Archaeology of Spiritualities

Academic anthologies devoted to the archaeology of religion, ritual, and the sacred are nothing new. Since the 1991 publication of Sacred and Profane, we have seen such volumes as Archaeology and World Religion (2001), The Archaeology of Ritual (2007), and Cult in Context (2007) shine light on the v...

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Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College London 2013-07-01
Series:Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/203/
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collection DOAJ
description Academic anthologies devoted to the archaeology of religion, ritual, and the sacred are nothing new. Since the 1991 publication of Sacred and Profane, we have seen such volumes as Archaeology and World Religion (2001), The Archaeology of Ritual (2007), and Cult in Context (2007) shine light on the various ways in which archaeologists can interpret the cosmological world views and ritual praxes of past societies. Archaeology of Spiritualities represents the latest foray into this fascinating topic, edited by three scholars with differing expertise; Rountree is a social anthropologist at New Zealand’s Massey University, while Christine Morris is a classical archaeologist at Ireland’s Trinity College, Dublin, and Alan A.D. Pearfield is a Minoan archaeologist at University College Dublin (UCD). Published in Springer’s “One World Archaeology” series, the book has its origins in a session of the Sixth World Archaeological Congress (WAC), held at UCD in 2008, which was organised by the trio alongside the University of Tanna’s Tõnno Junuks.
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spelling doaj.art-c7644dd1c8944ab6be767577b6f321cc2022-12-21T20:40:54ZengUniversity College LondonPapers from the Institute of Archaeology2041-90152013-07-0123110.5334/pia.422Archaeology of SpiritualitiesAcademic anthologies devoted to the archaeology of religion, ritual, and the sacred are nothing new. Since the 1991 publication of Sacred and Profane, we have seen such volumes as Archaeology and World Religion (2001), The Archaeology of Ritual (2007), and Cult in Context (2007) shine light on the various ways in which archaeologists can interpret the cosmological world views and ritual praxes of past societies. Archaeology of Spiritualities represents the latest foray into this fascinating topic, edited by three scholars with differing expertise; Rountree is a social anthropologist at New Zealand’s Massey University, while Christine Morris is a classical archaeologist at Ireland’s Trinity College, Dublin, and Alan A.D. Pearfield is a Minoan archaeologist at University College Dublin (UCD). Published in Springer’s “One World Archaeology” series, the book has its origins in a session of the Sixth World Archaeological Congress (WAC), held at UCD in 2008, which was organised by the trio alongside the University of Tanna’s Tõnno Junuks.https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/203/archaeology of religion
spellingShingle Archaeology of Spiritualities
Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
archaeology of religion
title Archaeology of Spiritualities
title_full Archaeology of Spiritualities
title_fullStr Archaeology of Spiritualities
title_full_unstemmed Archaeology of Spiritualities
title_short Archaeology of Spiritualities
title_sort archaeology of spiritualities
topic archaeology of religion
url https://student-journals.ucl.ac.uk/pia/article/id/203/