We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

Books published by University of Pennsylvania Press

Filter
Filter
Sort bySort Popular
  • - Salomon de Caus and Early Seventeenth-Century Landscape Design
    by Luke Morgan
    £58.49

    Salomon de Caus was a pivotal figure in the dissemination of the design principles and motifs of the Italian Renaissance garden throughout Europe. By setting the record straight in this biography, Luke Morgan rewrites the received history of early seventeenth-century garden design.

  • Save 19%
    - Crime and Justice in Pennsylvania, 1682-1800
    by Jack D. Marietta
    £51.99

    Troubled Experiment exposes the difference between glowing reputation and grim reality of crime in early Pennsylvania. The plight of lawmakers and magistrates, and the sufferings of victims, women, children, and minorities take their places in this tragedy. The authors conclude that through this lens, we see the troubled future of America.

  • Save 11%
    - An American Villa and Its Makers
    by Witold Rybczynski
    £38.99

    Like its palatial contemporaries Biltmore and San Simeon, Vizcaya represents an achievement of the Gilded Age, when country houses and their gardens were a conspicuous measure of personal wealth and power. In Vizcaya, the authors use illustrations, historic photographs, and narrative to document this extraordinary house and landscape.

  • Save 11%
    - Community Activism in Suburban Queens, 1945-1965
    by Sylvie Murray
    £42.49

    "A convincing revisionist account of the roles of US women in the two decades after WW II. . . . A very interesting rereading of a standard stereotype."-Choice

  • - The Photography of Erich F. Schmidt, 1930-1940
    by Ayse Gursan-Salzmann
    £25.99

    Bronze Age site of Tepe Hissar near the town of Damghan and the monumental buildings of the pre-Islamic Sasanian Palace.

  • by Nancy Thomson D Grummond
    £47.49

  • - Recent Work At Gordion
     
    £43.99

    Gordion, located in central Anatolia, was discovered in 1893 and has been the subject of investigations and research since then, but most notably since 1950 under the auspices of the Pennsylvania University Museum.

  • - G.M. Fitzgerald's Deep Cut on the Tell
    by Eliot Braun
    £51.99

    G. M. FitzGerald's Deep Cut at Beth Shan, a large-scale research project in the southern Levant, is a window to the earliest civilization at this major tell, documenting human activity during the Neolithic and Bronze Age. In 1933, his last season excavating at Beth Shan, FitzGerald gave us a preliminary picture of a series of late prehistoric events that reflects the chronological progression of cultures within the region. His pioneering research effort left us with a tantalizing but incomplete story.In 1998, Eliot Braun researched FitzGerald's field notes at the University of Pennsylvania Museum and reveals in this final excavation report some of the mound's earliest secrets, including chrono-cultural and historical-stratigraphic phasing. He has integrated his work with FitzGerald's original publications, reinterpreting the data and synthetic studies of the site's major features for a more comprehensive story. Copious illustrations such as field photos and documents give the reader the aura of the 1933 excavation and a view of Beth Shan as its deepest levels were probed. Braun reviews architectural remains and stratigraphy and includes broad typological comparisons of material remains, with reference to those of other regional sites and ceramic sequences. Two appendices offer one of the earliest archaeobotanical studies in the Near East and raw data derived from FitzGerald's field notes.University Museum Monograph, 121

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.