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Iron Age and Roman Burials in Champagne

Iron Age and Roman Burials in Champagne
Author: Ian Mathieson Stead
Publisher: Oxbow Books Limited
Total Pages: 392
Release: 2006
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

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This volume reports on the excavation of a series of six Iron Age cemeteries in Champagne, France. All the cemeteries were located by their distinctive ditched enclosures which served as the focus of each burial group.


Death and Burial in Iron Age Britain

Death and Burial in Iron Age Britain
Author: Dennis William Harding
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2016
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199687560

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In this volume, Harding examines the deposition of Iron Age human and animal remains in Britain and challenges the assumption that there should have been any regular form of cemetery in prehistory, arguing that the dead were more commonly integrated into settlements of the living than segregated into dedicated cemeteries.


Iron Age Cemeteries in Champagne

Iron Age Cemeteries in Champagne
Author: J.-L. Flouest
Publisher:
Total Pages: 49
Release: 1981
Genre: Burial
ISBN: 9780861590056

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The Final Feast

The Final Feast
Author: Pamela Elizabeth Craven
Publisher: BAR International Series
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN:

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An examination of the significant Iron Age amphora burials in north-west Europe in relation to the Mediterranean symposium and feasting ritual.


Romano-British Settlement and Cemeteries at Mucking

Romano-British Settlement and Cemeteries at Mucking
Author: Sam Lucy
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 778
Release: 2016-11-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1785702696

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Excavations at Mucking, Essex, between 1965 and 1978, revealed extensive evidence for a multiphase rural Romano-British settlement, perhaps an estate center, and five associated cemetery areas (170 burials) with different burial areas reserved for different groups within the settlement. The settlement demonstrated clear continuity from the preceding Iron Age occupation with unbroken sequences of artefacts and enclosures through the first century AD, followed by rapid and extensive remodeling, which included the laying out a Central Enclosure and an organized water supply with wells, accompanied by the start of large-scale pottery production. After the mid-second century AD the Central Enclosure was largely abandoned and settlement shifted its focus more to the Southern Enclosure system with a gradual decline though the 3rd and 4th centuries although continued burial, pottery and artefactual deposition indicate that a form of settlement continued, possibly with some low-level pottery production. Some of the latest Roman pottery was strongly associated with the earliest Anglo-Saxon style pottery suggesting the existence of a terminal Roman settlement phase that essentially involved an ‘Anglo-Saxon’ community. Given recent revisions of the chronology for the early Anglo-Saxon period, this casts an intriguing light on the transition, with radical implications for understandings of this period. Each of the cemetery areas was in use for a considerable length of time. Taken as a whole, Mucking was very much a componented place/complex; it was its respective parts that fostered its many cemeteries, whose diverse rites reflect the variability and roles of the settlement’s evidently varied inhabitants.


The Morel Collection

The Morel Collection
Author: Ian Mathieson Stead
Publisher: British Museum Press
Total Pages: 402
Release: 1999
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Leon Morel (1828-1909) was a part-time archaeologist who assembled an enormous collection of prehistoric, Roman and medieval antiquities, acquired by the British Museum in 1901. This book catalogues Morel's Iron Age antiquities.


A Forged Glamour

A Forged Glamour
Author: Melanie Giles
Publisher: Windgather Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2013-01-10
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1905119461

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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.


Journal of Roman Pottery Studies

Journal of Roman Pottery Studies
Author: Steven Willis
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2021-07-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 1789255902

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The Journal of Roman Pottery Studies continues to present a range of important new research in the field by both established and early career scholars. Volume XVIII has a strong theme on pottery production with papers on kiln sites, mortaria and late Roman pottery production in East Anglia and at a small town in Belgium. A major new third century assemblage from civitas Cananefatium in South Holland is presented. The second part of an important gazetteer of less common samian ware fabrics and types in northern and western Britain covers fabrics from Central and East Gaul


Families in the Roman and Late Antique World

Families in the Roman and Late Antique World
Author: Mary Harlow
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2011-12-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1441174028

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This volume seeks to explain developments within the structure of the family in antiquity, in particular in the later Roman Empire and late antiquity. Contributions extend the traditional chronological focus on the Roman family to include the transformation of familial structures in the newly formed kingdoms of late antiquity in Europe, thus allowing a greater historical perspective and establishing a new paradigm for the study of the Roman family. Drawing on the latest research by leading scholars in the field the book includes new approaches to the life course and the family in the Byzantine empire, family relationships in the dynasty of Constantine the Great, death, burial and commemoration of newborn children in Roman Italy, and widows and familial networks in Roman Egypt. In short, this volume seeks to establish a new agenda for the understanding of the Roman family and its transformation in late antiquity.