The transition from Roman Britain to early Anglo-Saxon England, traditionally described as the Adventus Saxonum and associated with a large-scale invasion by Germanic peoples, has been the subject of much debate. The archaeological record does not support a replacement of the local Romano-British population with Germanic incomers, and alternative explanations for the transition argue for a much smaller contribution of Germanic immigrants. As a contribution to this debate and to address the question of the number of immigrants, we have applied strontium and oxygen isotope analysis to study residential mobility in a sample of 19 individuals from the early Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Eastbourne, Sussex, on the southern English coast. Local variati...
Funder: Cambridge Philosophical Society; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100013858AbstractDebate ove...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
Debate over migrations to Britain during the fifth and sixth centuries AD is still rampant in archae...
The transition from Roman Britain to early Anglo-Saxon England, traditionally described as the Adven...
The aim of the project was to test the hypothesis, using oxygen and strontium isotopes, that a group...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
YesIron Age chariot burials in the UK are rare and restricted in their distribution. Historically it...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Artefacts and burial rites in the late Roman cemetery at Lankhills School, Winchester, southern Engl...
YesHistorical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to eas...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
This paper presents the results of a multi-isotopic (oxygen, strontium, carbon and nitrogen isotopes...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Early Medieval England is described historically as a time when people migrated from the Continent t...
Funder: Cambridge Philosophical Society; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100013858AbstractDebate ove...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
Debate over migrations to Britain during the fifth and sixth centuries AD is still rampant in archae...
The transition from Roman Britain to early Anglo-Saxon England, traditionally described as the Adven...
The aim of the project was to test the hypothesis, using oxygen and strontium isotopes, that a group...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
The adventus Saxonum is a crucial event in English protohistory. Scholars from a range of discipline...
YesIron Age chariot burials in the UK are rare and restricted in their distribution. Historically it...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Artefacts and burial rites in the late Roman cemetery at Lankhills School, Winchester, southern Engl...
YesHistorical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to eas...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
This paper presents the results of a multi-isotopic (oxygen, strontium, carbon and nitrogen isotopes...
Mobility and migration patterns of groups and individuals have long been a topic of interest to arch...
Early Medieval England is described historically as a time when people migrated from the Continent t...
Funder: Cambridge Philosophical Society; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100013858AbstractDebate ove...
The ancient settlement of Londinium (London) has long been characterized as a major commercial and b...
Debate over migrations to Britain during the fifth and sixth centuries AD is still rampant in archae...