The excavations carried out by M. Murray between 1921 and 1927 in the area of the Borġ in-Nadur temple produced large amounts of pottery related to the Neolithic and the Bronze Age, thus testifying to the long life-history of this place and highlighting its importance for Maltese prehistory. Following the publication of a number of reports at the time of the excavations, and a partial inventory of the material in the 1950s, the evidence from the megalithic temple of Borġ in-Nadur was never looked at again, a fact which probably contributed towards a less than comprehensive knowledge about the Maltese Bronze Age. In 2007, eighty years after the end of the excavations, a research project was commenced, aimed at a reappraisal of all ...
The ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptatio...
This article recounts the start of the excavations of the Xaghra Circle in Gozo. This site is also c...
The Middle Bronze Age (15th-13th century BC) is without doubts the most relevant period in the histo...
This paper presents an exhaustive catalogue of finds recovered from the site of Borġ in-Nadur and n...
The excavations carried out by M. Murray between 1921 and 1927 in the area of the Borġ in-Nadur temp...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
Borġ in-Nadur, on the south-east coast of the island of Malta, is a major multi-period site, with ar...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
For well over a century the study of Maltese prehistory has been dominated by the extraordinary mega...
The end of prehistory in the Maltese archipelago is characterized by the production of a problematic...
By taking a group of archaeological sites around the area of Borġ in-Nadur in south-east Malta, this...
This paper reviews the evidence for maritime connections between Malta and Sicily in the second mil...
In 1911 T.E. Peet pointed out for the first time the difficulty of interpreting the earliest example...
The ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptatio...
This article recounts the start of the excavations of the Xaghra Circle in Gozo. This site is also c...
The Middle Bronze Age (15th-13th century BC) is without doubts the most relevant period in the histo...
This paper presents an exhaustive catalogue of finds recovered from the site of Borġ in-Nadur and n...
The excavations carried out by M. Murray between 1921 and 1927 in the area of the Borġ in-Nadur temp...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
Borġ in-Nadur, on the south-east coast of the island of Malta, is a major multi-period site, with ar...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
The Maltese island have megalithic temples of extraordinary interest for archaeoastronomy. In litera...
For well over a century the study of Maltese prehistory has been dominated by the extraordinary mega...
The end of prehistory in the Maltese archipelago is characterized by the production of a problematic...
By taking a group of archaeological sites around the area of Borġ in-Nadur in south-east Malta, this...
This paper reviews the evidence for maritime connections between Malta and Sicily in the second mil...
In 1911 T.E. Peet pointed out for the first time the difficulty of interpreting the earliest example...
The ERC-funded FRAGSUS Project (Fragility and sustainability in small island environments: adaptatio...
This article recounts the start of the excavations of the Xaghra Circle in Gozo. This site is also c...
The Middle Bronze Age (15th-13th century BC) is without doubts the most relevant period in the histo...