Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T07:54:57.091Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The innocents and the sceptics: ANTIQUITY and Classical archaeology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Nicola Terrenato*
Affiliation:
Department of Classics, CB# 3145, 101 Howell Hall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NC 27599-3145, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Special section: Celebrating 75 years of Antiquity
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2002

References

Ashby, T. 1928. Three Italian archaeological congresses, Antiquity 2: 337.Google Scholar
A Veni, A.F. & Romano, G. 1994. Orientation and Etruscan ritual, Antiquity 68: 545–63.Google Scholar
Belloc, H. 1924. Europe and the Faith. London: Constable.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. & Snodgrass, A. 1988. Mediterranean survey and the city, Antiquity 62:5771.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. 1984. Structuralism and myth in Minoan studies, Antiquity 58: 3338.Google Scholar
Boardman, J. 1960. The multiple brush, Antiquity 34: 85–9.Google Scholar
Bradford, J. 1947. Etruria from the air, Antiquity 21: 74.Google Scholar
Bradford, J. 1949. ‘Buried landscapes’ in Southern Italy, Antiquity 23: 58.Google Scholar
Calza, G. 1933. Ostia in the light of recent discoveries, Antiquity 7: 405–9.Google Scholar
Chadwick, J. 1953. Greek records in the Minoan script, Antiquity 27: 196200.Google Scholar
Chadwick, J. 1959. Minoan Linear A: a provisional balance sheet, Antiquity 33: 269–78.Google Scholar
Collingwood, R.G. 1927. Roman frontier in Britain, Antiquity 1: 1530.Google Scholar
Collingwood, R.G. 1930. A newly-discovered Roman site in Cumberland, air photograph, Antiquity 4: 472–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collingwood, R.G. 1932. Two Greek fortresses in Sicily, Antiquity 6: 261–75.Google Scholar
Crawford, O.G.S. 1928. Our debt to Rome? Antiquity 2: 173–88.Google Scholar
Crawford, O.G.S. 1934. Sidonius and his times, Antiquity 8: 8184.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. 1965. Fishbourne (1961–4), Antiquity 39: 177–83.Google Scholar
Crawford, O.G.S. 1966. The temple of Sulis-Minerva at Bath, Antiquity 40: 199204.Google Scholar
Crawford, O.G.S. 1984. Images of Britannia, Antiquity 58: 175–8.Google Scholar
Frere, S.S. 1964. Verulamium, three Roman cities, Antiquity 38: 103–12.Google Scholar
Gjerstad, E. 1928. The Swedish excavations in Cyprus, Antiquity 2: 189–91.Google Scholar
Gjerstad, E. 1952. Stratigraphie excavations in the Forum Romanum, Antiquity 26: 6064.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hingley, R. (ed.) 2001. Images of Rome. Portsmouth: JRA.Google Scholar
Hood, M.S.F. 1962. The Knossos tablets: a complete view, Antiquity 3840.Google Scholar
Kenyon, K. 1952. Early Jericho, Antiquity 26: 116–22.Google Scholar
Krautheimer, R. & Corbett, S. 1960. The Constantinian basilica of the Lateran, Antiquity 34: 201–6.Google Scholar
Lees, S. 2002. Separation versus a Larger Vision, The Archaeological Record 2: 1113.Google Scholar
Marchand, S.L. 1996. Down from Olympus: archaeology and philhellenism in Germany, 1750–1970. Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1939. The volcanic destruction of Minoan Crete, Antiquity 13: 425–9.Google Scholar
Mattingley, H. 1934. Britannia, Antiquity 8: 381–94.Google Scholar
Morrison, J.S. 1991. Ancient Greek measures of length in nautical contexts, Antiquity 65: 298305.Google Scholar
Nylander, C. 1963. The fall of Troy, Antiquity 37: 611.Google Scholar
Pallottino, M. 1962. The Etruscan Lion, Antiquity 36: 201–5.Google Scholar
Peacock, D.P.S. 1989. The mills of Pompeii, Antiquity 63: 205–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peacock, D.P.S., Williams-Thorpe, O., Thorpe, R.S. & Tindle, A.G. 1994. Mons Claudianus and the problem of the ‘granito del foro’: a geological and geochemical approach, Antiquity 68: 209–30.Google Scholar
Potter, T.W. & Jackson, R.P.G. 1982. The Roman site of Stonea, Cambs, Antiquity 56: 111–20.Google Scholar
Randall-Maciver, D. 1927. The Etruscans, Antiquity 1:159–71.Google Scholar
Randall-Maciver, D. 1928a. Forerunners of the Romans, Antiquity 2: 2636.Google Scholar
Randall-Maciver, D. 1928b. Forerunners of the Romans II, Antiquity 2: 133–46.Google Scholar
Schnapp, A. 1993. La conquête du passé: aux origines de l’archéologie. Paris: Carré.Google Scholar
Shear, T.L. 1933. Remarkable discoveries in the Athenian Agora, Antiquity 7: 261267.Google Scholar
Tilley, A. 1992. Three men to a room – a completely different trireme, Antiquity 66: 599611.Google Scholar
Trigger, B. 1989. A history of archaeological thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Van Andel, T.H. & Runnels, C. 1988. An essay on the ‘emergence of civilization’ in the Aegean world, Antiquity 62: 234–47.Google Scholar
Ventris, M. 1953. A note on decipherment methods, Antiquity 27:200206.Google Scholar
Vita-Finzi, C. 1961. Roman dams in Tripolitania, Antiquity 35: 1420.Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1936. Mycenae, Antiquity 10: 405–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1940. The Treasury of Atreus, Antiquity 14: 233.Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, J.B. 1942. Problems of Maltese prehistory, Antiquity 19: 1935.Google Scholar
Webster, T.B.L. 1957. Mycenaean records: a review, Antiquity 31: 48.Google Scholar
White, K.D. 1963. Wheat-farming in Roman times, Antiquity 202–12.Google Scholar
White, K.D. 1965. The productivity of labour in Roman agriculture, Antiquity 102–7.Google Scholar
White, L.A. 1957. Evolution and diffusion, Antiquity 31: 214–18.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, D. 1983. The future of ancient Rome, Antiquity 57: 3844.Google Scholar
Willey, G.R. 1973. Man, settlement, and urbanism, Antiquity 47: 269279.Google Scholar
Wiseman, J. 2002. Archaeology as an academic discipline, The Archaeological Record 2: 811.Google Scholar