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pro vyhledávání: '"James M. Davidson"'
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Historical Archaeology.
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Historical Archaeology.
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
Historical Archaeology. 55:353-377
Subfloor pits, or root cellars, associated with African American housing and dating from the 17th through the 19th centuries, have been documented archaeologically in the Mid-Atlantic states and upland South. Excavations in 2014 and 2015 at the Bulow
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
Historical Archaeology. 54:681-737
African diaspora archaeology has its roots in American plantation archaeology of the 1960s and 1970s. One of the first artifacts recovered from these contexts was the simple blue glass bead, recognized by some as signifying retentions of African beli
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 87:857-858
Autor:
Travis G. Parno, Susan Piddock, Christopher Horrell, Martin Gibbs, James M. Davidson, Melissa Ashmore, Richard Veit, Mary Elizabeth Fitts, Tiffany C. Cain, Michael T. Lucas, Melanie Damour, Thomas Wheeler, Kurt A. Jordan, Anthony R. Tricarico, Alexander D. Keim, Matthew P. Rooney, Edward González-Tennant, Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood, Chris Espenshade, Robert Warren, James G. Gibb, Thomas A. Crist
Publikováno v:
Historical Archaeology. 50:133-204
Autor:
James M. Davidson, Rachel Black
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Archaeology. 34:1-22
In 1999, the human remains, coffin, and associated artifacts of William Ayres Crawford, a Confederate colonel who died in Saline County, Arkansas, in 1874, was examined archaeologically. Comparisons to Crawford's biohistory are made to his contempora
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Historical Archaeology. 19:76-121
Archaeologists often attempt to link artifacts recovered from enslaved plantation contexts to African-derived spiritual belief systems. Recent excavations within the slave cabins of Kingsley Plantation have revealed many artifacts that potentially he
Autor:
James M. Davidson
Publikováno v:
Historical Archaeology. 48:18-60
Since the 1970s, the “hand charm” has been recognized in plantation archaeology as an early example of an “Africanism,” a perceived supernatural object within African American life, with roots in African culture and belief. The underpinnings
Autor:
James M. Davidson, Karen McIlvoy
Publikováno v:
Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage. 1:107-166
Charles Fairbanks advanced the field of plantation archaeology in 1968 in his pioneering excavation in the cabins of enslaved laborers at Kingsley Plantation, Florida, with a focus on identifying "Africanisms." Failing to recognize elements of Africa