Engendering Roman Spaces' is a research project concerned with using artefact assemblage analyses to better understand spatial and gender relationships in the early Roman Empire and to produce more engendered perspectives of Roman society. This paper discusses the methodology and analyses being used in this project to investigate social behaviour within Roman military forts and fortresses of the 1st and 2nd centuries CE through analyses of the spatial distribution of artefacts at these sites. The processes involved include digitising previously published maps and artefact catalogues from Roman military sites to create searchable databases and GIS maps. They also include the classification of the artefacts according to a number of functional...
The article applies a GIS based approach to the study of the spread of the cult of Asclepius, the Gr...
This study concerns 28 Roman Iron Age Germanic burial grounds located in proximity to the river Elbe...
In this book, the author uses design theory, previously neglected in Roman archaeology, to investiga...
'Engendering Roman Spaces' is a research project concerned with using artefact assemblage analyses t...
The research project 'Engendering Roman Military Spaces', investigates socio-spatial behaviour insid...
Artefacts from military bases of the early Roman Empire potentially indicate not only the presence o...
Artefacts from military bases of the early Roman Empire potentially indicate not only the presence o...
This article outlines the approaches used in the Australian Research Council funded project, 'Engend...
This article outlines the approaches used in the Australian Research Council funded project, 'Engend...
This thesis examines the frontier defensive system found in the vicinity of the Roman auxiliary fort...
The study of the nature and function of extramural settlement on the northern frontier of Roman Brit...
This thesis examines the processes of cultural change during the early Roman (before c. AD 250) peri...
This book presents a useful GIS procedure to study settlement patterns in landscape archaeology. In ...
AbstractIn this paper, we present a method to deal with poorly dated site inventories for purposes o...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
The article applies a GIS based approach to the study of the spread of the cult of Asclepius, the Gr...
This study concerns 28 Roman Iron Age Germanic burial grounds located in proximity to the river Elbe...
In this book, the author uses design theory, previously neglected in Roman archaeology, to investiga...
'Engendering Roman Spaces' is a research project concerned with using artefact assemblage analyses t...
The research project 'Engendering Roman Military Spaces', investigates socio-spatial behaviour insid...
Artefacts from military bases of the early Roman Empire potentially indicate not only the presence o...
Artefacts from military bases of the early Roman Empire potentially indicate not only the presence o...
This article outlines the approaches used in the Australian Research Council funded project, 'Engend...
This article outlines the approaches used in the Australian Research Council funded project, 'Engend...
This thesis examines the frontier defensive system found in the vicinity of the Roman auxiliary fort...
The study of the nature and function of extramural settlement on the northern frontier of Roman Brit...
This thesis examines the processes of cultural change during the early Roman (before c. AD 250) peri...
This book presents a useful GIS procedure to study settlement patterns in landscape archaeology. In ...
AbstractIn this paper, we present a method to deal with poorly dated site inventories for purposes o...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
The article applies a GIS based approach to the study of the spread of the cult of Asclepius, the Gr...
This study concerns 28 Roman Iron Age Germanic burial grounds located in proximity to the river Elbe...
In this book, the author uses design theory, previously neglected in Roman archaeology, to investiga...