导言:新石器时代的英国——相遇与反思

K. Ray, Julian Thomas
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摘要

有可能体验新石器时代(约4000 -约2400年)吗在今天的英国?当然不是,或者从字面意义上说不是。然而,我们可以创造的设备,我们可以参观的地方,在某种程度上可以代替那种体验。这些技术使我们能够跨越将我们与数千年前遥远的世界分隔开来的时间鸿沟,尽管时间转瞬即逝。2013年,当英国遗产协会在巨石阵开设了一个新的游客中心时,我们有了一种穿越这个鸿沟的新方法。在通风的现代建筑内,最新的视听技术向游客介绍了遗址及其周围的史前景观。值得注意的是,在这一年结束之前,该中心接待了当时的美利坚合众国总统的访问。2014年9月5日,巴拉克·奥巴马在威尔士参加北约峰会途中意外造访了这一世界遗产。显然,参观被广泛认为是欧洲所有史前遗址中最不寻常的巨石阵,是这位新上任的白宫总统的个人“遗愿清单”之一。美国总统可能会在巨石阵中心看到的东西之一是该地区重建的新石器时代晚期的房屋,游客现在可以进入并在这些使用真实材料建造的建筑物中漫步。这些新建的木材和灰泥建筑是根据从杜灵顿墙(Durrington Walls)找到的证据建造的,杜灵顿墙是一个巨大的新石器时代晚期建筑群,距离巨石阵(Stonehenge) 2英里,在一个半公里宽的堤岸围栏内,设置了巨大的同心柱环。令人惊讶的是,如果游客中心在十年前就按照最初的计划建造,那么就不可能重建这些有4500年历史的房子,它们的地面是方形的,中央有壁炉。这是因为揭示巨石阵人类惊人遗迹的挖掘工作当时才刚刚开始。这表明了新石器时代英国研究的发现速度,这一过程的即时性是我们在这本书中想要传达的内容之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Introduction: Neolithic Britain—encounters and reflections
Is it possible to experience the Neolithic period (c.4000—c.2400 BCE) in Britain today? Of course not, or not in any literal sense. And yet, there are devices that we can create, and places that we can visit, that can to some extent stand in for that experience. These enable us, however fleetingly, to bridge the gulf of time that separates us from the distant world of thousands of years ago. One new way of traversing this chasm became available to us in 2013, when English Heritage opened a new visitor centre at Stonehenge. Inside the airy modern structure the latest audio-visual technology introduces visitors to the site and its surrounding prehistoric landscape. Remarkably, before the year was out, that centre had hosted a visit by the then President of the United States of America. Barack Obama made an unscheduled stop at the World Heritage Site en route from a NATO summit in Wales on 5 September 2014. Apparently, visiting Stonehenge, widely regarded as the most extraordinary of all prehistoric sites in Europe, was on the personal ‘bucket list’ of that recent incumbent of the White House. Among the things that the US President would have seen at the Stonehenge centre were reconstructed Late Neolithic houses from the area, and the visitor can now enter and walk around in these buildings, made using authentic materials. These newly constructed timber and daub buildings had been created on the basis of evidence recovered from Durrington Walls, a colossal Late Neolithic complex 2 miles from Stonehenge, where settings of concentric rings of massive posts were contained within an embanked enclosure half a kilometre across. Surprisingly, if the visitor centre had been built when it had originally been planned a decade earlier, it would not have been possible to recreate these 4,500-year-old houses, with their square ground plans and central hearths. This is because the excavations that would reveal these striking vestiges of the Stonehenge people were then only just beginning. This is an indication of the pace of discovery in the study of Neolithic Britain, and the immediacy of this process is one of the things that we would like to convey in this book.
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