Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-27gpq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-29T08:18:56.641Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Don't knock the ancestors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Mike Pitts*
Affiliation:
125 High St, Marlborough SN8 1LU, UK. (mike@avebury.net)

Abstract

“Too many ancestors?” said James Whitley. Mike Pitts responds.

Type
Debate
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2003

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ashbee, P. 1970. The Earthen Long Barrow in Britain. London: Dent.Google Scholar
Ashbee, P., Bell, M. & Proudfoot, E.. 1989. Wilsford Shafi: Excavations 1960–2. London: English Heritage.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C. & Fewster, K. J.. 1998. Stonehenge: is the medium the message? Antiquity 72: 84752.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batchelor, D. 1997. Mapping the Stonehenge landscape, Proceedings of the British Academy 92: 6172.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1998. The Significance of Monuments: On the Shaping of Human Experience in Neolithic & Bronze Age Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1991. Ritual, time and history, World Archaeology 23: 20919.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. & Bayliss, A.. 2000. Dating Stonehenge. In Lockyer, K. & Mihailescu-Birliba, V. (eds.) Computer Applications & Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (Oxford: British Archaeological Reports).Google Scholar
Buckley, D., Hedges, J. & Brown, N.. 2001. Excavations at a Neolithic Cursus, Springfield, Essex, 1979–85, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 67: 10162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chippindale, C. 1994. Stonehenge Complete (2nd ed). London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Christie, P. 1963. The Stonehenge Cursus, Wiltshire Archaeological & Natural History Magazine 58: 37082.Google Scholar
Cleal, R., Walker, K. & Montague, R.. 1995. Stonehenge in its Landscape: Twentieth Century Excavations. London: English Heritage Archaeological Report 10.Google Scholar
Exon, S., Gaffney, V., Woodward, A. & R. Yorston. 2000. Stonehenge Landscapes. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, A. 2002. The Amesbury Archer’: a well-furnished Early Bronze Age burial in southern England, Antiquity 76:CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker Pearson, M. & Ramilisonina, . 1998. Stonehenge for the ancestors: the stones pass on the message, Antiquity 72: 30826.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitts, M. 2001. Hengeworld (2nd edition). London: Arrow.Google Scholar
Pitts, M., Bayliss, A., Mckinley, J., Boylston, A., Budd, P., Evans, J., Chenery, C., Reynolds, A. & Semple, S.. 2002. An Anglo-Saxon decapitation and burial at Stonehenge, Wiltshire Archaeological & Natural History Magazine 95: 13146.Google Scholar
Pollard, J & Reynolds, A.. 2002. Avebury, the Biography of a Landscape. Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Stone, J. 1948. The Stonehenge Cursus and its affinities, Archaeological Journal 104: 719.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. 1999. Understanding the Neolithic. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Whitley, J. 2002. Too many ancestors, Antiquity 76: 11926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittle, A. 1998. People and the diverse past: two comments on ‘Stonehenge for the ancestors’, Antiquity 72: 8524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar