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Britain B C
 
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Britain B C (Paperback)

de Francis Pryor (Author)
3.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)

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Descriptions du produit

Review

'There are enough curious facts, contentious theories and bizarre hypotheses here to hold the interest of anyone concerned with the unique and peculiar story of these islands.' Independent on Sunday Praise for Francis Pryor's television series 'Britain B.C.': 'Fascinating!the evangelical Pryor paints a vivid portrait of pre-Roman society that tackles received wisdom about what was going on here in the Stone, Bronze and Iron ages.' Daily Telegraph 'Pryor leaps about the country at a cracking pace, his big personality making sure we never get bored by the scant and rarefied scraps that are his stock-in-trade.' Observer


Product Description

Traditionally, British history has been regarded as starting with the Roman Conquest. Yet this is to ignore half a million years of prehistory that still exert a profound influence on British and Irish life today. In Britain BC, Francis Pryor sets the record straight. Aided in recent years by aerial photography and coastal erosion (which has helped expose such sites as Seahenge), and by advances in scientific techniques such as radiocarbon dating and wood analysis, archaeologists have discovered compelling evidence for a much more sophisticated life among the Ancient Britons than has been previously supposed. Far from being woad-painted barbarians, the earliest inhabitants of the British Isles had developed their own religions, laws, crafts, arts, trade systems, farms, and priesthood long before the Romans' brief occupation. Examining sites from the great ceremonial landscapes of Stonehenge, Avebury, and the Bend of the Boyne to small domestic settlements, and objects from precious ritual offerings to the tiny fragments of flint discarded by toolmakers, Francis Pryor, one of our leading archaeologists, has created a remarkable portrait of the life of our ancestors, in all its variety and complexity. His authoritative and radical re-examination of Britain and Ireland before the coming of the Romans makes us look afresh at the whole story of our islands.

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5 internautes sur 6 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 An impassioned look back, Jui 11 2004
Par Stephen A. Haines (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Pryor is candid about his intentions. He wants to understand the society of his homeland. To gain that understanding, he's dug more holes than "found in Blackbourne, Lancashire". He's also swept the literature of prehistoric Britain to learn what his colleagues have revealed in their work. The result is a compelling narrative of how Britain, in the years before the Roman invasion, lived, worshipped and died. He's gone a step further in trying out the life for himself. It all boils down to what might be an exercise in chauvinism, but Pryor's too professional to sink into that morass. Instead, he's given us a superb overview of the roots of the British Isles. He also provides an superlative insight into the workings of modern archaeology.

The title reflects Pryor's view that too much attention has been paid to the Roman era. Christianity's invasion on Roman skirt-tails, of course, has diverted attention from the beliefs of pre-Roman peoples. He wants to set that record straight, and does so thoroughly and admirably. Drawing on a wealth of resources, he casts away the "invasion" foundation of British pre-history to build a new structure. Sweeping hordes give way to a society that spread cultural innovations through limited, but far-reaching mobility. Instead of defensive fortresses, the British Isles are pocked with "henges", religious centres reflecting a stable, ancestor-worshipping society. Henges, he reminds us, totally lack defensive features. Weapons are found as often in bogs and streams, or buried with owners. They aren't the detritus of battle.

Pryor's start is the now-famous site of Boxgrove. His account of the finds there, a stone tool preparation site nearly half a million years old, is nearly as vivid as Mike Pitts' own. The site reflects the changing nature of archaeology - more attention is now devoted to assessing what the environment was like in that distant time. Weather, soil, forest or field, are among the many elements now assessed in building a picture of ancient humanity's life. Instead of racks of museum collections, tools, weapons and jewellry now form images of what our ancestors considered important. If Pryor delves into speculation in his depictions, it's clearly an informed conjecture. Details, hidden in time, may remain hidden, but much more is now available to consider than earlier researchers had at their disposal.

Pryor demonstrates how modern research has discerned Neolithic paddocks and trackways. Faint lines in crops or discontinuities in the soil exposed by aerial photography have led to amazing finds. His descriptions of discoveries, digs exposing ancient structures and artefacts reveal a wealth of new information while imparting Pryor's own love of the science. That affection carries over into his accounts of how his ancestors lived. To him, this information is intensely valuable. If nothing else, it shatters long-held, but false myths about what comprises the British peoples. People today will understand themselves better if they understand their ancestors better. If that reduces aggression, bigotry and dogma, that's all to the good. In Pryor's hands, archaeology becomes more than an arcane science removed from society. Instead, the research becomes a force for positive thinking and, hopefully, action.

With such an outlook, this author has produced an immensely readable book. His fondness for the work and the discoveries is apparent. He exhorts you to share it all with him. He draws the reader into the questions his research seeks to answer. His enthusiasm is contagious - you want to be there at the various digs and museums with him. If you can't arrange that, he provides a multitude of drawings, maps and photograph sets to help convey what he's seen. There are the dead, their possessions, sometimes their dress. Different conditions, he explains, preserve different things. Where they haven't been preserved, he reconstructs them. The wattle and thatch house at Fengate is built to verify how it was done. With all these elements assembled in one book, it becomes clear that Pryor has created a lasting volume. British focus aside, this book should be a feature on any shelf. It's about you. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

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2.0étoiles sur 5 Confused book, Nov. 5 2008
Par A. Volk - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
I bought this book because I was hoping to get an account of what life was like in Britain BC. What I got was long, boring stories about the minute details of archaeological digs, political aspects of archaeology, and grand suppositions that were so broad as to be almost useless. The author claims that the story of Britain BC is about families, yet there is NO information on the day-to-day life of families. How big where they? Were they multigenerational? What were the roles of various family members? None of this information is presented in the book, which wanders aimlessly between scales of analyses, topics, and themes.

Instead, you get scattered details about a huge range of different archaeological sites. The names alone are hard to keep track of, let alone how the nature of an oak plank bridge is of tremendous important to the overall picture of Britain BC (in my opinion, it isn't).

This book gets two stars because the author at least tries to maintain the image of sticking to the data, even though as soon as he says that, he then engages in broad speculation himself. Save your money, I'll give you the only two significant findings of this book:

1- Stone-age bled into bronze-age which bled into iron-age. In other words, there was a degree of continuity and shared culture. Why this is surprising, I don't know. Maybe it was when the author started doing research 40+ years ago, but it isn't now.

2- Sometimes artifacts and structures have a religious, spiritual meaning that is not functional. Again, maybe this was revolutionary when the author started doing research, or maybe archaeology is just really, really lame. I don't know, I'm an evolutionary psychologist (with some experience in anthropology). These revolutionary conclusions seemed entirely too pedestrian to me.

So, if you are interested in the minute details of archaeology (including some very boring bureaucratic details), and grand, but unlinked, incoherent, and non-family details about Britain BC, this book is for you. Otherwise, stay away.
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