Article

The Times of Their Lives: from Chronological Precision to Kinds of History and Change

Details

Citation

Whittle A & Bayliss A (2007) The Times of Their Lives: from Chronological Precision to Kinds of History and Change. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 17 (1), pp. 21-28. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0959774307000030

Abstract
In preparing for the publication of the seven papers in the special supplement of Cambridge Archaeological Journal, we were concerned to find an outlet that could find a worldwide audience, as we believe that these papers have more than regional or period significance. That is a big claim. The case studies presented in the supplement are all of early Neolithic long barrows and long cairns of the fourth millennium cal. bc in southern England. Why should a study of the dating of constructions that held the remains of selected human dead, from a particular region of northwest Europe, at a particular point in the regional Neolithic sequence, have any wider importance? We offer two reasons. First, we are applying, perhaps for the first time to a group of monuments rather than to individual sites, a method for the interpretation of radiocarbon dates which enables much more precise estimates of chronology. Secondly, from this promise of far more robust and precise dating come many implications for the kinds of agents that we may wish to people our pasts, for the kinds of lives they lived, and for the histories that we can try to write about them. These are two developments, we suggest, which any archaeology needs to embrace.

Keywords
Neolithic monuments; radiocarbon dating; long barrows; long cairns;

Journal
Cambridge Archaeological Journal: Volume 17, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersEnglish Heritage
Publication date28/02/2007
Publication date online30/01/2007
Date accepted by journal05/10/2006
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28559
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN0959-7743
eISSN1474-0540

People (1)

Professor Alexandra Bayliss

Professor Alexandra Bayliss

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Research programmes

Research themes