Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders. T. Eric Peet
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T. Eric Peet
Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664569981
Table of Contents
STONEHENGE AND OTHER GREAT STONE MONUMENTS IN ENGLAND AND WALES
MEGALITHIC MONUMENTS IN SCOTLAND AND IRELAND
THE SCANDINAVIAN MEGALITHIC AREA
AFRICA, MALTA, AND THE SMALLER MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS
THE BUILDERS OF THE MEGALITHIC MONUMENTS, THEIR HABITS, CUSTOMS, RELIGION, ETC.
WHO WERE THE BUILDERS, AND WHENCE DID THEY COME?
HARPER'S LIBRARY OF LIVING THOUGHT
Harper's Library of Living Thought
PERSONAL RELIGION IN EGYPT BEFORE CHRISTIANITY
Harper's Library of Living Thought
RELIGION AND ART IN ANCIENT GREECE
Harper's Library of Living Thought
THE REVOLUTIONS OF CIVILISATION
Harper's Library of Living Thought
CRETE, THE FORERUNNER OF GREECE
Harper's Library of Living Thought
Harper's Library of Living Thought
Harper's Library of Living Thought
PREFACE
The aim of this volume is to enable those who are interested in Stonehenge and other great stone monuments of England to learn something of the similar buildings which exist in different parts of the world, of the men who constructed them, and of the great archæological system of which they form a part. It is hoped that to the archæologist it may be useful as a complete though brief sketch of our present knowledge of the megalithic monuments, and as a short treatment of the problems which arise in connection with them.
To British readers it is unnecessary to give any justification for the comparatively full treatment accorded to the monuments of Great Britain and Ireland. Malta and Sardinia may perhaps seem to occupy more than their due share of space, but the usurpation is justified by the magnificence and the intrinsic interest of their megalithic buildings. Being of singularly complicated types and remarkably well preserved they naturally tell us much more of their builders than do the simpler monuments of other larger and now more important countries. In these two islands, moreover, research has in the last few years been extremely active, and it is felt that the accounts here given of them will contain some material new even to the archæologist.
In order to assist those readers who may wish to follow out the subject in greater detail a short bibliography has been added to the book.
For the figures and photographs with which this volume is illustrated I have to thank many archæological societies and individual scholars. Plate III and part of Plate II I owe to the kindness of Dr. Zammit, Director of the Museum of Valletta, while the other part of Plate II is from