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Colonial intrigues and my dismissal as director of antiquities
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- Book Synopsis
- In 1934 John Hilton, a newly qualified young architect, was surprised to find himself appointed the first Director of Antiquities in the British colony of Cyprus. His technical competence was not in doubt but his authority as director was challenged by a rival who enjoyed the confidence of the Governor. After less than a year Hilton found himself dismissed. The outcry in Cyprus and England at his unfair treatment led to his tenure being extended and his rival's position being abolished. Hilton's memoir, composed forty years later but using family letters written at the time, is his own colourful account of this episode. Written fluently with a wry humour, it reveals how much he enjoyed the challenge of his job despite disliking the conventions of colonial society. His account provides an unusual insight into life in 1930s Cyprus, at the time still a relatively isolated and impoverished British colony.
- About The Author
- Nicholas Stanley-Price spent ten years as an archaeologist in Cyprus and the Middle East before concentrating on international heritage conservation, employed by the Getty Conservation Institute in California and by the intergovernmental body ICCROM in Rome as its Director-General. He has promoted the conservation and management of archaeological sites, as founding editor of the journal of that name, now published by Taylor & Francis, and by launching a new M.A. at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. He has published extensively on conservation principles, site conservation and antiquities management.
- Product Details
-
- ISBN
- 9781805830641
- Format
- Paperback
- Publisher
- Archaeopress Archaeology, (03 July 2025)
- Number of Pages
- 172
- Language
- English
- Dimensions
- 234 x 156 mm
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- See all books in this series
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