Ten discoveries that rewrote history

Patrick Hunt

Book - 2007

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Subjects
Published
New York : Plume [2007]
Language
English
Main Author
Patrick Hunt (-)
Physical Description
xiii, 226 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780452288775
  • Rosetta stone: the key to Egyptian history
  • Troy: the key to Homer and Greek history
  • Nineveh's Assyrian library: the key to Mesopotamia
  • King Tut's tomb: the key to Egypt's god-kings
  • Machu Picchu: the key to Inca architecture
  • Pompeii: the key to Roman life
  • Dead Sea scrolls: the key to biblical research
  • Thera: the key to the Aegean bronze age
  • Olduvai Gorge: the key to human evolution
  • Tomb of 10,000 warriors: the key to imperial China.
Review by Library Journal Review

An outgrowth of decades of travel and research by Hunt (classics, Stanford Univ.; Alpine Archaeology) and a popular class he teaches, this book allots one chapter to each of ten key discoveries: the Rosetta stone, Troy, the Assyrian Library at Nineveh, Tutankhamen's Tomb, Machu Picchu, Pompeii, the Dead Sea Scrolls, Akrotiri on Thera, the Olduvai Gorge, and the Tomb of 10,000 Warriors. These discoveries are examined "in the context of the evolving discipline of archaeology since the eighteenth century." Hunt writes colorfully and enthusiastically about each discovery and the importance of material finds, not texts alone, in reconstructing history. He gives full credit to archaeologists-great names such as Ninevah's Layard, King Tut's Carter, the Leakeys of Olduvai Gorge, and even Troy's much-maligned Heinrich Schliemann-for their unique accomplishments. The bibliography includes sources for each chapter, but footnotes would have benefited readers amid the broad sweep of time and space covered. Scholars will undoubtedly disagree over the relative importance of these discoveries and whether some should have been selected at all, but for lay readers and beginning students in archaeology and ancient history, this book will serve as an enjoyable, wide-ranging introduction to the importance of archaeology in writing-or rewriting-history. For public and undergraduate libraries.-Joan W. Gartland, Detroit P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.