Library Access: The Library of the American Research Center in Egypt    Browse Library Collection
book cover

H 210 x W 145 mm

90 pages

Illustrated throughout in colour and black & white (21 plates in colour)

Published Oct 2017

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781784916596

Digital: 9781784916602

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Keywords
Jordan; Deir Alla; Archaeology; History of archaeology; Leiden University; Journal; Excavation; Middle East; Syria; Lebanon; Biblical Archaeology

Archaeological Lives

Shifting Sand: Journal of a cub archaeologist, Palestine 1964

By Julian Berry

Paperback
£18.00
Includes PDF

PDF eBook
(personal use)
£16.00

PDF eBook
(institutional use)
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Shifting Sand is the journal of Julian Berry, then a 17-year-old archaeologist, written on-site during excavations in Jordan, 1964. The book provides a fascinating insight into the lives of archaeologists over 50 years ago, and the very close links between the European team, the Arab workmen, and the daily life in a simple mud-brick village.

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Contents

Foreword; Introduction; Diary Entries, 1964; Appendix; Postscript

About the Author

Julian Berry was born in 1946; his father was a sugar refiner and his mother an artist and interior decorator. At the age of nine he was consigned to boarding school, first to Twyford, and then to Winchester, where his father hoped he would become a fly-fisherman. In fact he developed two key interests at school, archaeology and letterpress printing. He was able to escape at the age of 17, as soon as he had learnt that he had got into Oxford, and with the help of Sir Mortimer Wheeler he signed up to join a Dutch dig in Jordan, where he arrived in January 1964. This book is about his youthful experiences as an archaeologist, and his travels at the time around Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. After Oxford he went on to found a letterpress book printing company, The Compton Press, which produced over 500 editions before its demise in 1980 along with virtually all of the British letterpress book production industry. He went on to work in marketing and became fascinated by the use of ‘data science’ as we now call it to predict human behaviour. This led to his founding a company that develops software solutions for marketers, where he is currently employed.