Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Archaeology of Nuragic Sardinia
View through CrossRef
The Archaeology of Nuragic Sardinia is a comprehensive synthesis of evidence bearing on current understandings of Sardinian prehistory from the 23rd through the 8th centuries BC. It is a study of the material traces left by those insular societies known famously for their unique megalithic ‘Giants’ tombs and intricate water-temples, as well as for the remarkable cyclopean edifices or nuraghi for which this singular ‘civilization’ takes its name. Following introductory discussions of the history of Nuragic research up to the present, as well as the island’s natural setting, individual chapters are given over to detailed examinations of findings on chronology, settlement, subsistence, industries, trade, external relations and cult practices for successive chronological periods from the Early Bronze Age through the Early Iron Age. For each period, issues of interpretation are addressed with regard to what might be reasonably inferred about Nuragic social institutions, normative codes, cognitive orientations, identity formations, cultural hybridity and entanglements, and the role of indigenous and exogenous factors in cultural continuity and discontinuity. While the focus throughout is on the Sardinian record, due consideration is also paid to potentially related developments on the neighboring island of Corsica. A postscript features a glimpse of life at the great Iron Age sanctuary of Santa Vittoria di Serri as imagined by the late ‘father of Sardinian archaeology’ Giovanni Lilliu.
Title: The Archaeology of Nuragic Sardinia
Description:
The Archaeology of Nuragic Sardinia is a comprehensive synthesis of evidence bearing on current understandings of Sardinian prehistory from the 23rd through the 8th centuries BC.
It is a study of the material traces left by those insular societies known famously for their unique megalithic ‘Giants’ tombs and intricate water-temples, as well as for the remarkable cyclopean edifices or nuraghi for which this singular ‘civilization’ takes its name.
Following introductory discussions of the history of Nuragic research up to the present, as well as the island’s natural setting, individual chapters are given over to detailed examinations of findings on chronology, settlement, subsistence, industries, trade, external relations and cult practices for successive chronological periods from the Early Bronze Age through the Early Iron Age.
For each period, issues of interpretation are addressed with regard to what might be reasonably inferred about Nuragic social institutions, normative codes, cognitive orientations, identity formations, cultural hybridity and entanglements, and the role of indigenous and exogenous factors in cultural continuity and discontinuity.
While the focus throughout is on the Sardinian record, due consideration is also paid to potentially related developments on the neighboring island of Corsica.
A postscript features a glimpse of life at the great Iron Age sanctuary of Santa Vittoria di Serri as imagined by the late ‘father of Sardinian archaeology’ Giovanni Lilliu.
Related Results
Water and cults in Nuragic Sardinia
Water and cults in Nuragic Sardinia
Nuragic Sardinia is the only Italian region where later prehistoric standing monuments identified specifically as cult buildings have survived. In fact, the many monumental cult co...
The State of the Debate: Nuragic Metal Trade in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age
The State of the Debate: Nuragic Metal Trade in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age
Abstract
This study examines the role of the Nuragic metal trade in the Mediterranean setting, seeking to advance the debate on this subject. Published metal-related...
Re-use of Nuragic Sacred Wells (Pozzi Sacri) in Punic Sardinia
Re-use of Nuragic Sacred Wells (Pozzi Sacri) in Punic Sardinia
The aim of the paper is to discuss the phenomenon of the re-use of Nuragic sacred wells (pozzi sacri) during the Punic period (c. 500–238 BC) in Sardinia. Although the Nuragic sett...
A Reappraisal of the Seismicity of Sardinia, Italy
A Reappraisal of the Seismicity of Sardinia, Italy
Abstract
In popular opinion, Sardinia is the only nonseismic region of Italy. Most researchers are likely to agree, up to a point. Geology-wise, the Sardinia–Corsica...
Sardinia, Nuragic Iron Age
Sardinia, Nuragic Iron Age
Abstract
The Sardinian Nuragic Iron Age marks a new phase in the prehistory of Sardinia. The Iron Age was a period of transformation and reorganization of the Nuragic com...
Social Organization in Nuragic Sardinia: Cultural Progress Without ‘Elites’?
Social Organization in Nuragic Sardinia: Cultural Progress Without ‘Elites’?
After the collapse of most early states in the East around 1200 BC, parts of the western Mediterranean experienced technological progress and demographic rise, apparently without a...
Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present
Modern Scotland: Archaeology, the Modern past and the Modern present
The main recommendations of the panel report can be summarised under five key headings: HUMANITY The Panel recommends recognition that research in this field should be geared tow...

