Acta Archaeologica Lovaniensia - Monographiae 8 for the whole spectrum of West european and National to remain active in the fieldof archaeology, and that DEN BROEKE, Southern sea salt in the low countries. http://www.kuleuven.ac.be/upers/ahawes.htm
Extractions: Leuven University Press The contents of this volume of essays in his honour gives a good overview of the fields in which Prof. Van Doorselaer has been active throughout his academic career. This book is especially an Album Amicorum, filled with reminiscences and intentions to continue the work. The voluminous size of this book may be considered as an adequate measure of the overall sympathy for Prof. Van Doorselaer. We hope that this publication may encourage him to remain active in the field of archaeology, and that the co-operation among colleagues, stimulated by this project, may be continued in the future. CONTENTS Marc LODEWIJCKX, Inleiding - Introduction
History Of Art Classical archaeology. Studies in 18 th Century european Art. Selected problems inthe art of the low countries, Germany, and France from the 14 th through the http://oia.osu.edu/wesp/histyart.html
Extractions: Click here to view the Master Schedule of Courses http://www.ureg.ohio-state.edu/courses/ to learn which courses are being offered currently. Undergraduate Only Courses Course Course Number An investigation of the art of Western civilization (Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, and the Roman and Byzantine empires) in its historical and cultural context. An investigation of Medieval and Renaissance art in its historical and cultural context. An investigation of the art of Europe and America in its historical and cultural context from the 17 th century to the present day. Introduction to the principles, methods, and history of archaeological investigation in the ancient Greek and Roman world, illustrated through a selection of major classical sites. A study of the underlying principles of abstraction in modern European art. Undergraduate and Graduate Courses A study of architecture, sculpture, and painting in Italy during the 14
Sea And Space Southern Observatory (ESO) and the european Association for tool to many disciplinesfrom archaeology to planning British Isles and the low countries to Norway http://ceos.cnes.fr:8100/cdrom-00b2/ceos1/satellit/ers/appion00/sea00_00.htm
Extractions: Sea and Space W The "Sea & Space" programme is carried out in connection with the 1998 European Week for Scientific and Technological Culture, an initiative by the European Commission. It is a collaborative project between the European Space Agency (ESA), the European Southern Observatory (ESO) and the European Association for Astronomy Education (EAAE), with support of EUMETSAT, GMD (the German National Research Center for Information Technology) and NSC (the Norwegian Space Centre). This programme is comprised of five interrelated sub-programmes that address some of the connections between Sea and Space in various natural ways and at different levels. It has strong educational components and is primarily directed towards Europe's middle and upper school students. Nevertheless, it is mostly web-based and will also be of interest to the public. The work of participants will eventually be featured here. The Sea and Space project brings the frontiers of technology into schools. Using the Internet, we will bring interactive contents - lessons, exercises, fieldwork - into the classroom, and turn your web browser into an image processing workstation!
Archaeological Dialogues - Subscribe standing empirical traditions of continental european archaeology. perspectives oncurrent issues in archaeology. based in the low countries to spanning the http://www.archaeologicaldialogues.com/content/10_1_editorial.htm
Extractions: Editorial (Issue 10.1 - 2003) (read / download as pdf here A decade of debate The present issue marks the tenth birthday of Archaeological dialogues as an international academic journal. What once began as an English-language periodical established by a small group of Dutch graduate students, has now evolved into a leading international journal for debating interpretative, theoretical, methodological, historical and political issues in archaeology. This development has taken us as much by surprise as it has far exceeded original intentions and expectations. When the journal was set up in Leiden in the early 1990s, the key aim of Archaeological dialogues was to promote, and indeed, provoke theoretical discussion in Dutch archaeology. Inspired by the fascinating theoretical developments in Anglo-American archaeology and anthropology of that time, the editors sought to reconcile these exciting new ideas with the long-standing empirical traditions of continental European archaeology. This ambition was readily evident from the subtitle that was carried on the cover for the first four years: Dutch perspectives on current issues in archaeology. Much has changed since then. The editors are no longer confined to Leiden but now hail from places as diverse and as distant as Chicago, Glasgow, Leicester, Berlin, Amsterdam and Brussels. Articles are no longer primarily solicited from Dutch colleagues, but are submitted from all over the world. And the readership has evolved from being primarily based in the Low Countries to spanning the breadth of the international archaeological community.
Dictionary.com/low lower Geology archaeology. Middle English loue, from Old Norse l gr. See leghin Indo-european Roots. low ness n. low countries, the Netherlands. http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=low
Extractions: Previous Next Contents December 2001 The description of each Unit of Assessment (UoA) is derived from the criteria statement of the relevant panel. Full details of the coverage of each unit may be found in RAE 5/99 Assessment Panels Criteria and Working Methods. 1 Clinical Laboratory Sciences Clinical biochemistry, molecular and cellular pathology, histopathology, haematology, immunology, virology, bacteriology, parasitology, medical entomology, medical genetics, medical physics, and medical and biotechnology in relation to diagnostics. 2 Community-based Clinical Subjects Epidemiology, public health research, health services research, primary care, and psychiatry. 3 Hospital-based Clinical Subjects Hospital-based clinical subjects and their cognate sub-disciplines excluding those specified in UoAs 1 and 2. 4 Clinical Dentistry Basic and applied dental sciences and dental materials including restorative dentistry (comprising prosthodontics, conservative (operative) dentistry, endodontology and periodontology), oral and maxillofacial surgery, orthodontics, paediatric dentistry, oral medicine, oral pathology, oral microbiology, dental diagnostic sciences, dental special needs, dental health sciences and dental public health, dental education, basic dental sciences and other such sciences relevant to clinical dentistry. 5 Pre-Clinical Studies
Extractions: A review of the volume The Age of Transition; the archaeology of English Culture 1400-1600 was written by Dave Evans. This collection of essays is based upon papers delivered at a joint conference of the Societies for Medieval Archaeology and Post-Medieval Archaeology, which was held in London in 1996, to explore such well-loved themes as when did the medieval period cease and the post-medieval era begin, and was it a seamless transition, or were some aspects long-lived and common to both eras. The editors have opted to keep the same title for the volume as was used for the original conference; whilst that decision may have assisted its marketing (i.e. delegates could easily identify the volume with the conference), it has proved to be rather misleading as a guide to the contents for any potential readers who were not present at the original proceedings. One of the first things to strike this reviewer was that there was very little agreement amongst the contributors as to whether there even was an 'Age of Transition', let alone when that might have been - and few, if any, were happy with the notion that it took place between 1400 and 1600. The widest scope of any of these essays is to cover the period from 1200 to 1800, whilst the narrowest restricts itself to the period 1450 to 1560. Most contributors seem to prefer to begin their studies at c.
11. The Carolingian Economy 8. Helena Hamerow, The archaeology of Rural Settlement Chris Wickham, european Forestsin the Early Middle Manorial Organizations in the low countries in the http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/research/rawl/carolingian/11economy.html
Medieval Studies Selection Policy 1485, the low countries and Scandinavia 15001550 115 (paleography), BL 830-980 (historyof european religion), CC (medieval archaeology) and multinational http://www.library.cornell.edu/colldev/cdmedieval.html
Extractions: At Cornell, Medieval Studies is an interdisciplinary program that draws faculty, graduate students, and undergraduate students from many departments: Classics, Comparative Literature, English, History, History of Art, Modern Languages, German Literature, Romance Studies, Music, Asian Studies, and Near Eastern Studies. Existing collection strength: 4 (research level) Languages: W (Wide variety of foreign language material in addition to English language material.) For collection development purposes, the term "medieval studies" refers to the languages, literatures, history, culture, commerce, social life and customs of Europe and the Byzantine Empire from the period of the Great Migrations (ca. A. D. 300) to the Renaissance (beginning in Italy 1350, England, France, Germany and Austria ca. 1485, the Low Countries and Scandinavia 1500-1550). Within this scope, materials that are interdisciplinary or intra-national are purchased by the medieval studies selector while materials specific to a particular nation are generally purchased by the appropriate subject selector (http://www.library.cornell.edu/colldev/cdselectors1.html).
Art History (AH) 210 The Art and archaeology of Ancient Egypt The art and architecture of the low countries,Germany, France european painting, sculpture, and architecture of the http://www.uic.edu/ucat/courses/previous/ahxxucat.html
Medieval Pottery Glazed internally with clear orange thick glaze. Northern european (possibly Dutch).16th/17th century. low countries. 17th century. 1295; 527; Area 5. Handle. http://www.cf.ac.uk/hisar/archaeology/reports/scalloway/catmed.html
Extractions: 1147A; u/s; Area 5 (rim sherd) 1222; 288; Area 5 (rim sherd) 1204; 244; Area 5 (rim sherd) 1147B; u/s; Area 5 ?Pipkin. Body sherd. Orange sandy fabric with quartzite inclusions. Glazed internally and externally with clear orange glaze with small copper-enriched areas giving a green tinge. ?Dutch 16th/17th century. 1147; u/s; Area 5 Small bodysherd. Vessel type unknown. Orange-red sandy fabric with some quartz inclusions. Internal dark brown glaze. 1147; u/s; Area 5 Slipware bowl. Body sherd. Orange-pink fabric with some small inclusions. External slip decoration in two bands and arc. One blob of slip covered with bright green glaze. Internal and external over-all clear orange glaze. Weser Ware. 16th century. 1162; 202; Area 5 Cauldron/large pipkin. Leg portion and body sherd where leg is luted onto the body. Conical shape, bending slightly inwards. Reduced sandy fabric but oxidised on body sherd. External dark brown glaze and internal olive-green glaze. Low Countries. 17th century. 1295; 527; Area 5
Courses - Ah Greek Art and archaeology. and early 18th centuries in Germany, France, Spain, England,and the low countries. Early TwentiethCentury european Avant-Gardes. http://www.scrippscol.edu/~dept/art/Degree/courses_ah.html
Extractions: Scripps Department of Art Course Catalog Art History Lower-Division Courses 51 a, b, c. Introduction to the History of Art. J. Emerick, G. Gorse 52. Monuments of Asia. A survey of major monuments from Buddhist, Hindu, and Islamic Asia. Lectures focus on the artistic significance and social context of such religious sites as Sanchi, Horyu-ji, Angkor Wat, and the Taj Mahal. Offered annually. B. Coats 67CC. Contemporary Chicano Art and Its Antecedents. Chicano art as an autonomous offspring of Mexican art. The influence of Mexican muralists and other Mexican artists depicting the dramatic changes brought by the revolution. Staff Upper-Division Courses 140. The Arts of Africa. A survey of African art and architecture exploring ethnic and cultural diversity. Emphasis on the social, political, and religious dynamics that foster art production at specific historical moments. Critical study of Western art historical approaches and methods used to study Africa. P.J. Jackson
Redirector Culture and History of the low countries 15001700, International The Place of theDead in european Society, 1400 R. Gilchrist (eds.), The archaeology of the http://ah.brookes.ac.uk/history/staff/spicer.html
University Of Exeter Press - Archaeology, Further Information setting for one of the greatest european lovestories from Britain to the Caucasus,the low countries to Upper interested in the history and archaeology of the http://www.ex.ac.uk/uep/archcon.htm
Extractions: Subjects and Search Index by Title Index by Author/Editor Ordering Information ... Home A completely new revised and enlarged edition of this classic survey of monuments in South-West England associated with the stories of King Arthur and Knights of the Round Table: the castle of Tintagel, the great hill-fort of Cadbury in south Somerset, the ruined abbey at Glastonbury and Castle Dore in south Cornwallthe setting for one of the greatest European love-stories of all time, that of Tristan and Isolde. In each case the archaeological evidence is summarised, and linked with relevant Arthurian literature. The book includes maps, plans, photographs and suggestions for further reading; it will be valuable to specialists as well as accessible to the general reader. Author: M.J. Swanton is Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of Exeter. "The book will become a standard of reference for wooden artefacts in western Europe."
Univ Of Exeter: Archaeology - Bibliography east, in M. Barley (ed.), european Towns, their J. (eds) 1983 Roman and Native inthe low countries. Barbegal watermill in its environment archaeology and the http://www.ex.ac.uk/archaeology/ugbibrom.html
Extractions: Centre for ... Search archaeology GENERAL BACKGROUND WORKS Barbarians and Romans in North-West Europe from the Later Republic to Late Antiquity The Early Roman Empire in the West Carcopino, J. 1941: Daily Life in Ancient Rome Atlas of the Roman World Cunliffe, C. 1988: Greeks, Romans and Barbarians: Spheres of Interaction Rome and her Northern Provinces Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd edition) Paoli, U. 1958: Rome: its People, Life and Customs Stillwell, R. (ed.) 1976: The Princeton Encyclopaedia of Classical Sites Wacher, J. (ed.) 1987: The Roman World (2 vols) Ward Perkins, J. 1981: Roman Architecture (2nd edition) Roman Imperialism: Post-Colonial Perspectives . Leicester. Wells, C. 1984:
Courses archaeology, regional history and archaeology, economics, mass media we may evensay european, phenomenon of The low countries The Burgundian State and Nation http://odur.let.rug.nl/dutchstudies/courses.htm
Extractions: Dutch Studies Programme First Semster 2002- 2003 2 September - 2 December 2002 course code course ECTS Intensive Dutch Language Course, level I Intensive Dutch Language Course, level II Dutch Language Course I Dutch Language Course, Level II, semi-intensive Dutch 20th Century History in an International Perspective ... Educational Sciences; Introduction into the Dutch System Second Semester 2002-2003 January 7 - April 22, 2003 course code course ECTS Intensive Dutch Language Course, level I Intensive Dutch Language Course, level II Dutch Language Course (regular) I Dutch Language Course, Level II, semi-intensive Dutch Modern History in an International Perspective ... Dutch Painting in the Golden age Intensive Dutch Language Course, level I 12 August - 30 August 2002 January 2003 lecturer Language Centre Format Lectures, 3,5 hrs. per day, homework/study 3,5 hrs per day Value/ credits 4.5 ECTS Aim of the course At the end of the course the students'proficiency in Dutch will be sufficient to get by in everyday situations. Literature Kuiken, F. van Kalsbeek a.
Extractions: General Editor : Philip Grierson Medieval European Coinage is a major international work of reference for medieval numismatists, archaeologists and historians. The series of some 17 volumes , published by Cambridge University Press , will cover the coinage of Europe c . 450 to c . 1500, region by region. The MEC Project will produce the first comprehensive survey of European medieval coinages since the Traité de numismatique du moyen âge of Engel and Serrure (3 vols, 1891-1905). Each volume of MEC provides an authoritative, up-to-date account of the coinage of an area, written by experts in the field. The text is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue of the coins in the unrivalled collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, which has largely been formed by Professor Philip Grierson The first volume of MEC was published in 1986, and the critically-acclaimed volume 14 on Southern Italy appeared in 1998. A further eight volumes are currently in preparation. A full list of volumes follows. 1. The Early Middle Ages (5th-10th Centuries).
Archaeolink.com Archaeology, Anthropology, Ancient Civilizations - Social Studie Provides those interested in archaeology, anthropology, and ancient civilizations hundreds of reviewed resources for any research project Cultural Landscapes european Wildflowers Gardening History Growing budget beginning as low as US $36 per http://www.archaeolink.com/
Extractions: The Amazing This place is designed to provide students and others interested in the fields of archaeology, anthropology, and ancient civilizations (and now a lot more) a one stop resource for homework help or other projects. You will find numerous resources (currently over ten thousand and climbing ) divided by topic. Each site has been reviewed, and checked for links inappropriate for youngsters. While I try to keep things up to date, you may run into dead or changed links. If so, please notify me and I will remove them as soon as possible. If you have a website which you would like to see here, please send me the information and I will review it for possible inclusion. - Thank You website designed for use on all types of browsers from the most primitive to advanced versions. Archaeology Anthropology Ancient Civilizations Glossary ... Specialty Pages Or scroll down the page for topic headings. Do you need money for school? Check out the section about scholarships, grants, fellowships, and other sources of academic and research funding. Archaeology, Anthropology, History Scholarships
Centre For Historical Studies : Course Unit Information Social Movements in the modern low countries, Study of to the tradition of Europeanprehistory, and and perspectives concerning its archaeology and prehistory.. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/centreforhistoricalstudies/coursemaster.php
Extractions: Course Code Title Course Description Module Value Aspects of the History of the Low Countries A survey course of Low Countries History from the late Middle Ages to the First World War. 0.5 unit Introduction to Dutch and Belgian Contemporary History An introduction to contemporary Dutch and Belgian history and politics. 0.5 unit Themes in Dutch and Belgian History Since 1930 The course provides a detailed study of selected themes from Dutch and Belgian contemporary history. 0.5 unit Major Social Movements in the modern Low Countries Study of selected themes from the history of social movements from the late 19th Century to the present day 0.5 unit
HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SHIP - LECTURE NOTES HISTORY AND archaeology OF THE SHIP LECTURE NOTES. Cog which came to dominate NorthernEuropean trade was view of the geography of the low countries the cog http://cma.soton.ac.uk/HistShip/shlect84.htm
Extractions: and, more obscurely, in the related type of extended logboat which later came to be known as the Hulk. The cog also had other advantages. Its structure made it a capacious load carrier, especially for the bulky raw materials, grain, timber, furs, salt, fish and wool in which the Hanseatic league specialised. The high sides offered protection against piracy, a constant anxiety in the Baltic and one of the primary motives for the formation of the Hanseatic League in the first instance. The addition of castles made the cog virtually impregnable to marauding longships but castled cogs were also deployed against each other in sea battles and were used by the Hanse to blockade Danish towns as a means of exerting economic pressure. Lastly the cog was quick and easy to build, requiring less skill than contemporary Nordic boats. Although the design principle was inherently weak it was compensated for by the use of the heavy oak timbers which were indigenous to North Western Europe. From the C13th the cog very quickly took over as the principal transport of the Hanseatic fleet. By the early C14th Northern Cogs were venturing into the Mediterranean where they precipitated further technological transfers with the Mediterranean round ships. The latter copied the easily handled square sail of the Cog. The Cogs adopted the carvel planking of the Mediterranean tradition. Although the cog was built initially as a shell constructed on a flat bottom its design lent itself to skeleton building. At some point in the C14th the various different trends in European shipbuilding merged to produce the carvel built skeleton framed ship which then dominated the cutting edge of wooden shipbuilding until the advent of steel in the nineteenth century.