OAR@UM Collection:/library/oar/handle/123456789/191032026-05-24T01:14:30Z2026-05-24T01:14:30ZResearch essays by students of archaeologyBonanno, Anthony/library/oar/handle/123456789/191502018-03-26T09:54:50Z1997-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Research essays by students of archaeology
Authors: Bonanno, Anthony
Abstract: A short description on the research for dissertations for students reading for a degree in Archaeology. These include Egyptian deities and the process of mummification and the Roman Baths in Malta.1997-01-01T00:00:00ZMalta Archaeological Review, Issue 2/library/oar/handle/123456789/191492019-05-20T09:29:52Z1997-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Malta Archaeological Review, Issue 2
Editors: de Bono, Antony; Pace, Anthony
Abstract: Malta Archaeological Review, Issue 2 (1997)
Description: Contents Include : From the President / Antony de Bono - Society Report - Musuem News - Nathaniel Cutajar1997-01-01T00:00:00ZThe archaeology of collectivityPace, Anthony/library/oar/handle/123456789/191472020-05-12T11:58:54Z1997-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: The archaeology of collectivity
Authors: Pace, Anthony
Abstract: The present contribution addresses patterns in the long
term development of Maltese prehistoric funerary sites
during the period spanning 4000 - 2500 Be. The period
in question saw the development of a series of central
sites in a number of strategic locations across the
Maltese archipelago. Site development followed at
least three major trajectories: social/ritual, funerary and
domestic. The former two categories assumed a
monumental character having a primary focus on
architectural design. Monumental characteristics,
whether above or below ground, increased the survival
chances of the more extensive and prominent sites so
that these now dominate the archaeological repertoire
of the period. By comparison the third category of
settlements, domestic remains tend to be less
conspicuous. Following previous research (Pace 1992),
the present study tentatively suggests that as one of the
principal trajectories in monument development, the
evolution of Maltese Late Neolithic funerary sites
followed a single long term cognitive process that
brought cultural collectivity into sharp focus. Cognitive
design processes were critical for the survival,
elaboration, extension and social reproduction of
collective belief systems which, in the case of funerary
rituals, were expressed in the deliberate structural
expansion and elaboration of central cemeteries. As
an important cultural phenomenon, cognitive design
processes embodying notions of the collective would
have encompassed several features, traces of which may
still be evident in the archaeological record and ancient
prehistoric landscape. A selection of these features will
be examined in a contextual framework built around
evidence of chronological stages in the development
of funerary sites, and the close ties relating these
developments to site location patterning of megalithic
'temple' structures.1997-01-01T00:00:00ZCan we go to Ta' Kaccatura?Grima, Reuben/library/oar/handle/123456789/191452021-06-14T08:37:18Z1997-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Can we go to Ta' Kaccatura?
Authors: Grima, Reuben
Abstract: This article describes how the Maltese countryside, previously viewed as dangerous, is now considered beautiful and sought after. The need for access to the countryside increased and this created problems with the rural side of the population. The present concern, however, is the implications for the preservation, presentation, and
enjoyment of the archaeological sites lying in the less easily accessible parts of the landscape. The Roman villa at Ta' Kaccatura is one such site.1997-01-01T00:00:00Z