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Persistent economic ways of living. Production, distribution, and consumption in late prehistory and early history

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    0447017 - ARÚ 2016 HU eng B - Monography
    Danielisová, Alžběta (ed.) - Fernández-Götz, M. (ed.)
    Persistent economic ways of living. Production, distribution, and consumption in late prehistory and early history.
    Budapest: Archaeolingua Alapítvány, 2015. 243 s. Archaeolingua, 35. ISBN 978-963-9911-70-3
    R&D Projects: GA ČR GAP405/12/0926
    Institutional support: RVO:67985912
    Keywords : Iron Age * Early medieval * economics * consumption * production
    Subject RIV: AC - Archeology, Anthropology, Ethnology

    This edited volume focuses on long-term economic structures reflected in material culture, analysing the emergent processes that affected production mechanisms and embedded economic behaviour. It focuses on approaches and methods for ascertaining levels of societal complexity through the detection of the character and aspects of basic economic processes (involving food production, redistribution, exchange, and specialisation) common for most past European societies. The volume shows different ways in which we can approach these processes. From the more traditional methods like artefacts studies, comparative analysis of analogies and ethnographic parallels we are able to infer and develop theoretical models applied and tested through modern methods of computer modelling and social simulation. The wide range of presented papers allows a synthetic review of socio-economic developments throughout the long period from Late Prehistory to the Middle Ages against the background of spatial or social structures at a supra-regional level. The contributions included in this volume are believed to constitute a useful starting point for similar studies that try to combine long-term analysis with short-term developments transcending spatial and chronological barriers from a comparative perspective and bring together different research experiences.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0248983

     
     
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