Discovering what Counts in Archaeology and Reconstruction: Lessons from Colonial Williamsburg
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
The evolution of historical archaeology as an innovative way of knowing about the past parallels the history of its practice at Colonial Williamsburg. This restored eighteenth-century capital of Virginia epitomizes the challenges and the promises of mingling archaeology with reconstruction, including the ‘brick and mortar,’ the environmental, and the digital, to underpin and guide historical interpretations. How can lessons learned from over 80 years of archaeological and architectural research at Colonial Williamsburg help the future of historical archaeology? What are some of the abiding factors in archaeology that continue to drive its relevancy in restoration and historical interpretation? The papers in this session address past and current diverse-research initiatives and speak to both the esoteric questions ‘that count’ in archaeology and reconstruction and the day-to-day practicality of interpreting history to the public.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-12 of 12)
- Documents (12)
- Archeological discoveries and hypothesis for a new colonial portrait (2014)
- Architectural Reconstruction and the Andy Warhol Factor (2014)
- Canine Aggression and Canine Affection in Eighteenth Century Williamsburg: Analyzing the Dog Burials at the Anderson Armoury site (2014)
- Domestsicating the Chesapeake Landscape (2014)
- Framing the questions that matter: the relationship between archaeology and conservation (2014)
- Reconstructing the Landscape of Death: A City-Site Approach to the Study of African American Burials (2014)
- Reconstructing the Landscape of late Eighteenth Century Williamsburg: The Application and Presentation of Levels of Archaeological Data within a Virtual Environment (2014)
- Revisiting Williamsburg’’s First Two Reconstructions: Using 3D Modeling to Reexamine and Reinterpret the Raleigh Tavern and Capitol (2014)
- Town and Gown Archaeology in Williamsburg, Virginia (2014)
- ‘Useful Ornaments to His Cabinet’: An Analysis of Anatomical Study and Display in Colonial Williamsburg (2014)
- When Nobody’s Home: Nationalistic Veneration and the Constraints of Interpretation at the Unreconstructed Ruins of Secretary Thomas Nelson’s House in Yorktown, Virginia (2014)
- «where my father and mother are buried»: Landscape and the Moral Orders of Emplacement throughout the Plantation Chesapeake (2014)