Piggott, S. (1970). British archaeology and the enemy. Council for British Archaeology Annual Report 20. Vol 20, pp. 74-85.
Title The title of the publication or report |
British archaeology and the enemy | |
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Issue The name of the volume or issue |
Council for British Archaeology Annual Report 20 | |
Series The series the publication or report is included in |
Council for British Archaeology Annual Report | |
Volume Volume number and part |
20 | |
Page Start/End The start and end page numbers. |
74 - 85 | |
Biblio Note This is a Bibliographic record only. |
Please note that this is a bibliographic record only, as originally entered into the BIAB database. The ADS have no files for download, and unfortunately cannot advise further on where to access hard copy or digital versions. | |
Publication Type The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book |
Journal | |
Abstract The abstract describing the content of the publication or report |
The Presidential Address to the CBA examines that body's role as "secretaries, interpreters and preservers of the memorials of our ancestors". The Enemy that we must fight works within as well as without; he sees archaeology as a curiosity or at best a harmless amusement, rather than a demanding scholarly discipline. We ourselves accept incompetence too often, and we squander our limited resources in too many digs and too many local journals, when strong regional policies and cooperation would achieve infinitely more. Non-excavational fieldwork is desperately necessary, cheap and easy to organise, and destroys no evidence. New and vigorous methods are needed to combat public apathy and antipathy, and the developers cupidity which, as the Barford Conference appallingly demonstrated, is destroying sites at an ever-increasing rate. Trivialisation of our discipline comes not only from the mass media and the lunatic fringe but from some of the very museums whose primary obligation should be to scholarship, and from the Inspectorate of Tidy Ruins. We need a new State Archaeological Service, designed by archaeologists, responsive to changing needs, and answerable not to politicians but to scholarship. See also abstract 71/924. | |
Year of Publication The year the book, article or report was published |
1970 | |
Locations Any locations covered by the publication or report. This is not the place the book or report was published. |
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Source Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in. |
BIAB
(British Archaeological Abstracts (BAA))
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Created Date The date the record of the pubication was first entered |
05 Dec 2008 |