Details
The study of past landscapes is one of today's most exciting interdisciplinary subjects. Archaeologists, ecologists, social and cultural historians, literature specialists and artists all contribute to our understanding of cultural landscapes. Landscapes reflects this diversity and excitement, through accessible, well-researched and well-illustrated articles. Landscapes is fully peer-reviewed with a distinguished editorial board. It seeks to be both accessible and scholarly, a journal to which all those engaged in studying past landscapes, both amateur and professional, can turn for the best of current research and the most influential opinions. Its scope is broad and whilst focusing largely on the British Isles, it also covers subjects outside the UK. Prehistoric, medieval and post-medieval archaeology all figure prominently.
Table of Contents
Contributors
Editorial
Replicating Cultural Landscapes: Interpreting Rock-art in the Valcamonica, Lombardy, Italy 1 (George Nash)
A British Tradition? Mapping the Archaeological Landscape (Mark Bowden and David McOmish)
Living Landscape: Reading Hadrian’s Wall (Richard Hingley)
Adapting Landscapes: The Continual Modification of Leicestershire’s Open Fields (Ronan O’Donnell)
What Landscape Means to Me (Stephen Daniels)
Review Article
Buildings in the Landscape: Informed Conservation for the 21st century (Martin Cherry)
Reviews
Alexandra Walsham, The Reformation of the Landscape. Religion, Identity and Memory in Early Modern Britain and Ireland (David Stocker)
Christopher Tilley, Interpreting Landscapes: Geologies, Topographies, Identities; Explorations in Landscape Phenomenology 3 (Oscar Aldred)
Valerie Hall, The Making of Ireland’s Landscape Since the Ice Age (Ros Ó Maoldúin)
Nicholas Cooke, Fraser Brown and Chris Phillpotts (eds), From Hunter Gatherers to Huntsmen: A History of the Stansted Landscape (George Nash)
Tom Williamson, The Origins of Hertfordshire (John Blair)
Nicholas J. Higham and Martin J. Ryan (eds), Place-Names, Language and the Anglo-Saxon Landscape (Richard Jones)
Paul Cullen, Richard Jones and David N . Parsons, Thorps in a Changing Landscape (Christopher Scull)
Andrew Macnair and Tom Williamson, William Faden and Norfolk’s 18th-Century Landscape (Edward Martin)
Peter Brandon, The Discovery of Sussex (Casper Johnson)
Editorial
Replicating Cultural Landscapes: Interpreting Rock-art in the Valcamonica, Lombardy, Italy 1 (George Nash)
A British Tradition? Mapping the Archaeological Landscape (Mark Bowden and David McOmish)
Living Landscape: Reading Hadrian’s Wall (Richard Hingley)
Adapting Landscapes: The Continual Modification of Leicestershire’s Open Fields (Ronan O’Donnell)
What Landscape Means to Me (Stephen Daniels)
Review Article
Buildings in the Landscape: Informed Conservation for the 21st century (Martin Cherry)
Reviews
Alexandra Walsham, The Reformation of the Landscape. Religion, Identity and Memory in Early Modern Britain and Ireland (David Stocker)
Christopher Tilley, Interpreting Landscapes: Geologies, Topographies, Identities; Explorations in Landscape Phenomenology 3 (Oscar Aldred)
Valerie Hall, The Making of Ireland’s Landscape Since the Ice Age (Ros Ó Maoldúin)
Nicholas Cooke, Fraser Brown and Chris Phillpotts (eds), From Hunter Gatherers to Huntsmen: A History of the Stansted Landscape (George Nash)
Tom Williamson, The Origins of Hertfordshire (John Blair)
Nicholas J. Higham and Martin J. Ryan (eds), Place-Names, Language and the Anglo-Saxon Landscape (Richard Jones)
Paul Cullen, Richard Jones and David N . Parsons, Thorps in a Changing Landscape (Christopher Scull)
Andrew Macnair and Tom Williamson, William Faden and Norfolk’s 18th-Century Landscape (Edward Martin)
Peter Brandon, The Discovery of Sussex (Casper Johnson)
