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         European Low Countries Archaeology:     more detail

61. Ancient Monuments Board For Scotland 46th Annual Report: Page 7
the longterm future of the archaeology service in influence from two almost separateEuropean stands, from the Auld Alliance) and the low countries, and from
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/library2/doc15/amar-07.asp
Non-Graphical version
Ancient Monuments Board for Scotland Forty-sixth Annual Report 1999
APPENDIX 2
Response to the consultation document entitled ' Celebrating Scotland - A National Cultural Strategy Arts and Cultural Heritage Division
Scottish Executive Education Department
Area 1A
Victoria Quay
Edinburgh EH6 6QQ
Celebrating Scotland - A National Cultural Strategy
My Board have obtained copies of the above consultation document which invited responses by 30 October. I should point out that the Ancient Monuments Board for Scotland is the statutory advisory body to Scottish Ministers on built heritage matters. The proposal to develop a national cultural strategy is welcome but such a strategy must include all aspects of Scottish culture. There is little reference to the built heritage in the document and none at all as far as we can see to archaeology. I understand that Historic Scotland had no input into the document. In particular, the Focus Group does not have any representation from the built heritage sector and this really should be rectified. We would commend the introductory clauses to the latest draft of Historic Scotland's Conservation Charter in creating the case for the built heritage in the context of a national cultural strategy. Here, the case for the uniqueness of Scotland's built heritage is particularly well made.

62. XIICourse Descriptions, Art History
A survey of Ancient Greek Art and archaeology, with stress The visual arts in theLow countries, the German territories ARTH*2580 european Art, 19001945 F(3-0
http://www.uoguelph.ca/calendar_archives/undergrad/October2001/12arth.shtml
2001-2002 Undergraduate Calendar XIICourse Descriptions, Art History School of Fine Art and Music. Students with a special interest in particular courses in Art History should consult the School concerning prerequisites. ARTH*1510 Art Historical Studies I F(3-0). [0.50]. A consideration of the visual arts in the Western tradition. Emphasis will be placed on historical and critical analysis of key monuments and on the prerequisite technology, as well as on various ways of looking at the visual past and present. Focus will be on the visual arts from prehistory through the Middle Ages. ARTH*1520 Art Historical Studies II W(3-0). [0.50]. A continuation of ARTH*1510 with particular emphasis on the visual arts from the Renaissance to today. Prerequisite(s): ARTH*1510 ARTH*2150 Art and Archaeology of Greece F(3-0). [0.50]. A survey of Ancient Greek Art and Archaeology, with stress on form and function plus stylistic trends and aesthetic values. The course will illuminate the cultural, social, and political life in Ancient Greece. (Also listed as CLAS*2150 Equate(s): CLAS*2150 ARTH*2280 Modern Architecture: Architecture from the Industrial Revolution to Today W(3-0). [0.50].

63. English Heritage - Conservation Through Aerial Archaeology
between workers in the fields of lowlevel air to promote conservation of the Europeanarchaeological heritage over 70 delegates from 18 countries, from within
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/Default.asp?WCI=Node&WCE=6980

64. Belgian Francophone Collections
The Southern low countries are defined as comprising modern Belgium (ie includingthe old in the history of religion, history of art, archaeology and history.
http://www.bl.uk/collections/westeuropean/belgium.html
document.write(''); Home Collections West European French ... French-Canadian Collections
Belgium
British Library French Section
The British Library’s Belgian francophone collections are among the most extensive outside Belgium. The exact size is not known since, as with other country/language holdings, they have no separate catalogue and are dispersed within the rest of the collection. There are approximately 7,200 titles in French in the Current Catalogue which covers material acquired since 1975. The collections contain books and periodicals on all subjects in the humanities, social sciences and history of science, with particular emphasis on history and literature. A good collection of official publications is held by the Official Publications and Social Policy Reading Area. Currently there are some 170 current titles on standing order (periodicals and monographs in series) and some 200 monographs are acquired each year. Early collections Modern collections Related Internet resources
Early collections
The pre-1851 collections are the responsibility of Early Printed Collections . Details of the British Library’s early imprints may be found in the French and Dutch short-title catalogues described on the Early Printed Collections web pages.

65. Offshore-SEA - Strategic Environmental Assessment Site
please click here 9 european Costal Resources Norway, Denmark, Germany, the low Countriesand France Management Socio Economics archaeology Existing Activities.
http://www.habitats-directive.org/sea/dev/html_file/sea3_doc1.cgi?index=5

66. British Archaeology, No 51, February 2000 Books
Iberian peninsula, Germany and the low countries, and the development of the northernEuropeancentred trading the considerable amount of archaeology that has
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba51/ba51book.html

67. GCMRS Staff
email C.Morris@archaeology.arts.gla.ac.uk. law, against a general background ofEuropean and Scots later medieval France and the low countries; Valois Burgundy
http://www.gla.ac.uk/centres/mars/CMRSsta2.htm
Staff research interests This list is intended to be a complete list of Glasgow University staff with medieval and renaissance research interests, revised September 2002. Don't hesitate to let Alaric Hall know of any changes or omissions. Dr Alison Adams (French)
Emblems studies, especially textual criticism; particular interest in study of vernacular translations in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Descriptive bibliography.
e-mail: A.Adams@french.arts.gla.ac.uk Susan M. Anthony (English literature)
Shakespeare; Renaissance Literature; 19th century women's literature
e-mail: S.Anthony@englit.arts.gla.ac.uk Dr Stuart Airlie (History)
The political and cultural development of the barbarian kingdoms in the post-Roman/early medieval west; specifically, the nature of authority and power in the royal and aristocratic families in Carolingian Europe; the construction and 'use' of the Middle Ages in modern culture.
e-mail: S.Airlie@medhist.arts.gla.ac.uk Prof. David Bates (History)
Britain and northern France from the tenth to the early thirteenth centuries; the Duchy of Normandy, 911-1204; charter diplomatic in the central medieval period.
e-mail: D.Bates@medhist.arts.gla.ac.uk

68. MEDCIT00
Colloquium in european History Medieval Cities. Fehring, Günter P. The Archaeologyof Medieval Germany An The Origins of Towns in the low countries and the
http://www.uwm.edu/~carlin/medcit00.htm
HISTORY 850
COLLOQUIUM IN EUROPEAN HISTORY: MEDIEVAL CITIES
PROFESSOR MARTHA CARLIN
History 850 UWM, Fall 2000-1 Colloquium in European History: Medieval Cities Martha Carlin Office: Holton 324, tel. (414) 229-5767 Messages: UWM History Dept., tel. (414) 229-4361 E-mail: carlin@csd.uwm.edu Home page: www.uwm.edu/~carlin Office hours: Tues. 2:00-3:00 or by app't
Course description: This course will have two goals: to familiarize students with in-depth bibliographical research techniques, and to survey the published literature (including materials available on the Internet) concerning medieval cities, c AD 300-1500. Each student will choose an individual city to study. We will cover a different topic every week, for which we will all read a set selection of modern studies on medieval urban history. In addition, each week all students will compile a bibliography on that week's topic for their own city and report on it. At the end of the semester students will submit a complete annotated bibliography on their city, together with a short (4-5 pages) overview of its history in the medieval period. The overview must be fully documented with notes and bibliography.
Topics: origins; topography; local government; economy; town and countryside; demography; religion and the church; work and guilds; standards of living; water supply, sanitation, and public health; childhood and education; crisis and disorder; recreation and civic ceremony.

69. ORB: The Online Reference Book For Medieval Studies
Industrial archaeology in Belgium. the historical geography, mostly of the low Countriesand surrounding 19th Session of the Permanent european Conference for
http://orb.rhodes.edu/encyclop/high/low_count/brabant.html
ORB Online Encyclopedia
Low Countries
Historical Geography of Brabant
Section Editor: K. A. W. H. Leenders
Preliminary Outline for this Section:

70. 6th Annual Meeting Of European Association Of Archaeologist (EAA)
that can be found from the low countries in the 5th International Conference on WaterfrontArchaeology was held a total of twenty Northeuropean towns, ranging
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/publ/eaa2000.htm
th Annual Meeting of
European Association of Archaeologist (EAA)
13 to 17 September 2000, Lisbon Preliminary program with abstracts
Section I – Close encounters
Harbours and calls are encounter areas for sea- and river routes and hinterlands characterized by settlements of various kinds and by agricultural and manufacturing activities. The aim of the session is to study the links between trade and local productions through urban archaeology, settlement archaeology, landscape and underwater archaeology, by means of papers focusing on general issues or specific case-studies. Within the specific frame, suggested topics interest are: the mechanisms and organization of trade (local and long-distance exchange); relation between State and free market; the links between the productive areas and the commercial flows; the peculiar role of single areas, harbours, sites.
Speakers, section I:
MARINELLA PASQUINUCCI-ANTONELLA DEL RIO, Università di Pisa
and Dr TIMM WESKI, email KL911ae@mail.lrz-muenchen.de

71. Portuguese Vs Spanish Shipbuilding Practices
of some other wood species such as european oak from Poland and the low Countriesfor the The International Journal of Nautical archaeology and Underwater
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/bld/portspan.htm
Portuguese vs Spanish Shipbuilding Practices
By Paulo Monteiro Portugal created a maritime empire, an empire that relied not on the conquest of land and territories but rested on naval superiority, an empire formed by ephemeral sea routes and fragile harbours of support, like those of Ilha de Mozambique, Santa Helena and Terceira. So, unlike the Spanish empire, nothing substantial remains of this former empire on land. Till now, the Portuguese colonial expansion has been studied principally from its architectural evidence and from the documentary evidence left by its major participants or by the contemporary observers of the process. But nothing is known about the true instrument of the Portuguese expansion: the Portuguese built ship.
Spanish shipfinds
The Emanuel Point Rye A wreck, Cattewater wreck (1), Molasses Reef wreck (2), Highborn Cay wreck (3), Western Ledge Reef wreck (4), San Esteban San Juan (6) and the San Diego (7) are all examples of archaeologically researched Iberian vessels that represent the Spanish part of the Peninsula. Spanish galizabra, 1589. Archivo General de Simancas

72. Undergraduate Record, Chapter 6: College Of Arts And Sciences
history, theory and field techniques of classical archaeology. century in Italy, theLow countries, France and 246 (3) (Y) Eighteenth-Century european Art A
http://www.virginia.edu/registrar/records/98ugradrec/chapter6/uchap6-3.5a.html
6: College of Arts and Sciences General Information Academic Information Departments and Programs Faculty ... Studio Art
Art History Course Descriptions
ARTH 101 - (4) (Y)
History of Art I

Study of the history and interpretation of architecture, sculpture and painting. Begins with prehistoric art and follows the main stream of Western civilization to the end of the medieval period. ARTH 102 - (4) (S)
History of Art II

Study of the history and interpretation of architecture, sculpture and painting from 1400 to the present. ARTH 103 - (3) (IR)
History of Art III

Study of the history and interpretation of the primary artistic traditions of China and Japan from prehistoric times through the nineteenth century. ARTH 201 - (3) (Y)
Second Year Seminar in the History of Art

A seminar on art historical problems and methods, intended for students who may be interested in majoring in art history. ARTH 202 - (3) (IR)
Tigris to Tiber: Art of the Ancient World

A survey of major masterpieces of painting, sculpture, and architecture from Prehistoric Europe, Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Aegean, Greece, Rome, Constantinople, and Medieval Europe. Style and subject matter are studied as languages expressing the values and meanings associated with changing norms of human personality in relation to the gods, the state, and nature, and as the basis of aesthetic delight. ARTH 209 - (3) (Y) Sacred Sites Examines the art and architecture of ten religious sites around the world focusing on the ritual, culture, and history as well as the artistic characteristics of each site.

73. Periodicals
costs) € 55 (within the european Union); € 58 papers on history, art, archaeologyand literature those regarding the former low countries and modernday
http://www.brepols.net/publishers/periodicals.htm
Brepols publishes a wide variety of periodicals across a range of the humanities. Please select a periodical below or check our complete online catalogue for details on single issues. Antiquité Tardive Apocrypha Archives of Asian Art Bibliothèque annuelle du Moyen Age tardif ... Viator Antiquité Tardive (AT) Editorial responsibility: Association pour l’Antiquité Tardive (contact: N. Duval) The Association’s journal aims at enriching the study of written texts from the fourth to the seventh centuries by setting these into a wider context using a multidisciplinary approach covering history, archaeology, epigraphy, law and philology. Frequency: 1 issue a year Price: Apocrypha (APOCRA) Editorial responsibility: Association pour l'étude de la littérature apocryphe chrétienne The journal is focused on the treasures of material borne through literature and other expressions of the imagination over two millennia. This material was generated, cultivated and transmitted by numerous Jewish communities and a range of Christian communities throughout Asia, Africa and Europe. Frequency: 1 issue a year Price: Archives of Asian Art AAA Editorial responsibility: Asian Society Archives of Asian Art is a journal of the Asian Society, one of the world's foremost institutions dedicated to building bridges of understanding between Americans and Asians. It provides information and insights about Asia and the Pacific, and offers fresh perspectives on the forces and issues that are shaping Asia's relations with the United States and the rest of the world.

74. Palaeography, MSS & Book History
a critical edition of medieval booklists from the Southern low countries. thematically,relating to the medieval history of different european countries.
http://www.brepols.net/publishers/book_history.htm
The following series fall under the rubric Series on Palaeography, Manuscript Studies and Book History Please click on a series to get a detailed description or use the scrollbars to scan all available series. Armarium Codicum Insignium Autographa Medii Aevi Bibliologia Bibliotheca Manuscripta Monasteriorum Belgii ... Index Scriptorum Operumque Latino-Belgicorum Medii A evi Manuscrits Datés Conservés en Belgique Monumenta Palaeographica Medii Aevi - Series Gallica Monumenta Palaeographica Medii Aevi - Series Hebraica Monumenta Palaeographica Medii Aevi - Series Hispanic ... Armarium Codicum Insignium (ACI) Editorial responsibility: The Armarium has been established to provide facsimile reproductions of important manuscripts along with a detailed study of the palaeography and the textual traditions contained. The series is limited to facsimiles of manuscripts originating from the Graeco-Roman world and in particular those of a Christian inspiration. Bibliologia (BIB) Editorial responsibility: C. Sirat, J. Irigoin and E. Poulle

75. School Of History & Archaeology - Module Description
School of History and archaeology. development of the entry ceremony was a Europeanphenomenon, we on examples from northern France and the low countries in the
http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/History/postgrad/modules/violence.htm
School of History and Archaeology
Medieval History module
Violence, Religion, and Ritual in the Medieval World, 600-1500
1. CHRISTIANISATION AND CONVERSION IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES ( DR M. DUNN What did Christianisation and conversion mean in England in the seventh and eighth centuries? What was the nature of pagan belief and by what means did the church seek to replace it? Was there such a thing as a Christian 'conversion literature'? How successful was the church in its attempt to supplant other beliefs and to what extent did they survive as 'magic 'folk-belief or medicine? How did Christianity itself develop as a result of contact with paganism? To answer these questions, the seminar will look at the theoretical, literary, anthropological, archaeological and toponymic contribution to our knowledge and examine a wide range of source-material including histories, 'conversion literature', saints' lives, penitentials, decrees of church councils, letters, artefacts, poetry, charms, curses and cures. Seminar I: Theory and Historiography of Belief, Conversion, Christianisation and

76. HJG: Periodicals Directory: Complete Index: L
european Electronic Journal for Feminist Exegesis / Revue Européenne Electroniqued'Exégèse Féministe / Europäische elektronische The low countries.
http://www.history-journals.de/journals/hjg-title-l.html
WWW-Virtual Library The History Journals Guide
by Stefan Blaschke - Periodicals Directory -
The History Index Home Complete Index Electronical Index Chronological Index ... Announcements Complete Index A B C D ... K L M N O P ...

77. CMS Faculty
Eastern Civilizations Middle Eastern art and archaeology. JHA Munro/Economics MedievalEuropean economic history, esp the low countries and England, c1250c1550
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/medieval/fac.html
Centre for Medieval Studies
Graduate Faculty
The Centre is fortunate in being able to call upon the services of medievalists throughout the University of Toronto. The faculty in 2002-3 are: J. Abray /History
Early modern sex and gender; early modern masculinity; late medieval and early modern piety; reformation history. S. Akbari /English
Allegory; comparative literature; science and literature; nationalism; depictions of Islam. L. D. Armstrong /Medieval Studies
Legal and economic history of late medieval Northern Italy. T. D. Barnes /Classical Studies
History, literature, culture and religion of the Roman Empire and late Antiquity. K. Bartlett /History
Intellectual and cultural relations between England and Italy in the Renaissance; European humanism. D. Black /Philosophy
Medieval philosophy; Arabic philosophy; Aquinas; 13th century Latin philosophy; the medieval Aristotelian tradition. Principal areas of philosophy: epistemology and philosophy of mind. J.R. Blackburn
Early modern Yemen; Ottoman history; Arabic. J. Blackmore

78. Athens Mobility
which provide accommodation at relatively low prices The european and InternationalRelations Department also provides Students from EU countries, who have the E
http://www.ulb.ac.be/unica/SMG99/athens_mob.html
UETHNIKO KAI KAPODISTRIAKO PANEPISTIMIOU ATHINON
University of Athens

79. Near Total Ape-Habitat Loss Foreseen By 2030
initiative, is also working with the european Space Agency to square miles), annualloss of lowimpacted gorilla habitat in countries including Nigeria
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/09/0903_020903_apes.html
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Near Total Ape-Habitat Loss Foreseen By 2030 National Geographic News
September 3, 2002
Less than 10 percent of the remaining habitat of the great apes of Africa will be left relatively undisturbed by 2030 if road building, mining camps, and other infrastructure developments continue at current levels, a new report suggests. The future is even more bleak for the orangutans of Southeast Asia The report indicates that within 30 years there will be almost no habitat left that can be considered "relatively undisturbed." GRASP is a partnership of UN agencies, ape range and donor states, convention secretariats and conservation non-governmental organizations (NGOs) committed to halting the rapid decline of all the great ape species. Primatologist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Jane Goodall is a "special ape envoy" to GRASP. If development continues at an unchecked pace, just 8 percent of the chimpanzee's current habitat in Africa will be left relatively undisturbed by the year 2030, a new UN report suggests.
Photograph by Gallo Images/CORBIS
This story aired on our U.S. cable television program

80. IAG Newsletter No. 15 (3/1998)
with the financial support of the european Union, COST Geomorphologists has been keptas low as possible. for interested individuals in other countries to find
http://main.amu.edu.pl/~sgp/iagn153.htm
International Association of Geomorphologists
Newsletter no. 15 (3/1998)
+++ Important News +++ Important News +++ Important News +++
After three Regional Conferences in Asia and Europe (1991: Ankara, Turkey; 1995: Singapore; 1996: Budapest, Hungary) the International Association of Geomorphologists is delighted to have a formal invitation of the Brazilian Geomorphology Union to host the IAG Regional Conference 1999 in Rio de Janeiro. The proposed dates of the meeting are July 17 - 21, followed by a local field trip on July 22 and post-conference excursions starting on July 23. More details regarding this meeting will be given in one of the next issues of the Newsletter.
Interim reports of the IAG Working Groups
Working Group on Geoarchaeology The Working Group on Geoarchaeology was proposed in 1996 at the IAG Regional Conference in Hungary and confirmed in 1997 at the IAG International Conference in Bologna, Italy. The Working Group is chaired by Prof. Dr. Morgan De Dapper (Universiteit Gent, Belgium) and co-chaired by Prof. Dr. Jose-Luis Pena-Monne (Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain) and Dr. John Boardman (University of Oxford, U.K.). The main objective of the group is the strengthening of links between geomorphology and archaeology. Indeed, geomorphology and archaeology have great overlapping interests as is demonstrated by recent developments. Archaeological studies are more and more imbedded in a broader regional geomorphological context and in turn provide dating evidence to better understand the development of geosystems through the times of human occupation.

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