Eighteenth-century visions of the Stone Age
Archaeological concepts of prehistory and the Stone Age are rooted in nineteenth-century scientific discoveries, which extended the human past much further back in time than was previously thought. Without this deep past, the disciplines of archaeology and history would not be what they are today....
Saved in:
Main Author: | Liisa Kunnas-Pusa |
---|---|
Format: | article |
Language: | DA EN FR NO SV |
Published: |
Septentrio Academic Publishing
2021
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doaj.org/article/fd7cc2d1ae984fdaa96e3caf0e88c942 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
Patrick Leech, Cosmopolitanism, dissent and translation. Translating radicals in eighteenth-century Britain and France
by: Francesca Piselli
Published: (2021) -
Johan Stén, Kulta-aika. Valistus ja luonnontieteet Turun Akatemiassa [The Golden Age. Enlightenment and science at the Academy of Turku] (Helsinki: Art House, 2021). 517 pp.
by: Ella Viitaniemi
Published: (2021) -
Jaakko Sivonen, Patriotism in an Absolute Monarchy: Fatherland, Citizenship and the Enlightenment in Prussia, 1756–1806 (Helsinki: Faculty of Arts, University of Helsinki, 2020). 306 pp.
by: Eva Piirimäe
Published: (2021) -
Anne Eriksen, Livets læremester: Historiske kunnskapstradisjoner i Norge 1650–1840 (Oslo: Pax forlag, 2020). 336 pp.
by: Leidulf Melve
Published: (2021) -
Per Pippin Aspaas & László Kontler, Maximilian Hell (1720–92) and the Ends of Jesuit Science in Enlightenment Europe (Leiden: Brill, 2019). 477 pp.
by: Gunnar Ellingsen
Published: (2021)