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  1. Chief Charles Thurstan Shaw CBE FBA FSA (27 June 1914 – 8 March 2013) was an English archaeologist, the first trained specialist to work in what was then British West Africa. He specialized in the ancient cultures of present-day Ghana and Nigeria.

  2. Charles Thurstan Shaw war ein britischer Archäologe, der in den westafrikanischen Kolonialgebieten Großbritanniens arbeitete. Sein Schwerpunkt lag auf den Kulturen auf dem Gebiet der Staaten Ghana und Nigeria.

  3. 10. Sept. 2013 · Thurstan Shaw's contributions to West African archaeology go beyond his fieldwork. His syntheses set important points of repair for the current generation and established certain key notions within the Anglophone school — such as the rejection of the term ‘Neolithic’ for Sub-Saharan Africa in favour of Late Stone or Ceramic ...

  4. Born in Devon in 1914 and educated at Blundell’s School, Tiverton, and Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, Charles Thurstan Shaw read classics before taking a first in archaeology and...

  5. 31. März 2013 · The son of a Church of England clergyman, Charles Thurstan Shaw was born in Plymouth on June 27 1914 and educated at Blundell’s School, Tiverton, where he won prizes for Greek and music (he was...

  6. (Charles) Thurstan Shaw (1914-2013) was an archaeologist, especially of West Africa. He was the second son of the Revd John Herbert Shaw and Grace Irene Shaw (née Woolart), and attended Blundell’s School, Tiverton and Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (BA 1936, MA 1941, PhD 1968).

  7. 30. Nov. 2022 · When Thurstan Shaw published the full report on his 1959–1964 excavations, he sought to define an “Igbo-Ukwu Culture” following the archaeological interpretive traditions of the day.