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Harold John Edward Peake, FSA, FRAI (27 September 1867 – 22 September 1946) was a British archaeologist, anthropologist, museum curator, and independent scholar.

H. J. E. Peake

Career

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Peake was honorary curator of the Newbury Museum (now the West Berkshire Museum), which became well known for its pottery and chronological displays. He served as the president of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland for a two-year period from 1926 to 1928. He was also a member of the council of the Society of Antiquaries of London from 1928 to 1930. He was known for his wide interests, from "[pioneering] research into the beginnings of cereal cultivation" in the Levant through to the local archaeology of Berkshire, and his unifying application of anthropological thought and archaeological evidence.[1][2][3][4]

From 1927 through 1936, he was the co-author of the ten volumes of The Corridors of Time with H. J. Fleure, which aimed to cover world prehistory from "the dawn of human life to the periods when written ideas and abstract thought spread far and wide". A tenth volume was published posthumously in 1956 by Fleure who used research and notes they had done together.[1][5]

He was awarded the Huxley Memorial Medal and Lecture in 1940; the lecture was titled "The study of prehistoric times".[1][6]

Views

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Peake proposed a "prospector theory" within the school of cultural diffusion: this theorised that the megalithic architecture of Europe such as the dolmens was spread by prospectors from the Eastern Mediterranean, probably originating from the Aegean Islands before 2200 BC, who were seeking commodities such as metal ores.[7] He later argued that the rudiments of megalithic architecture originated in Syria c. 4000BC and from there spread to Egypt in the second pre-dynastic period and the eastern Mediterranean.[5][8] He suggested that this was not the spread of a single culture within the same millennia, but of slow diffusion over time from mother sites to daughter sites, perhaps linked to a shared cult.[8]

I have endeavoured to show that it is to the north-east of the Aegean that we must look for the centre from which mining prospectors set out for Spain and Brittany, carrying with them the elements of megalithic architecture.

— The Origin of the Dolmen (1916)[7]

This is in contrast to Grafton Elliot Smith who argues for hyperdiffusionism with ancient Egypt as the single source of cultural practices, and to Luis Siret who argued that it was the Phoenicians who borough megaliths to the Iberian Peninsula.[7] Peake suggested that Smith had overemphasised and oversimplified events by centring Egypt as the sole origin of cultural diffusion,[3] and that Siret's argument was only possible because he moved the dates of the Phoenicians from 800 BC to 2000 BC.[7]

Selected works

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  • Peake, Harold (1916). "68. The Origin of the Dolmen". Man. 16: 116–121. doi:10.2307/2788934. ISSN 0025-1496. Retrieved 28 July 2024.
  • Peake, Harold (1922). The Bronze Age and the Celtic World. London: Benn Brothers. ISBN 9789356087347. OCLC 3728495 – via Project Gutenberg.
  • Peake, Harold (1922). The English village, the origin and decay of its community; an anthropological interpretation. London: Benn Brothers.
  • Peake, Harold (1930). The flood; new light on an old story. New York: Robert M. McBride.
  • Peake, Harold (1933). Early steps in human progress. London: Sampson Low Marston.


The Corridors of Time

References

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  1. ^ a b c H. J., Fleure; Mark, Pottle (23 September 2004). "Peake, Harold John Edward (1867–1946)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35430. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ "Peake, Harold John Edward, (27 Sept. 1867–22 Sept. 1946), Vice-President of the Royal Anthropological Institute; President of the Newbury District Field Club; President of the Newbury District Hospital; Chairman of the Governors of the Newbury Grammar School; Corresponding Fellow of the Societa Romana di Antropologia". Who Was Who. Oxford University Press. 1 December 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
  3. ^ a b FLEURE, H. J. (1947). "Harold John Edward Peake, 1867-1946". Man. 47: 48–50. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
  4. ^ Fleure, H. J. (October 1946). "Mr. Harold J. E. Peake". Nature. 158 (4015): 508–509. Bibcode:1946Natur.158..508F. doi:10.1038/158508a0.
  5. ^ a b Wickstead, Helen (15 June 2017). ""Wild Worship of a Lost and Buried Past": Enchanted Archaeologies and the Cult of Kata, 1908–1924". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 27 (1). doi:10.5334/bha-596. ISSN 1062-4740.
  6. ^ "Huxley Memorial Medal and Lecture Prior Recipients". Royal Anthropological Institute. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d Peake, Harold (1916). "68. The Origin of the Dolmen". Man. 16: 116–121. doi:10.2307/2788934. ISSN 0025-1496. Retrieved 28 July 2024.
  8. ^ a b Peake, Harold (1922). "Chapter IV: The Prospectors". The Bronze Age and the Celtic World. London: Benn Brothers. pp. 48–60. ISBN 9789356087347 – via Internet Archive.