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How Ancient Europeans Saw the World

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A revolutionary approach to how we view Europe's prehistoric cultureThe peoples who inhabited Europe during the two millennia before the Roman conquests had established urban centers, large-scale p...
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  • 23 June 2015
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A revolutionary approach to how we view Europe's prehistoric culture

The peoples who inhabited Europe during the two millennia before the Roman conquests had established urban centers, large-scale production of goods such as pottery and iron tools, a money economy, and elaborate rituals and ceremonies. Yet as Peter Wells argues here, the visual world of these late prehistoric communities was profoundly different from those of ancient Rome's literate civilization and today's industrialized societies. Drawing on startling new research in neuroscience and cognitive psychology, Wells reconstructs how the peoples of pre-Roman Europe saw the world and their place in it. He sheds new light on how they communicated their thoughts, feelings, and visual perceptions through the everyday tools they shaped, the pottery and metal ornaments they decorated, and the arrangements of objects they made in their ritual places—and how these forms and patterns in turn shaped their experience.

How Ancient Europeans Saw the World offers a completely new approach to the study of Bronze Age and Iron Age Europe, and represents a major challenge to existing views about prehistoric cultures. The book demonstrates why we cannot interpret the structures that Europe's pre-Roman inhabitants built in the landscape, the ways they arranged their settlements and burial sites, or the complex patterning of their art on the basis of what these things look like to us. Rather, we must view these objects and visual patterns as they were meant to be seen by the ancient peoples who fashioned them.

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Price: $27.95
Pages: 304
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 23 June 2015
ISBN: 9780691166759
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology, Archaeology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General, HISTORY / Ancient / General, HISTORY / Europe / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Physical, Anthropology, Ancient history, European history

"Honorable Mention for the 2012 PROSE Award in Archeology & Anthropology, Association of American Publishers"
Peter S. Wells is professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota. His many books include Barbarians to Angels: The Dark Ages Reconsidered and The Barbarians Speak: How the Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe (Princeton).