the use of authorised users only. Giving access in any form to non-authorised users is prohibited.

Share the story of what Open Access means to you

a graphic of a lock that is open, the universal logo for open access

University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.

  1. Home
  2. Space, Hierarchy and Society: Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Area Analysis

Space, Hierarchy and Society: Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Area Analysis

Barry C. Burnham and John Kingsbury
Restricted You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution. Log in
Read Book Buy Book
  • Contents

  • Front Cover
  • Copyright
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Contributors
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Section 1: The Individual and The Group
  • The Group and The Individual in History
  • Inferring Status from Burials in Iron Age Europe: Some Recents Attempts
  • Who's Who in the Northern British Bronze Age
  • The Social Identity of the Individual in Isolated Barrows and Barrow Cemetaries in Anglo-Saxon England
  • An Anthropological Contribution to the History and Archaeology on an Ethnic Group
  • Social and Cultural Patterning in the Late Iron Age in Southern England
  • Glastonbury Ware: An Alternative View
  • Summary
  • Section 2: Section Groupings in the Urban Environment
  • Urban Structures in the Pre-Roman Iron Age
  • Pompeii - Planning and Social Implications
  • Medieval Winchester: Its Spatial Organization
  • Residential Differentiation in the Nineteenth-Century City
  • Towns and Typologies: Forms and Processes
  • Section 3: The Interaction of Ethnic Groups
  • Three Types of Ethnic Interaction Among Maasi-Speaking People in East Africa
  • Migration, Ethinc Differentiation and State Formation in the Iron Age of Bantu Africa
  • The Archaeological Recognition of Religion: The Examples of Islam in Africa in 'Urnfields' in Europe
  • Romano-British Interaction
  • Discussion of Section 3
  • Discussion
  • An Historian's Comments
  • Dialogues of the Deaf
Citable Link
Published: 1979
Publisher: BAR Publishing
ISBN(s)
  • 9781407349022 (ebook)
  • 9780860540601 (paperback)
BAR Number: S59
Subject
  • Mediterranean
  • British Isles
  • Identity / Gender / Childhood / Ethnicity / Romanization
  • Early Modern and Modern
  • Agriculture / Farming / Husbandry / Land-use / Irrigation
  • Ceramics and Pottery Studies
  • Architecture / Domestic and Urban Buildings and Space / Urbanism
  • Theory and Method (general titles)
  • Islam
  • Ethnoarchaeology / Anthropology
  • Death / Burial / Cemeteries / Tombs
  • Western Europe and Britain
  • Bronze Age and Iron Age
  • Trade / Exchange / Travel / Economy
  • Neolithic / Chalcolithic
  • Late Antiquity and Byzantium
  • Multiperiod
  • Migration Period, Early Medieval and Medieval
  • Roman
  • Africa
BAR Publishing logo +44 (0)1865 310431 info@barpublishing.com www.barpublishing.com

FacebookTwitter

End User License Agreement

© BAR Digital Collection 2023

Powered by Fulcrum logo · Log In
x This site requires cookies to function correctly.