Editorial: Advances in understanding megaliths and related prehistoric lithic monuments

Autores/as

  • G. Terence Meaden Oxford University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/jls.v4i4.1945

Palabras clave:

standing stones, megalithic monuments

Resumen

Standing stones and megalithic monuments are impressive remains from a remote prehistoric world that for the British Isles began some 6000 years ago and led to a cultural flowering that peaked in the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age with the rise of fine megalithic monuments like Newgrange, Knowth, Drombeg, Maeshowe, Avebury and Stonehenge. Nearby on the European continent, what may be called an era involving megalithic culture had begun a few centuries earlier (as at Carnac and Locmariaquer), and still earlier in the Mediterranean lands and islands (e.g., the Tarxien Temple in Malta), south-eastern Europe, the Near and Middle East, and India beyond. 

Biografía del autor/a

G. Terence Meaden, Oxford University

Kellogg College
Oxford University
62 Banbury Road
Oxford
UK

Descargas

Publicado

31-dic-2017

Cómo citar

Meaden, G. T. (2017). Editorial: Advances in understanding megaliths and related prehistoric lithic monuments. Journal of Lithic Studies, 4(4), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.2218/jls.v4i4.1945