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Download Stringing the Past: An Archaeological Understanding of Early Southeast Asian Glass Bead Trade (Archaeology Series) fb2

by Jun G. Cayron

  • ISBN: 9715425062
  • Category: Crafts & Home
  • Author: Jun G. Cayron
  • Subcategory: Crafts & Hobbies
  • Other formats: doc azw mobi lrf
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: University of the Philippines Press (July 31, 2007)
  • Pages: 222 pages
  • FB2 size: 1654 kb
  • EPUB size: 1360 kb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 874
Download Stringing the Past: An Archaeological Understanding of Early Southeast Asian Glass Bead Trade (Archaeology Series) fb2

Stringing the Past book.

Stringing the Past book. Details (if other): Cancel. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Stringing the Past: An Archaeological Understanding of Early Southeast Asian Glass Bead Trade.

5 Southeast Asian Bead Trade. 6 Types of Glass Beads in Southeast Asia. a b c d e f g Cayron, J. (2006). Quezon City: The University of the Philippines Press. 7 Archaeological finds in the Philippines. 1 Ille Cave Shell bead analysis. Bellina, Bérénice (2003).

The journal covers the traditional components of archaeology: placing events and patterns in time and space; analysis of past lifeways; and explanations for cultural processes and change. To this end, the publication will highlight theoretical and methodological advances in studying the past, present new data, and detail patterns that reshape our understanding of it.

The source of thousands of Indo-Pacific type glass beads recovered from the Pandanan shipwreck in Palawan, Philippines, has heretofore not been determined

The source of thousands of Indo-Pacific type glass beads recovered from the Pandanan shipwreck in Palawan, Philippines, has heretofore not been determined. This book is a significant contribution to our knowledge of glass beads: how they were made, used, and traded in early Southeast Asia.

One World Archaeology. He is the author of Stringing the Past: An Archaeobiological Understanding of Early Southeast Asian Glass Bead Trade

One World Archaeology. He is the author of Stringing the Past: An Archaeobiological Understanding of Early Southeast Asian Glass Bead Trade. Correspondence to: jcayron2010l.

Journal of Field Archaeology, Vol. 27, Issue. When trade between China and Southeast Asia blossomed between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries, Chinese traders began to form overseas Chinese communities.

Southeast Asia, Archaeology of. Miriam T Stark, University of Hawai’i-M. hampers our understanding of developments. It discusses theoretical tensions, political concerns, and the future of Southeast Asian archaeology. Disagreement continues over the taxonomic status of Homo. oresiensis, a small hominin that produced stone tools and has.

When trade between China and Southeast Asia blossomed between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries, Chinese traders began to form overseas Chinese communities. Chinese commercial guides from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries give detailed lists of the items which were in demand at various Southeast Asian ports. These include perishable items such as cloth, and more durable items including metal, ceramics and glass, which archaeologists can hope to find and thereby to reconstruct the interplay between economic activity and social change during this period.

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1 Southeast Asian Bead Trade. 2 Archaeological finds in the Philippines. Glover and Henderson place the date of glass bead trade in Southeast Asia at no later than 400 BCE. Alastair Lamb states that the most common type of bead for around that time was the Indo-Pacific beads. According to Francis, the beads could be named Indo Pacific Monochrome Drawn Glass Beads.

The source of thousands of Indo-Pacific type glass beads recovered from the Pandanan shipwreck in Palawan, Philippines, has heretofore not been determined. This book is a significant contribution to our knowledge of glass beads: how they were made, used, and traded in early Southeast Asia.

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