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Conservation. Restoration --- Archeology --- historic preservation --- archaeology --- architectural heritage --- bouwkundig erfgoed --- monumentenzorg --- archeologie --- Antiquities --- Archaeology --- Cultural policy. --- Cultural property --- Historic preservation. --- Historic sites --- Material culture --- Collection and preservation. --- Methodology. --- Philosophy. --- Protection. --- Conservation and restoration.
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#VCV monografie 2006 --- Philosophy and psychology of culture --- General ethics --- Archeology --- archaeology --- cultural property --- cultural heritage
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Archaeological resource management (ARM) is the practice of recording, evaluating, preserving for future research and presenting to the public the material remains of the past. Almost all countries uphold a set of principles and laws for the preservation and professional management of archaeological remains. This book offers a critical and comparative perspective on the law and professional practices of managing archaeological remains. Beginning with a global history of ARM, John Carman provides an overview of legal and professional regulations governing ARM today. He then turns to consider the main practices involved in managing archaeological remains, namely, their identification and recording, their evaluation for 'significance', their preservation and their presentation to the public. As a whole, the book offers an overview of what ARM 'does' in the world, with implications for understanding the role of archaeology as a contemporary set of practices that determine how future generations will access material remains of the past.
Antiquities --- Historic preservation --- Historic buildings --- Historic sites --- Cultural property --- Archaeology --- History & Archaeology --- Cultural property, Protection of --- Cultural resources management --- Cultural policy --- Archaeological specimens --- Artefacts (Antiquities) --- Artifacts (Antiquities) --- Specimens, Archaeological --- Material culture --- Preservation, Historic --- Preservationism (Historic preservation) --- Archaeological museums and collections --- Salvage archaeology --- Collection and preservation --- Government policy --- Management --- Law and legislation --- Conservation and restoration --- Protection --- Collection and preservation. --- Government policy. --- Management. --- Law and legislation. --- Conservation and restoration. --- Protection.
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15.30 archaeology: general. --- Archaeology and history. --- Archaeology and history. --- Archaeology --- Archaeology --- Archeologie. --- Ethnoarchaeology. --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Forensic anthropology. --- Forensic anthropology. --- Human remains (Archaeology). --- Human remains (Archaeology). --- Oorlog. --- Social archaeology. --- Violence --- Violence --- Violence. --- War and civilization. --- War and civilization. --- War --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- History --- History. --- History
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Military archaeology. --- Military art and science --- War --- Archéologie militaire --- Art et science militaires --- Guerre --- History. --- History. --- Histoire --- Histoire
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The development of key methodologies for the study of battlefields in the USA in the 1980s inspired a generation of British and European archaeologists to turn their attention to sites in their own countries. The end of the Cold War and key anniversaries of the World Wars inspired others, especially in the UK, to examine the material legacy of those conflicts before they disappeared. By 2000 the study of war was again firmly on the archaeological agenda. The overall purpose of the book is to encourage proponents and practitioners of Conflict Archaeology to consider what it is for and how to develop it in the future.The central argument is that, at present , Conflict Archaeology is effectively divided into closed communities who do not interact to any large extent. These separate communities are divided by period and by nationality, so that a truly international Conflict Archaeology has yet to emerge. These divisions prevent the exchange of information and ideas across boundaries and thereby limit the scope of the field. This book discusses these issues in detail, clearly outlining how they affect the development of Conflict Archaeology as a coherent branch of archaeology
Military archaeology. --- Military art and science --- War --- History.
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Ramanuja --- S38/1333 --- #SML: Joseph Spae --- Works not related to China and the Far East--Interreligious dialogue: Christianity and Hinduism --- Râmânuja Yatishvara --- Râmânujāchârya --- Rāmānuja, --- Rāmānujāchārya, --- Irāmān̲ujar, --- Etirājar, --- Emperumān̲ār, --- Tiruppāvai Jīyar, --- Uṭaiyavar, --- Rāmānujulu, --- Rāmānujācārya,
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God --- Polarity --- Attributes. --- Religious aspects. --- 291.21 --- -Polarity --- -Antithesis --- Contrariety --- Opposites --- Dialectic --- Opposition, Theory of --- Metaphysics --- Misotheism --- Monotheism --- Religion --- Theism --- Onderwerp van de godsdienst: goden en geesten; aanbidding; godensagen --- Attributes --- Religious aspects --- -Onderwerp van de godsdienst: goden en geesten; aanbidding; godensagen --- 291.21 Onderwerp van de godsdienst: goden en geesten; aanbidding; godensagen --- -291.21 Onderwerp van de godsdienst: goden en geesten; aanbidding; godensagen --- Antithesis --- Polarity (in religion, folk-lore, etc.) --- Polarity (Religion) --- Attributes of God --- God - Attributes. --- Polarity - Religious aspects.
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