Cover
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: All the King’s Horses: An Introduction by Alex W. Barker and Paula Kay Lazrus
Chapter 2: The Economics of the Looted Archaeological Site of Bâb edh-Dhrâ’: A View from Google Earth by Neil Brodie and Daniel A. Contreras
Chapter 3: The Material and Intellectual Consequencesof Acquiring the Sarpedon Krater by David Gill
Chapter 4: Moot Loot Speaks: Classical Archaeology and the Displaced Object by Stephen L. Dyson
Chapter 5: Unprovenienced Artifacts and the Invention of Minoan and Mycenaean Religion by Senta C. German
Chapter 6: Early Looting and Destruction of Australian Shipwreck Sites: Legislation, Education, and an Amnesty for Long-Term Preservation by Jennifer Rodrigues
Chapter 7: The Trade in Fresh Supplies of Ancient Coins: Scale, Organization, and Politics by Nathan T. Elkins
Chapter 8: The Social and Political Consequences of Devotion to Biblical Artifacts by Neil Brodie and Morag M. Kersel
Chapter 9: What All the King’s Horses Has to Say to American Archaeologists by Ann M. Early
References Cited
About the Contributors
Index