Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

arts and humanities

Inside and outside the dry stone walls: Revisiting the material culture of Great Zimbabwe

Antiquity, Volume 82, No. 318, Year 2008

'Any study of Great Zimbabwe has to rely a great deal on re-examining and re-assessing the work of early investigators, the men who removed all the most important finds from the ruins and stripped them of so much of their deposits' (Garlake 1973: 14). The authors have here done us a great service in reviewing the surviving archaeological evidence from this world famous site. They challenge the structuralist interpretation - in which different parts of the site were allocated to kings, priests, wives or to circumcision rituals - and use the architectural, stratigraphic and artefactual evidence accumulated over the years to present a new sequence. The early enclosures on the hill, the Great Enclosure and the valley enclosures now appear as the work of successive rulers, each founding a new residence and power centre in accord with Shona practice.

Statistics
Citations: 75
Authors: 2
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Study Locations
Zimbabwe
Participants Gender
Male