British Archaeology
The Tower of London New Armouries Project Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780904220360
Pub Date: 12 Jun 2006
Imprint: Oxford Archaeology
Series: Occasional Paper
Description:
The New Armouries was built against the medieval inner curtain wall at the Tower of London in 1663-4 as a small arms store, and was later used for displays of the Royal Armouries collections. On the opposite side of the curtain wall a range of buildings providing soldiers' houses was constructed in the mid 17th century. This was rebuilt as the Irish Barracks by Dugal Campbell in the 1750s, but was demolished during the 19th century.
RRP: £7.50
The Medieval Postern Gate by the Tower of London Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 74
ISBN: 9781901992601
Pub Date: 25 May 2006
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Illustrations: 47 b/w illus, 29 tabs
Description:
This long-awaited publication elucidates a remarkable monument, now preserved in situ beside the Tower of London. Excavations at Tower Hill in 1979 uncovered substantial reamins of the medieval postern gate at the junction of the City's defensive wall and the moat of the Tower of London. The postern gate was constructed between 1297 and 1308, towards the close of the reign of Edward I.
RRP: £7.95
The Mote of Mark Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 190
ISBN: 9781842172179
Pub Date: 12 May 2006
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Oxbow Monographs
Illustrations: 8p of col pls, many b/w figs
Description:
The Mote of Mark is a low boss of granite rising from forty-five metres above the eastern shore of Rough Firth, where the Urr Water enters the Solway, between the villages of Kippford and Rockcliffe. The summit comprises a central hollow between two raised areas of rock and was formerly defended by a stone and timber rampart enclosing one third of an acre. The Mote of Mark appears to have first attracted the attention of antiquaries in the late eighteenth century, and first assumed national importance with Alexander Curle's major work in 1913.
Royal palace, abbey and town of Westminster on Thorney Island Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9781901992502
Pub Date: 29 Mar 2006
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Illustrations: 144 mainly col illus, 56 tabs
Description:
The Palace and Abbey of Westminster provide one of the most familiar images in the world. From its beginnings on an island surrounded by the Rivers Thames and Tyburn more than 7000 years ago, the site became the most important centre of English history from the 11th century onwards. The palace, which started as one of many royal residences, became the principal home of the English monarchs until it was damaged by fire during the reign of Henry VIII.
RRP: £29.95
Archaeology of the Wallingford Bypass, 1986-92 Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 264
ISBN: 9780947816674
Pub Date: 12 Mar 2006
Imprint: Oxford University School of Archaeology
Series: Thames Valley Landscapes Monograph
Illustrations: 70 illustrations, 22 plates
Description:
The site at Whitecross Farm, including timber structures located on the edge of the eyot, and a substantial midden and occupation deposit has been securely radiocarbon-dated to the late Bronze Age. The late Bronze Age artefact assemblages are suggestive of a high-status site, with a range of domestic and ritual activities represented. The bank of the Grim's Ditch earthwork was found to have preserved evidence of earlier settlement, dating to the Neolithic and Bronze Age, and a sequence of cultivation, including ard marks and 'cord-rig' cultivation ridges.
RRP: £26.95
From Ice Age to Essex Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9781901992618
Pub Date: 12 Feb 2006
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Description:
This book presents a short history of human habitation in East London, based on archaeological findings at gravel sites between 1963 and 1999. To find the beginning of this story we have to go back half a million years, to the time when advancing ice sheets pushed the Thames southwards to its present course, depositing the river gravels that exist across East London today. Archaeological work on the East London gravels began when finds from gravel pits were given to local collectors and museums.
Saxon, Medieval and Post-Medieval Settlement at Sol Central, Marefair, Northampton Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 81
ISBN: 9781901992571
Pub Date: 24 Jan 2006
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Illustrations: 76 b/w illus, 31 tabs, CD
Description:
Excavation work by Northamptonshire Archaeology and MoLAS revealed residual prehistoric and Roman artefacts and Middle Saxon settlement evidence in the form of a single sunken-floored building. Activity intensified in the Late Saxon to Norman period, when metalworking, crop processing and bone working took place at the site. The establishment of buildings suggests the main Saxon settlement around St Peter's Church spread northeastwards towards the limits of the town.
RRP: £11.95
EAA 112: Dragon Hall, King Street, Norwich Cover
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780951787816
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2005
Imprint: East Anglian Archaeology
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph
Illustrations: p, 25pls, 95figs;
Description:
When a wealthy merchant built Dragon Hall in 1427 there had already been stone buildings on the site for 140 years, while the origins of settlement here lay in the period c. 9751025. Some of the buildings used by these first settlers were uncovered during the recent work at Dragon Hall, along with evidence for a small riverside community within an extra-mural Late Saxon suburb.
Castles in Context Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 178
ISBN: 9780954557522
Pub Date: 01 Dec 2005
Imprint: Windgather Press
Illustrations: many col illus
Description:
Castle studies have been transformed in recent years with a movement away from the traditional interpretation of castles as static military structures towards a wider view of castles as aesthetic symbols of power, with a more complicated relationship with the landscape. Supported by numerous colour photographs of the most `tangible' remains of the Middle Ages, this clearly written and very accessible study makes the most current ideas about the role of the castle available to a wider and more general readership. Robert Liddiard discusses the history of castle building before and after the Norman Conquest, considering the Norman and medieval definition of the castle, and he reassesses the military defensive capabilities of castles, demolishing the idea that they were built in response to military policy.
Holy Trinity Priory, Aldgate, City of London Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 285
ISBN: 9781901992458
Pub Date: 20 Jul 2005
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Illustrations: 214 b/w and col illus
Description:
This is an archaeological, architectural and historical study of one of the largest complexes of buildings in the medieval City of London, but one which is largely unknown and of which only two fragments survive above ground today. It is the fifth volume in a series on the monasteries of London. Holy Trinity Priory, Aldgate, was the first religious house to be established inside the walls of London after the Norman Conquest, in 11078; one of the earliest Augustinian houses to be established in England; and the first to be dissolved, in 1532.
RRP: £32.95
Archaeology of the Jubilee Line extension Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 56
ISBN: 9781901992540
Pub Date: 05 May 2005
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Illustrations: 41 b/w illus
Description:
Excavation ahead of redevelopment by London Underground Limited uncovered flint tools and debitage characteristic of the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods and Early Bronze Age. Activity resumed in the Late Bronze Age. A neonate skeleton of Early Iron Age date was recovered from a rubbish pit near a probable roundhouse.
RRP: £7.95
A Norse Farmstead in the Outer Hebrides Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9781842171691
Pub Date: 30 Apr 2005
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Description:
This volume examines South Uist, a small island in the soutern half of the Outer Hebrides. In the middle of the island lies the township of Bornais. This covers a particularly flat area of land which means that the three mounds can be seen all the more clearly.
Set in stone Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 128
ISBN: 9781842171431
Pub Date: 11 Mar 2005
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Illustrations: b/w illus
Description:
As its title might suggest, this volume sets out to present a new view of Scotland's Neolithic as seen via its monumental structures. The papers brought together here came out of a research day at Cardiff University's School of History and Archaeology in January 2002 and cover a diverse number of topics. They raise questions of ancestry and worldview, and highlight the amount that can be done in examining the settings of monuments.
A Medieval Moated Site at Cedars Field, Stowmarket, Suffolk Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 33
ISBN: 9780860552796
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2004
Imprint: East Anglian Archaeology
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph
Illustrations: 2 b/w pls, 13 b/w figs, 13 tbs
Description:
The medieval moated site at Cedars Wood was investigated in 1980 and 1999, revealing occupation evidence from the Neolithic and Bronze Age, Roman and medieval periods. The latter forms the focus of this report although other finds are listed. Occupied from the 12th to 14th century, the site is thought to have belonged to the Broughton family and comprised an area of approximately one acre enclosed by a shallow moat.
EAA 107: Excavations at Stansted Airport, 1986-91 Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 583
ISBN: 9781852812423
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2004
Imprint: East Anglian Archaeology
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph
Illustrations: many b/w pls, illus, figs, tbs
Description:
This is an account of the archaeological work begun in 1985 in response to the development of Stansted as Londons third airport. Originally it was conceived as a medieval landscape project, focusing on the three known sites in the area two of which were thought to be Domesday Manors supplemented by fieldwalking of the entire development area. By 1991 the fieldwalking programme, coupled with large-scale excavations and watching briefs, had transformed our understanding of the settlement landscape of north-west Essex, with the discovery of extensive archaeological deposits dating back to the Neolithic.
Cistercian Abbey of St Mary Stratford Langthorne, Essex Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 198
ISBN: 9781901992380
Pub Date: 12 Dec 2004
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Illustrations: b/w and col illus
Description:
The Cistercian monastery of St Mary Stratford Langthorne once stood on land south of the new Jubilee Line station at Stratford. Excavations 1973-94 recorded large parts of the monastic church, cemetery and related buildings. Topics include the precinct arrangement, architecture and decoration, and the way of life of the inhabitants.
RRP: £18.95