Classical World  /  Roman Britian
Yarnton Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 655
ISBN: 9781905905218
Pub Date: 17 Nov 2011
Imprint: Oxford University School of Archaeology
Series: Oxford Archaeology Monograph
Description:
The Yarnton landscape, extending from the floodplain of the Thames up onto the higher Second Gravel Terrace, has witnessed a long history of topographic and vegetational change linked to human activity. Settlements on the edge of the Second Gravel Terrace were occupied throughout the Iron Age and Roman periods. Associated with the middle Iron Age settlement was a small cemetery of some 35 crouched inhumation burials.
Roman London and the Walbrook stream crossing Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 592
ISBN: 9781907586040
Pub Date: 15 Aug 2011
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Description:
The site of 1 Poultry, excavated in the 1990s, is located near the Bank of England in the heart of the City of London. It lay immediately west of the point where the main east-west road through Roman London bridged the Walbrook stream and proved to be one of the most significant archaeological sites ever excavated in the City, with an unparalleled sequence of buildings, roads and open spaces. A timber drain of AD 47 beneath the main road is the earliest, securely dated structure yet known from Londinium and a pottery shop destroyed in the Boudican revolt gives a snapshot of life in AD 60/61.
EAA 138: Farm and Forge Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 214
ISBN: 9780955654633
Pub Date: 15 May 2011
Imprint: East Anglian Archaeology
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph
Illustrations: 120 illus
Description:
Between 1998 and 2001, Albion Archaeology (formerly Bedfordshire County Archaeology Service) carried out a series of archaeological investigations in advance of development at Marsh Leys on the outskirts of Bedford. Although the discovery of flint artefacts suggested limited earlier prehistoric activity, the first firm evidence for sustained use of the site was a ditched enclosure, which pre-dated the late Iron Age. The vast majority of the archaeological evidence was associated with two Romano-British farm sites c.
Silchester Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 544
ISBN: 9780907764373
Pub Date: 15 Mar 2011
Imprint: Roman Society Publications
Series: Britannia Monographs
Description:
Characterising urban life, City in Transition is the second volume reporting on the archaeology of the continuing excavation of Silchester Insula IX, taking the story down to the early 2nd century. In describing the evidence for the occupation of the 2nd and 3rd centuries it follows on from Life and Labour in Late Roman Silchester (2006), which published the late Roman occupation. Geochemical and micromorphological analyses inform the interpretation of the use of space within buildings and, together with the study of an abundant material culture and environmental record, provide a rich characterisation of the houses and their occupants.
RRP: £75.00
A Roman settlement and bath house at Shadwell Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 225
ISBN: 9780956305428
Pub Date: 20 Jan 2011
Imprint: Pre-Construct Archaeology
Description:
Excavations in 2002 by Pre-Construct Archaeology on two adjacent sites in Shadwell revealed an extensive late Romano-British settlement over a kilometre beyond the walls of Londinium on an escarpment overlooking the north bank of the Thames. The area's importance became apparent in the 1970s through the discovery of monumental masonry and 3rd-century settlement and burial practice. This volume presents the evidence for Roman Shadwell as revealed by these excavations and considers its place within the broader context of Londinium and its hinterland.
Finds from the Frontier Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 161
ISBN: 9781902771816
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2010
Imprint: Council for British Archaeology
Illustrations: b/w and col illus
Description:
Finds from the Frontier brings together papers given at a conference held at Newcastle upon Tyne in 2008. Its aim is to elucidate the life of the 4th-century limitanei of Britain through their material culture. The papers consider whether the excavated artefacts justify the traditional implication that the period is one of declining standards and largely come to the conclusion that, on the contrary, the period was rich in artefacts that have much to tell us about the late frontier.
The late Roman cemetery at Lankhills, Winchester Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 569
ISBN: 9780904220629
Pub Date: 01 Dec 2010
Imprint: Oxford Archaeology
Description:
Lankhills and its late Roman cemetery have played a significant role in the understanding of the military in civilian areas of Roman Britain in the fourth century, and these new excavations double the number of graves explored and add to the variety of finds represented. New analytical techiques show that some of those buried were immigrants from other parts of Europe and perhaps even North Africa. The new excavations revealed a further 307 inhumation graves (plus six more partly excavated previously) and 25 more cremation burials.
RRP: £25.00
Roman Mosaics of Britain Volume IV Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 480
ISBN: 9780854312948
Pub Date: 11 Nov 2010
Imprint: Society of Antiquaries of London
Illustrations: c.500 b/w & col photographs and line drawings
Description:
This volume brings to a triumphant conclusion this monumental project to catalogue, describe and illustrate every Romano-British mosaic. The area covered by the fourth and final volume in the corpus is one of the richest regions of Britain in economic as well as architectural and artistic terms and this is reflected in the quantity and quality of the region's mosaics, which include the largest figured mosaic ever found in Britain - the Woodchester Orpheus pavement - which was perhaps the inspiration for the other famous Orpheus mosaics of the Roman Cotswolds. At the heart of this affluent region is Cirencester, Roman Britain's second largest town, represented here by more than sixty mosaics, the second-century examples being the most exquisite in the country.
RRP: £160.00
Evolution of a Farming Community in the Upper Thames Valley Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 222
ISBN: 9781905905164
Pub Date: 01 Apr 2010
Imprint: Oxford University School of Archaeology
Series: Thames Valley Landscapes Monograph
Description:
The site at Cotswold Community in the western reaches of the Upper Thames Valley has been a focus for human activity since Neolithic times. Successive Bronze Age, Iron Age and Roman settlements developed within an increasingly open grassland landscape, which was heavily exploited for the growing crops and the grazing of animals. The spiritual lives of the inhabitants were glimpsed through a series of structured pit deposits and ritual monuments, including a potential Neolithic timber circle and Bronze Age round barrows.
RRP: £15.00
The Hoxne Late Roman Treasure Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 288
ISBN: 9780714118178
Pub Date: 22 Mar 2010
Imprint: British Museum Press
Description:
The Hoxne treasure, a spectacular collection of gold and silver coins, gold jewellery and silver artefacts, was buried early in the 5th century AD, and was rediscovered in November 1992. Although the major objects have been exhibited in museums and illustrated and discussed in both popular and scholarly publications over the last fifteen years, the results of detailed research on the entire find are published here in full for the first time. This volume provides a complete, illustrated inventory of the items in the treasure other than the 15,000 coins, which have been separately published (in The Late Roman Gold and Silver Coins from the Hoxne Treasure, by P.
Tracks through Time Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
ISBN: 9781901992878
Pub Date: 22 Jan 2010
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Illustrations: col illus
Description:
The East London Line Project presented a unique opportunity, as structures were demolished and cleared for London's latest railway, to discover more about some of London's earliest railways. This included previously undiscovered parts of one of the world's first operational passenger railways, the Eastern Counties of 1840. The new construction led to important archaeological discoveries, particularly at the site of Holywell Priory and beneath Bishopsgate Goods Yard in Shoreditch.
Secrets of the Gardens Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
ISBN: 9780956305411
Pub Date: 11 Nov 2009
Imprint: Pre-Construct Archaeology
Description:
Beneath Drapers' Gardens, in what was once a damp and uninviting quarter of the Roman city of Londinium lies the buried valley of the Walbrook, home to some of the more unpleasant industries of the town, as well as some remarkable and unexpected finds, including a hoard of metal objects buried in a fourth century well. However, what really sets this site apart is both the extraordinary preservation of finds due to the particular soil conditions of the Walbrook Valley, and the sheer size of the area investigated. A near complete urban street with associated buildings spanning many years of the Roman occupation was uncovered.
RRP: £9.95
Roman Mosaics of Britain Volume III Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 600
ISBN: 9780854312894
Pub Date: 05 Apr 2009
Imprint: Society of Antiquaries of London
Description:
The third volume in this massive project to create the first complete corpus of the Roman mosaics of Britain covers the areas of Britain that were first to come under Roman control and where some of Britain's most impressive mosaics are to be found - in Colchester, Silchester, London and Verulamium, and in villas and palaces at Brading, Bignor, Fishbourne and Rockbourne. In their introduction to the volume, the authors trace the origins of mosaic-making in Britain, and the development of colour palettes and motifs, from the mainly black-and-white geometric designs of first-century Fishbourne Palace, reflecting contemporary Gaulish fashions, to the more elaborate polychrome designs of the third and fourth centuries, featuring figures from classical mythology, some of which (like Brading's Orpheus taming the animals with his music, or Lullingstone's Bellerophon slaying the Chimera) had been invested with new meaning as symbols of Christianity. They consider too the types of buildings with which mosaics are associated, the functions of mosaic-decorated rooms, the materials from which they are made, the impact of mosaic discoveries on early antiquaries and the pioneering mosaic paintings of artists such as Richard Smirke and Charles Stothard, published in Samuel Lysons' Reliquae Britanniae Romanae (1817).
RRP: £200.00
Roman Southwark - Settlement and Economy Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 280
ISBN: 9781901992786
Pub Date: 14 Feb 2009
Imprint: MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology)
Series: MoLAS Monograph
Description:
This report presents an overview of Roman urban development in London south of the Thames. The establishment of the Roman bridge and the first approach roads and landing places, made Southwark an ideal location for the development of facilities for the trans-shipment of goods between land and river. The wide range of data from 41 previously unpublished north Southwark sites provides the means for 'mapping' Roman activity in Southwark: the nature of the early settlement, changing patterns of land use and broader processes of social and economic change.
RRP: £27.95
EAA 125: Life in the Loop Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9780955654619
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2008
Imprint: East Anglian Archaeology
Series: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph
Illustrations: 192 illus
Description:
The Biddenham Loop has been the scene of human activity from the Palaeolithic through to the present-day but the majority of the archaeological evidence spans the Neolithic to the early 4th century AD. Apart from two handaxes, probably brought up from deep within the gravel by recent quarrying, no evidence for Palaeolithic activity was recovered. Given that the Biddenham area once had a reputation as a prolific source of material of this date, its absence is explained by the developments relatively limited impact on the underlying gravel terrace.
Londinium and Beyond Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 294
ISBN: 9781902771724
Pub Date: 31 Dec 2008
Imprint: Council for British Archaeology
Illustrations: b/w and col illus
Description:
This volume, a collection of essays in honour of Harvey Sheldon, begins with a section on the chronology and cartography of Roman London. The second section examines the landscape and environment of Roman London and its hinterland, drawing from a variety of disciplines.The third part of the book examines themes which are more difficult to identify through the archaeological record, such as education, cults and attitudes to death and burial.