
Journal of Urban Archaeology 5 (2022)
Anomalocivitas
- Pages: 246 p.
- Size:216 x 280 mm
- Illustrations:33 b/w, 55 col., 17 tables b/w., 11 maps b/w, 12 maps color
- Language(s):English
- Publication Year:2022
- € 51,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
- ISBN: 978-2-503-59757-7
- Paperback
- Available
- E-journal
- Available
List of Illustrations
Anomalocivitas — Editorial, Rubina Raja & Søren M. Sindbæk
Anomalocivitas, Weak Ties, and Strange Attractors. A Framework for the Archaeology of Urban Origins, Søren M. Sindbæk
The Naming of Parts: Integrating Urban Difference, Roland Fletcher, Kirrily White, and Ben Dharmendra
Urban Scalograms. An Experiment in Scaling, Emergence, and Greek and Roman Urban Form, J.W. Hanson
Trypillia Mega-Sites. Neither Urban nor Low-Density?, René Ohlrau
Bringing the Country to Town. ‘Rurban’ Landscapes in Iron Age Europe, Tom Moore and Manuel Fernández-Götz
Urban Samnium? Towards a Literary and Archaeological Re-evaluation, Kevin S. Lee
Reframing the Foundation of Monte Albán, Gary M. Feinman, Richard E. Blanton, Linda M. Nicholas, and Stephen A. Kowalewski
The Paradox of Palmyra. An Ancient Anomalopolis in the Desert, Rubina Raja and Eivind Heldaas Seland
The Long History of Early Medieval Urbanism on the Island of Walcheren (Netherlands). Towards a Biography of Urban Continuity, Pieterjan Deckers
Animal Husbandry, Import Replacement, and Urban Growth in Medieval Odense, Denmark, Kirstine Haase
Voluntary Camps and Practical Machine Sites. What these Non-Urban Settlements Teach us About Urbanism, Michael E. Smith
The Backfill