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Bronze Age

Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology

Social Status and Recycling in Bronze Age China

What does recycling have to do with social standing in Bronze Age China? Dr Victoria Sainsbury discusses the recent work of the FLAME team, lead by Dr Ray Liu, on the metal work at Anyang, and how powerful people controlled how metal moved through society
Digging for Meaning: Research from the Oxford School of Archaeology

Cycling to Archaeology!

From Thames-side ruins and forgotten stone circles to Ridgeway hillforts and Roman villas, Oxfordshire is abundant in archaeological riches.
Protecting the Past: Archaeology, Conservation and Tourism in the North of Jordan

Private Ownership or Public Domain? The Cultural Heritage of Tall al-`Umayri at Risk

Dr Clark (LaSierra, Madaba Plains Project) speaks of the issues involved in the protection of Tell 'Umeiri, a multi-period site in the Madaba region (central Jordan)
Keble College

Societies in Transition: Becoming Roman in Britain

Lecture on Britain under Roman rule and the incorporation of Britain into the Roman world. Professor Gosden also talks about the significance of our environment, the outside, material world, and how it influences historical events in ancient history.
Societies in Transition

Societies in Transition: Becoming Roman in Britain

Lecture on Britain under Roman rule and the incorporation of Britain into the Roman world. Professor Gosden also talks about the significance of our environment, the outside, material world, and how it influences historical events in ancient history.
Societies in Transition

Societies in Transition: Volcanogenic Origins of the Classical World

A lecture on the origins of the classical world: from the growth of Minoan Crete during the Bronze Age, 2000 BCE, where a possible volcanic eruption on Santorini led to the destruction of Minoan Crete and a catalyst to the creation of the Classical world.
Societies in Transition

Societies in Transition: Early Metallurgy Around the World

Professor David Killick (Dept. Anthropology, University of Arizona) talks about the invention of metallurgy and the transition from the Stone Age to the Bronze Age and what the social roles of emerging metallurgy were in societies throughout the world.

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