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Ivor Noël Hume (1927–2017)

Autor de Martin's Hundred

46+ Obras 1,319 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Ivor Noël Hume was born in London, England on November 4, 1927. He was evacuated from London during World War II. He studied at Framlingham and St. Lawrence Colleges and served briefly in the Army until he was injured in an accident. While working as a stage manager in London, he heard a radio mostrar más report about a man who fished antiquities from the Thames and decided to give it a try. He delivered some of his finds to Adrian Oswald, the head of the Guildhall Museum. Hume began working with him doing postwar archaeology in the rubble of London and was given a job at the museum in 1949. A week later, he found himself in charge after his boss contracted pneumonia and never returned to work. He decided to specialize in 17th- and 18th-century wine bottles. He was the director of Colonial Williamsburg's archaeological mission from 1957 to 1988. In 1970, he and his colleagues discovered the remains of a once-fortified settlement called Wolstenholme Towne. He was able to verified the massacre the destroyed the settlement by exhuming the bones of its victims and found physical evidence of colonization. He wrote more than two dozen books during his lifetime including The Virginia Adventure, A Guide to Artifacts of Colonial America, All the Best Rubbish, and A Passion for the Past: The Odyssey of a Transatlantic Archaeologist. In 1993, he was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire for his service to British cultural interests in Virginia. He died on February 4, 2017 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: archaeologychannel.org

Obras de Ivor Noël Hume

Martin's Hundred (1982) 328 copias
Historical Archaeology (1968) 99 copias
Treasure in the Thames (1956) 3 copias
Archaeology (1971) 2 copias

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I received this from paperbackswap.com in June 2023.
 
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classyhomemaker | Dec 11, 2023 |
Entertaining, but a little dated, and patronizing toward the ladies. But in exchange for these flaws, you get a vivid sense of the curmudgeonly antiquarian-author's character, up to and including his radical pessimism about the future of the human race. The afterword is an object lesson in scholarly caution: It candidly lists all the things the original 1963 text and captions got wrong.
 
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Muscogulus | Jul 29, 2012 |
In the seventies, Colonial Williamsburg acquired the James River plantation, Carter’s Grove. In order to show plantation life in the 18th century, the Foundation needed to establish the locations of the outbuildings and other features of the original plantation. They discovered much more, the remains of an early seventeenth century settlement, Martin’s Hundred. Since the discovery of the original fort at Jamestown was years in the future, this was the first archaeological evidence of those early settlers, including evidence of the Indian attack in 1622. The book chronicles the events surrounding the discoveries up to 1982. Written by archaeologist Ivor Noël Hume, the book reads like a mystery with clues, false trails and a lot of research in American and European museums and libraries.

The book is enhanced with numerous plans of the site as well as photographs of some of the finds, unfortunately in black and white and not in color. Noël Hume explains everything in clarity, whether talking about bones, pipes or pieces of pottery or glass. There are footnotes, index and a very nice bibliography. However this is not a dry and scholarly account, but a very readable and exciting story.
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fdholt | Mar 31, 2012 |
Having been born and raised in New England, and now finding myself a transplant in Virginia, I was self-admittedly somewhat oblivious to Virginia's beginnings. Hume's book was a great place to start. He covers both the archeological evidence, interwoven with a good accounting of the history of Roanoke and the James Towne settlement.
I was amazed at the amount of suffering and violence that the English meted unto themselves and to the native Americans that lived in the region.
The debunking of some of the myths surrounding Capt John Smith, Powhatan and Pocahontas are every bit as riveting as the mythology that has survived up to the present.
A great survey of the early English attempts to establish themselves in the New World.
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pjlambert | Sep 7, 2008 |

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Obras
46
También por
1
Miembros
1,319
Popularidad
#19,488
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
41

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