For many archaeologists, Iberia is the last great unknown region in Europe. This ground-breaking volume presents a sample of the ways in which archaeologists have applied theoretical frameworks to the interpretation of archaeological evidence.
Margarita Diaz-Andreu, Simon Keay
1: Introduction; 2: Conflict and Innovation; 3: Behavioural Transformations During the Pleistocene; 4: The Neolithic of the Iberian Peninsula; 5: The Funerary World and the Dynamics of Change in Southeast Spain (Fourth-Second Millennia BC); 6: The Dynamics of the occupation of the Middle Basin of the River Guadiana between the Fourth and Second Millennia BC; 7: The Neolithic/Chalcolithic Transition in Portugal; 8: The Dynamics of Change in Northwest Portugal During the First Millennium BC; 9: Migration Revisited; 10: The Iron Age Iberian Peoples of the Upper Guadalquivir Valley; 11: Urban Transformation and Cultural Change; 12: Hispania; 13: Observations on Historiography and Change from the Sixth to Tenth Centuries in the North and West of the Iberian Peninsula; 14: The Origins of Al-Andalus (Eighth and Ninth Centuries); 15: All Change?