Current World Archaeology 110

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Highlights:

From the Editor:
The fame of the Incas often eclipses other ancient societies that flourished in Peru. These dazzling groups rose and fell at various times and places, but their stories are essential for understanding the Inca Empire. Because the region was relatively isolated from outside influences, these Peruvian societies developed from unique building blocks, which display common themes that can be traced over thousands of years. We follow some of these threads, to seek out the origins of the Incas.

It is a different story in Adulis, a former port city of the Kingdom of Aksum. Excavating Christian places of worship there has revealed buildings that drew on influences and materials from overseas to both the east and west, as well as distinctive local architecture. The results shed light on the connections at work in a cosmopolitan trading hub at a crossroads between the seas.

When it comes to influences, the jungle is rarely judged to have done much for human progress ever since our distant ancestors left it in favour of the African savannah. But how accurate is this view? Examining the results of research conducted in tropical forests presents an alternative picture. Modern scientific analysis reveals that ancient groups chose to live in this environment, while aerial survey is laying bare just how much could be achieved by mastering this resource-rich environment.

In Butrint, Albania, a more old-fashioned method was employed to record examples of an extraordinary set of inscriptions discovered in the 1920s. Most of these texts are concerned with freeing slaves, but – after almost a century exposed to the elements – these documents have become less legible. Now the chance discovery of paper moulds made from some inscriptions in the 1930s offers the opportunity to check the accuracy of the original readings.

Finally, Richard Hodges profiles Tracy Roberts of LoveItaly, taking a look at her ongoing work to help conserve Italy’s heritage.


Cover Date: Dec / Jan 2022, Volume 10 Issue 2

Cover Story

Peru: a journey in time The Incas dominate perceptions of Peru’s past, but their empire did not appear out of nowhere. Instead, it drew on traditions and concepts that developed across the central Andes for…

Features

Rethinking the jungle: the forgotten story of humanity and tropical forests Humans and jungles are often seen as a poor combination. It is easy to write off the environment as challenging…
Face to face with the Netherlands’ first Neanderthal The young Neanderthal man, known as ‘Krijin’, lived between 50,000 and 70,000 years ago in Doggerland, the prehistoric landscape that…
A crossroads between the seas: the origins of early Christianity Excavations in Eritrea are revealing early Christian sites from the Kingdom of Aksum. What can these places of worship reveal…
Butrint’s slave manumissions: shedding new light on the UNESCO World Heritage city During 2020, 'squeezes' – copies – made in the 1930s of Butrint’s exceptional inscriptions from the Sanctuary of Asclepius were…

Comment

The Treasures of Sanxingdui The contents of those two pits amaze. They include some of the most remarkable bronzes from the ancient world: human…
Making a difference? The wealth produced by Egyptian peasants was spent on warfare, monuments, and luxury. Egyptian artisans were despised as manual labourers.…
American advances activists in Mexico City are claiming that the arrival of Columbus in America opened the door to European oppression and…

News

Views

Engraved deer bone What is it? This 51,000-year-old engraved toe bone is one of the oldest works of art ever found. The bone,…
Tracy Roberts and LoveItaly Based in Rome, LoveItaly is now in its seventh year and its accent is decidedly American and not patrician. It…
Byzantine wine factory Excavations in the city of Yavne in Israel have discovered a vast 1,500-year-old industrial complex thought to be the largest…
Gold of the Great Steppe A new exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge presents an array of artefacts from the Iron Age Saka culture…

Reviews

Ontologies of Rock Art Back in the days when I was an undergraduate, I was introduced to the mystical world of social theory. My…
History of the Caucasus For thousands of years, people have lived on the 1,000-mile span of mountains stretching, high and low, from the Black…

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