Current World Archaeology 125

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Highlights:

From the Editor:
Farmers in the southern Netherlands found themselves in an enviable position during the Roman period. Nearby military bases along the Rhine brimmed with soldiers that needed feeding , while good soil allowed crops to be grown in abundance. Some landowners transformed these advantages into enormous wealth. Their success saw villa estates sprouting across a landscape that has gone on to capture the interest of generations of antiquarians and archaeologists. Bringing the evidence that they gathered together allows us to tell a story of country folk that is anything but everyday.

Digging in Benin City, Nigeria, is also shedding light on a remarkable residence: in this case, a royal palace. The site can stake a claim to being one of the most celebrated and notorious historic places in Africa. While the palace lay at the heart of a great kingdom, it was destroyed during a raid in 1897, with the loot including the sculptures now known as the ‘Benin Bronzes’. We go behind the scenes of the excavation project examining this site.

It is submerged prehistoric settlements that have been under the microscope in the western Balkans. Ancient pile-dwelling sites are often associated with Alpine lakes, but such settlements found favour across a much wider area. The challenge has always been to date the western Balkan sites. Overcoming this hurdle is revealing the remarkable potential of these settlements.

Where Roman frontiers are concerned, it is their scale rather than assigning them to a broad archaeological era that has posed problems for scholars. Now, though, a book series has managed to encircle the Roman Empire, providing an up-to-date account of the frontiers. We examine what has been accomplished.

Finally, in our travel section, Richard Hodges shares the results of recent excavations at Butrint, which are providing fascinating new insights into its fortunes in the 9th century AD.


Cover Date: Jun / Jul 2024, Volume 11 Issue 5

Cover Story

Roman villas in Limburg: The rise and fall of a prosperous farming community Around 20 Roman villas have been excavated in the Limburg region of the Netherlands. The heyday for this work came in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when a…

Features

Digging Benin City: Investigations have begun at one of Africa’s most celebrated and notorious sites Nigerian archaeologists are working with the British Museum and UK colleagues to research and excavate in Benin City. Mike Pitts…
Encircling the Empire: How Rome’s frontier network was chronicled Rome’s frontiers have defeated many, ranging all of the way from menacing barbarians to publishers planning a book series. Now…
Seeing beneath the surface: Unravelling prehistoric submerged settlements in the Balkans For two centuries, European scholars have explored prehistoric settlements preserved in Alpine lakes and bogs. The discovery of ancient pile-dwelling…

Comment

John Walker Hayes: 21.4.1938-27.2.2024 A personal tribute by Paul Reynolds.
Against the flow Rubina Raja & Søren M Sindbæk on managing ressources in urban African societies.
Finding Eden and fighting extinction In the complex story of human migration out of Africa, Homo sapiens are believed to have travelled steadily eastwards to…
Neolithic France: a seismic moment There has, of late, been a veritable tsunami of results from recent research that are literally transforming prehistory before our…

News

Views

The other Pompeii: Common lives in the shadow of Vesuvius An exhibition at Pompeii explores the less glamorous side of life in the ancient city.
CWA #125 crossword, and answers to crossword #124 Across 6 Large knife often found among Anglo-Saxon grave goods (9)8 Fertility goddess worshipped at Carthage (5)10 ___ Wall, Roman…
CWA Photo of the Year Competition 2024 – winners announced Results We had a fantastic selection of entries sent in for this year’s photo competition, with images that took us…
A lost monument re-emerges The Dolmen of Guadalperal is a megalithic tomb located in the Spanish province of Cáceres, some two hours south-west of…
Being ‘a Greek spy’ back at Butrint The site of Butrint, in the foreground, looking towards the Straits of Corfu. I was in Greece, rolling off a…
Bronze Age lipstick What is it? This small, intricately decorated cylindrical vial, measuring 6.7cm long and 1.9cm in diameter, is made of a…

Reviews

Reimagining Human–Animal Relations in the Circumpolar North REVIEW BY GEORGE NASH When we think about the history and archaeology of the north, we are immediately drawn to the…
Dead Man’s Chest: exploring the archaeology of piracy REVIEW BY SHANNON LEE DAWDY Dead Man’s Chest is a collection of essays and research reports by practising archaeologists and…
The Naked Neanderthal REVIEW BY MATTHEW POPE From the start, Slimak is clear that The Naked Neanderthal is a very personal book and…

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