This article examines the interpretation and public presentation of a particular view of the supposedly ‘national’ role of monuments in a geographically restricted part of southern England – what we have termed the British late Neolithic mythos: that monuments in the Stonehenge area had a ‘national’, ‘unifying’ role for ‘Britain’ at a time when ‘Britain’ had a ‘unified culture’ and was isolated from continental Europe, and that as part of that process, animals for feasting were transported from as far as ‘Scotland’. We explore the trajectory of interpretative inflation, ‘possible’ > ‘probable’ > ‘certain’ > ‘sensational’ through academic and popular accounts, media releases, social media, newspaper articles, TV programmes, Research...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
The great henge complexes of southern Britain are iconic monuments of the third millennium BCE, repr...
A brief overview of the period c.4000-2000 in Wiltshire for the 162nd summer meeting of the Royal Ar...
Trying to understand the past by constructing ‘big picture’ and more detailed narratives is what we,...
This is the abstract of a paper that I presented at the 2016 Neolithic and Bronze Age Research Stude...
Archaeologists have more opportunities than ever to disseminate their research widely—and the public...
Neolithic monument complexes in Britain and Ireland were places where dispersed non-human and human ...
The Neolithic of Europe comprises eighteen specially commissioned papers on prehistoric archaeology,...
Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and ...
This article considers the long-debated and thorny issue of the transition from the Mesolithic to th...
This thesis argues that henges, stone circles and ring cairns form a 'spectrum' of monuments with or...
Stonehenge is the most well-known Neolithic monument surviving from Britain’s prehistoric past. It h...
Dieser Artikel fasst die neuesten Erkenntnisse zum ältesten Neolithikum auf den Britischen Inseln zu...
Bronze Age as a period of separation from a resilient complex of traditions of Mesolithic and even P...
Over the past ten years, the academic archaeological community has begun to come to terms with some...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
The great henge complexes of southern Britain are iconic monuments of the third millennium BCE, repr...
A brief overview of the period c.4000-2000 in Wiltshire for the 162nd summer meeting of the Royal Ar...
Trying to understand the past by constructing ‘big picture’ and more detailed narratives is what we,...
This is the abstract of a paper that I presented at the 2016 Neolithic and Bronze Age Research Stude...
Archaeologists have more opportunities than ever to disseminate their research widely—and the public...
Neolithic monument complexes in Britain and Ireland were places where dispersed non-human and human ...
The Neolithic of Europe comprises eighteen specially commissioned papers on prehistoric archaeology,...
Stonehenge is the icon of British prehistory, and continues to inspire ingenious investigations and ...
This article considers the long-debated and thorny issue of the transition from the Mesolithic to th...
This thesis argues that henges, stone circles and ring cairns form a 'spectrum' of monuments with or...
Stonehenge is the most well-known Neolithic monument surviving from Britain’s prehistoric past. It h...
Dieser Artikel fasst die neuesten Erkenntnisse zum ältesten Neolithikum auf den Britischen Inseln zu...
Bronze Age as a period of separation from a resilient complex of traditions of Mesolithic and even P...
Over the past ten years, the academic archaeological community has begun to come to terms with some...
This paper examines the adoption by archaeologists of perspectives of ’land-scape ’ currently being ...
The great henge complexes of southern Britain are iconic monuments of the third millennium BCE, repr...
A brief overview of the period c.4000-2000 in Wiltshire for the 162nd summer meeting of the Royal Ar...