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Iron Age and Roman Coin Hoards in Britain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 767

Iron Age and Roman Coin Hoards in Britain

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020-06-30
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  • Publisher: Oxbow Books

More coin hoards have been recorded from Roman Britain than from any other province of the Empire. This comprehensive and lavishly illustrated volume provides a survey of over 3260 hoards of Iron Age and Roman coins found in England and Wales with a detailed analysis and discussion. Theories of hoarding and deposition and examined, national and regional patterns in the landscape settings of coin hoards presented, together with an analysis of those hoards whose findspots were surveyed and of those hoards found in archaeological excavations. It also includes an unprecedented examination of the containers in which coin hoards were buried and the objects found with them. The patterns of hoarding...

Stories from the Landscape
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 310

Stories from the Landscape

Man's impact on the landscape is obvious although, as this book makes clear, his relationship with the landscape is a complicated one and is both physical and emotional.

Cladh Hallan - Roundhouses and the dead in the Hebridean Bronze Age and Iron Age
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1196

Cladh Hallan - Roundhouses and the dead in the Hebridean Bronze Age and Iron Age

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-10-31
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  • Publisher: Oxbow Books

This first of two volumes presents the archaeological evidence of a long sequence of settlement and funerary activity from the Beaker period (Early Bronze Age c. 2000 BC) to the Early Iron Age (c. 500 BC) at the unusually long-occupied site of Cladh Hallan on South Uist in the Western Isles of Scotland. Particular highlights of its sequence are a cremation burial ground and pyre site of the 18th–16th centuries BC and a row of three Late Bronze Age sunken-floored roundhouses constructed in the 10th century BC. Beneath these roundhouses, four inhumation graves contained skeletons, two of which were remains of composite collections of body parts with evidence for post-mortem soft tissue prese...

Reconsidering Archaeological Fieldwork
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 192

Reconsidering Archaeological Fieldwork

Digging, recording, and writing are the three main processes that archaeologists undertake to analyze a site, yet the relationships between these processes is rarely considered critically. Reconsidering Archaeological Fieldwork asserts that each of these processes involves at least a bit of subjective interpretation. As a group of archaeologists work together to reconstruct an objective view of the past, at a particular time, at a particular site, their field methods and subjective interpretations affect the final analysis. This volume explores the important nature of the relationship between fieldwork, analysis, and interpretation. Containing contributions from a diverse group of archaeolog...

Relational Archaeologies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

Relational Archaeologies

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-04-11
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Many of us accept as uncontroversial the belief that the world is comprised of detached and disparate products, all of which are reducible to certain substances. Of those things that are alive, we acknowledge that some have agency while others, such as humans, have more advanced qualities such as consciousness, reason and intentionality. So deeply-seated is this metaphysical belief, along with the related distinctions we draw between subject/object, mind/body and nature/culture that many of us tacitly assume past groups approached and apprehended the world in a similar fashion. Relational Archaeologies questions how such a view of human beings, ‘other-than-human’ creatures and things aff...

Toby's Little Eden and Other Stories
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 326

Toby's Little Eden and Other Stories

The first story in this collection of short stories, The Ghostwriter, is about a very successful thriller writer who seems to be possessed by the spirit of Charles Dickens. This leads him to battle his inner demons and question his atheistic attitude. The second story is called Something To Do and features an ordinary man who decides to become a writer. His quotidian task is complicated by slightly obsessive thoughts relating to an old flame. The third story entitled Toby's Little Eden focuses on a strapping young man who is happily dormant and isolated in his beautiful garden in North London but the arrival of a new young housekeeper leads him to reluctantly come out of his shell. Found Wanting is about a man who seeks to gently nudge his wife back into prostitution but is he pushing at an open door? The final story, Carlington Park G.C. is really a series of comical sketches featuring the groundstaff of a new golf course in North Manchester.

A Forged Glamour
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 284

A Forged Glamour

A Forged Glamour, which takes its title from a poem, is an exploration of the lives and deaths of ironworking communities renowned for their spectacular material culture, who lived in modern-day East and North Yorkshire, between the 4th and 1st centuries BC. It evaluates settlement and funerary evidence, analyses farming and craftwork, and explores what some of their ideas and beliefs might have been. It situates this regional material within the broader context of Iron Age Britain, Ireland and the near Continent, and considers what manner of society this was. In order to do this it makes use of theoretical ideas on personhood, and relationships with material culture and landscape, arguing that the making of identity always takes work. It is the character, scale and extent of this work (revealed through objects as small as a glass bead, or as big as a cemetery; as local as an earthenware pot or as exotic as coral-decoration) which enables archaeologists to investigate the web of relations which made up their lives, and explore the means of power which distinguished their leaders.

An Oxford View of Cambridge
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 24

An Oxford View of Cambridge

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1988-07-21
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  • Publisher: CUP Archive

This is the text of the Rede Lecture given in the University of Cambridge by the Rt.Hon.Lord Jenkins of Hillhead on 10 May 1988. Lord Jenkins takes as his theme the relationship between Oxford and Cambridge over the centuries in an attempt to analyze their similarities and differences. Characteristically, Lord Jenkins is not just concerned with the universities' response to and shaping of education, but with their role as the nursery of great statesmen and public figures, and it is in this that he sees one of the essential differences between the Oxford and Cambridge styles.

Excavations at Cill Donnain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Excavations at Cill Donnain

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-06-30
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  • Publisher: Oxbow Books

The SEARCH (Sheffield Environmental and Archaeological Research Campaign in the Hebrides) project began in 1987 and covers the Scotland’s Outer Hebrides. The aim of the project is to investigate how human societies adapted in the long-term to the isolated environment of the Outer Hebrides. The first major excavation on South Uist discovered that what was thought to be a shell midden at Cill Donnain was in fact a wheelhouse, a type of dwelling used in the period c.300 BC – AD 500; under which lay the remains of a Bronze Age settlement. This settlement was partly investigated by Marik Zvelebil in 1991 and then later by Mike Parker Pearson and Kate MacDonald in 2003. The site itself is situ...

Rethinking Roundhouses
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 293

Rethinking Roundhouses

Excavated plans of roundhouses may compound multiple episodes of activity, design, construction, occupation, repair, and closure, reflecting successive stages of a building's biography. What does not survive archaeologically, through use of materials or methods that leave no tangible trace, may be as important for reconstruction as what does survive, and can only be inferred from context or comparative evidence. The great diversity in structural components suggests a greater diversity of superstructure than was implied by the classic Wessex roundhouses, including split-level roofs and penannular ridge roofs. Among the stone-built houses of the Atlantic north and west there likewise appears t...