Visions of Antiquity
Contributor(s)
Pearce, Susan (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
This fascinating portrait of the Society of Antiquaries of London, founded in 1707, assesses the impact that individual Fellows and the Society as a whole have had in influencing the way we visualise and understand the past. There are, for example, essays on the Society's pioneering role in recording monuments and antiquities for posterity, in establishing the scientific and empirical basis of archaeological studies, in replacing Biblically based timeframes with a clearer understanding of deep time measured in millions of years, in drawing up the first legislation protecting ancient monuments, and in funding and publishing the great excavations of the last one hundred years, from Stonehenge, Maiden Castle, Richborough and Sutton Hoo to Aksum (Ethiopia) and Mons Porphyrites (Egypt). All the papers represent fresh and original scholarship and they tell us much about the Society's achievements (and some of the accompanying conflicts between personalities and ideas) over three hundred years. They are based on diaries, letters, minute books and confidential government papers and on portraits that chart the changing image of the antiquary from a figure of fun to heroic seeker of forgotten people and civilizations.
Keywords
Excavations; historical research; antiquaryISBN
9780854312870Publisher
Society of Antiquaries of LondonPublisher website
https://www.sal.org.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2007Series
Archaeologia, 111Classification
History
History: theory and methods
Archaeology
Archaeological science, methodology and techniques