African Sites: Archaeology in the CaribbeanJay B. Haviser Examines archaeological research about African peoples who were brought to the Caribbean and their descendants in the twentieth century. The contributions cover a wide geographical sample ranging from Caribbean studies to individual investigations on twelve difference islands from the English, Dutch, Spanish and French territories. |
Contents
PART | 1 |
Reconstructing | 9 |
Ethnoarchaeological Consideration of Social Relationship | 38 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
19th century Accompong African diaspora African sites African-Caribbean African-CuraƧaoan African-descendant Afro-Caribbean ceramics Agorsah Amerindian analysis Anguilla Antigua archaeological Armstrong artifacts assemblage associated Bahamas Bahamas Figure Bahamian Barbados Barbuda burials Caribbean clay Clifton Plantation colonial contexts Crooked Island CuraƧao decoration descent East End enslaved ethnic ethnoarchaeology European Eustatius evidence example excavations exterior household Family Islands Farnsworth foodways Galways Mountain Galways village Gartley Ghana groups Guadeloupe Handler Heath Higman historical Howson important Jamaica jars John kitchen Knip kunuku house landscape lifeways located low-fired earthenwares Loyalist period manufacture Marine Farm material culture Mintz Montserrat Nassau Nchumuru Nevis noted Olwig patterns plantation planter population post-emancipation pots pottery production Pulsipher record recovered region settlement sherds slave cabin slave village slavery social relationships society Spanish West Indies spatial behavior storage structures Suriname tion traditions U.S. Virgin Islands Wade's Green wares West African West Indies Wiae Wylly