Eric Peet (1882-1934) is better known as an Egyptologist, but this,
his 1909 first published work, remained the standard reference on
its subject for many years. Gaining a Craven Scholarship from
Oxford, he spent three years exploring Italian and Maltese sites,
but later found work on Egyptian excavations (his co-authored
publication on The Cemeteries of Abydos is also reissued in this
series). This book is organised chronologically from the
palaeolithic period to the Bronze Age, and, as Peet points out in
his preface, pulls together not only his own research but the
earlier work of Italian archaeologists, mostly published in
scattered form in journals. From the finds in early cave shelters
to the sophisticated metal and ceramic wares found in Bronze Age
settlements and burials, this highly illustrated work demonstrates
the development of prehistoric society in a region generally much
better known for the later achievements of the Romans.
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