Archival Historiographies: Introduction (original) (raw)

EAC Working Group for Archaeological Archives, A European View of Selecting for Archaeological Archives

Plural: History, Culture, Society, 2017

This paper examines the issues around selecting for archaeological archives, including the reasons for doing so, how selection fit into a project and the methodological framework. The context is 'Making Choices', a project of the Europae Archaeologiae Consilium that is looking at how all choices are made across archaeological practice, while the foundations are provided by existing standards for archiving and for selection.

Ancestral Archives: Explorations in the History of Archaeology

Antiquity, 2002

Historiographic revelationsBack from his famous visit to Boucher de Perthes in the spring of 1859, John Evans hastened to invite some antiquarians friends in London to examine his finds. The flint implements he had collected with Joseph Prestwich in the undisturbed gravel beds of the Somme valley were indeed. or so ho believed, altogether new in appearance and totally unlike anything known in this country [Evans 1869: 93-4):But while I was waiting in the rooms of the Society of Antiquaries, expecting some friends to come out of the meeting room, I looked at a case in one of the windows seats, and was ahsolutely horror-struck to see in it three or four implements precisely resembling those found at Abbeville and Amiens. I enquirer1 where they came kom, but nobody knew, as they were not labelled. On reference, however, it turned out that they had been deposited in the museum of the Society for sixty years, and that an account of them had been published in Archaeologia …

Archives of memory: A note on the Archives of European Archaeology (AREA) network and its scientific seminars (1998-2008) - 2008

Taking here the notion of memory in both its collective and effective dimensions, the present publications constitutes an appropriate moment, after a decade of AREA activities, to briefly recall some of the main objectives and achievements of this European network. the aims of the network AREA -Archives of European Archaeology -is a research network dedicated to the history of archaeology, with particular emphasis on the archives of the discipline, their study and preservation. Since its launching, support for the AREA network was generously awarded by the Raphael programme (AREA phase I, 1998(AREA phase I, -1999, and subsequently by the Culture 2000 programme of the European Commission's Directorate General for Education and Culture (AREA phase II, 1999-2000, an experimental measure, and AREA phase III, 2001-2004, followed by AREA phase IV, 200-2008, both multiannual cultural collaboration projects). Throughout its phases, the AREA network has welcomed a growing number of partner institutions from across the continent -university departments and institutes, museums, research centres and public bodies -working together within a common European framework (see below the list of partners). This continuous support has enabled the AREA network to develop the following major objectives (see also www.area-archives.org):

Shaping Archaeological Archives: Fieldwork, Collections, and Private Archives — Issues of Curation and Accessibility

Shaping Archaeological Archives: Dialogues between Fieldwork, Museum Collections, and Private Archives, 2023

Raja, R. (2023). “Shaping Archaeological Archives: Fieldwork, Collections, and Private Archives — Issues of Curation and Accessibility”, in Raja, R. (ed.), Shaping Archaeological Archives: Dialogues between Fieldwork, Museum Collections, and Private Archives, Archive Archaeology 4, Turnhout: Brepols, 1-7.