Recorded Places, Experienced Places

The Holocene rock art of the Iberian Atlantic north-west

£63.00
Editors:
Ana M. S. Bettencourt, Manuel Santos Estevez, Hugo A. Sampaio and Daniela Cardoso
Publication Year:
2017
Language:
English
ISBN:
9781407314846
Paperback:
222 pages, Illustrated throughout in colour and black and white. 122 figures (35 in colour), 3 tables (2 in colour)
BAR number:
S2878
+

Description

This book springs from the compilation of papers and posters presented in 2013 and 2014 at the 2nd and 3rd Enardas Colloquia, entitled ‘Living Places, Experienced Places’. The first part, in two chapters, is entitled 'Concepts and tools to study rock art'. The second part, ‘From sub-naturalistic to Schematic rock art tradition’, discusses various expressions of recorded art in the hinterland area of northwest Iberia, as well as expressions of the schematic art tradition from north-central Portugal. The third part, ‘Atlantic tradition rock art’ comprises four chapters. The fourth part, ‘Other styles’, includes five chapters focusing on depictions that the book editors consider distinct from the best-known regional styles.

AUTHOR
Ana M. S. Bettencourt is Professor of Archaeology at University of Minho, Braga, Portugal. Her main research interests are burial contexts and practices; rock art; metal depositions and archaeology and tourism, on which subjects she has led several research projects and published numerous books and articles.
Manuel Santos-Estévez obtained a PhD in History in 2004 at the University of Santiago de Compostela. His main research focuses on rock art, sculpture and landscape archaeology. Since 2014 he has been a post-doctoral researcher at the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) at the University of Minho. He has directed 50 archaeological projects, and has published a number of papers in international reviews.
Hugo Aluai Sampaio holds a PhD in Settlement and Landscape Archaeology and works in the School of Management at the Polytechnic Institute of Cávado and Ave, in Portugal. His research is dedicated to the Bronze Age, focusing on issues related to metallurgy and deposition of metallic objects, funerary practices and contexts, settlement and rock art. He also works in archaeology and cultural heritage.
Daniela Cardoso obtained a PhD in rock art in 2015, at the University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Portugal. She works at the Sociedade Martins Sarmento in Guimarães, Portugal, where she participates on projects related to rock art and to rock art and tourism.
Contributors: Emilio Abad-Vidal, M. Isabel C. Alves, Ana M. Arruda, Ana M.S. Bettencourt, Cláudio Brochado, Álvaro Campelo, Daniela Cardoso, Joana Castro Teixeira, Nuno Coelho Gomes, Beatriz Comendador Rey, Maria de Jesus Sanches, Jorge Juan Eiroa, Ramón Fabregas Valcarce, Antón Fernández Malde, Gonçalo Ferreira, Manuel Antonio Franco Fernández, Félix González Insua, Joana N. Leite, Paulo A.P. Lemos, George H. Nash, Gabriel R. Pereira, Josefa Rey Castiñeira, Alda Rodrigues, Carlos Rodríguez-Rellán, Hugo A. Sampaio, Manuel Santos Estevez, António Manuel S.P. Silva, Isabel S. Silva, Pedro P. Simões, Luís Sousa, Manuel Valério Figueiredo, Alia Vázquez Martínez

Table of Contents (S2878_9781407314846_ToC.pdf, 152 Kb) [Download]

Introduction (S2878_9781407314846_Introduction.pdf, 280 Kb) [Download]