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Archaeological and Anthropological Tripos, Parts IIA and IIB, 1999: Notice

The Faculty Board of Archaeology and Anthropology give notice that they have prescribed the following special areas, special subjects, and subjects for seminar courses in Part IIA and Part IIB of the Archaeological and Anthropological Tripos (Statutes and Ordinances, p. 236) in 1999:

ARCHAEOLOGY

Special areas

  Paper A7(2). Palaeolithic and Mesolithic archaeology I: The archaeology of modern human origins and early Upper Palaeolithic cultures.
Paper A8(2). Palaeolithic and Mesolithic archaeology II: Upper Palaeolithic and Late Pleistocene archaeology.
Paper A9(2). Later European prehistory I: Cognition and ideology in prehistoric Europe.
Paper A10(2). Later European prehistory II: Understanding the landscapes of prehistoric Europe.
Paper A11. Europe in the first millennium A.D. I: The archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England.
Paper A12(2). Europe in the first millennium A.D. II: Scandinavian archaeology.
Paper A13. Prehellenic archaeology (Paper D1 of Part II of the Classical Tripos).
Paper A14. Early Hellenic archaeology (Paper D2 of Part II of the Classical Tripos).
Paper A15. Classical (Greco-Roman) art (Paper D3 of Part II of the Classical Tripos).
Paper A16. Archaeology of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire (Paper D4 of Part II of the Classical Tripos).
Paper A17(2). Ancient Egypt I: The framework of living II.
Paper A18(2). Ancient Egypt II: The practice of religion II.
Paper A19(2). Ancient India I: The Indus civilization and beyond.
Paper A20(2). Ancient India II: Art and architecture of ancient India.
Paper A21. Prehistory of Western Asia (Paper As. 17 of the Oriental Studies Tripos).
Paper A22. Special subject in Assyriology (Paper As. 15 of the Oriental Studies Tripos).
Paper A23(2). Historical archaeology of Mesopotamia, 1600-539 B.C.

Special subjects

  Paper A24. Archaeology of the Americas.
Paper A25. Archaeology of gender.
Paper A26. African archaeology.
Paper A27. Archaeological science I (Paper A3).
Paper A28. Medieval Britain.
Paper A29. Palaeoecology and primate evolution.
Paper A30. Prehellenic archaeology (Paper A13).
Paper A31. Early Hellenic archaeology (Paper A14).
Paper A32. Classical (Greco-Roman) art (Paper A15).
Paper A33. Archaeology of the Western provinces of the Roman Empire (Paper A16).
Paper A34. Ancient India I: The Indus civilization and beyond (Paper A19(2)).
Paper A35. Historical archaeology of Mesopotamia, 1600-539 B.C. (Paper A23(2)).
Paper A36. Ancient Egypt II: The practice of religion II (Paper A18(2)).
Paper A37. Ancient Egypt I: The framework of living II (Paper A17(2)).
Paper A38. Special subject in Assyriology (Paper A22).
Paper A39. History of Mesopotamia (Paper As. 13 of the Oriental Studies Tripos).

BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY

Subjects for seminar courses

1. Behaviour and genetics in conservation biology.
2. Disease or ill-health.
3. Evolution and the environment.

SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY

Compulsory papers

  Paper S4. Advanced social anthropology I: Cognition, knowledge, and belief.
Paper S5. Advanced social anthropology II: Political economy.
Paper S6. Ethnographic areas: Latin America, the Pacific, West Africa.

Special subjects

  Paper S7. Medical anthropology.
Paper S8. Cities, complexity, and cosmopolitanism.
Paper S9. Anthropology beyond professional texts.
Paper S10. Nationalism, race, and ethnicity.
Paper S11. Anthropology, communication, and the arts.

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Cambridge University Reporter, 5 August 1998
Copyright © 1998 The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge.