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A Study of Activity at Neolithic Causewayed Enclosures Within the British Isles (Paperback)
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A Study of Activity at Neolithic Causewayed Enclosures Within the British Isles (Paperback)
Series: British Archaeological Reports British Series
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Since the first explorations of causewayed enclosures,
archaeologists have attempted to define these early Neolithic
monuments in relation to territorial patterns, pottery typologies,
and ultimately though the concept of structured deposition. While
these concepts have been important in advancing our knowledge of
causewayed enclosures, the interpretations of the material from the
enclosures ditch segments and other areas of these sites have
failed to take into account the importance of how objects and
materials came to be at the sites, were produced and used there,
preceding deposition. This book argues that activities at
enclosures should not be categorically separated from the everyday
activities of those who visited the enclosures; that by looking in
detail at the spatial and temporal distribution of objects in
association with chronology that the practical activities people
engaged in at enclosures have been overshadowed by interpretations
stressing the ritual nature of structured deposits. These
activities had a direct relationship with enclosures and local
landscapes. This argues that perhaps more deposits within
causewayed enclosures were the result of everyday activities which
occurred while people gathered at these sites and not necessarily
the result of a 'ritual' act. A re-interpretation of the detail
from nine causewayed enclosures within three 'regions' of the
British Isles (East Anglia, Sussex and Wessex) are examined. This
theoretical approach to activity goes beyond the deposition of
objects and also includes enclosure construction, object
modification such as flint knapping, animal butchery, and the use
of pottery and wood. On a micro scale this indicates that each
community who constructed an enclosure deposited objects in a
unique and 'personal' manner which was acceptable within their
defined social system. On a macro scale, this indicates that
although all British causewayed enclosures seem to 'function' in
the same way, the individual sites were constructed, modified and
used in distinctive ways. Some enclosures seem to have existed
quite independently from their neighbours while other enclosures
within close proximity to each other had a specialised role to
play. These specialised roles indicate that some enclosures may
have been constructed and used by groups who primarily came to them
in order to carry out a specific set of activities which were then
defined through deposition.
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