The Beaker period in southern England is associated with the appearance of a highly visible set of material culture in the archaeological record, primarily associated with inhumation burials. This Beaker material culture has a long history of archaeological research and has resulted in this period being named after a style of pottery, the Beaker. However, the funerary record for this period is one that exhibits substantial variability. This paper considers how the archaeological narrative of the Beaker period has been constructed and presents a set of examples that exclude Beaker pottery and Beaker artefacts from the grave assemblage, located in southern England. Herein, it is questioned what these burials represent and whether they can be ...
This paper critically evaluates how archaeologists define ‘grave goods’ in relation to the full spec...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
Excavation of an Early Beaker-Early Bronze Age funerary monument at Porton Down revealed an unusuall...
During the mid-third millennium BC, people across Europe started using an international suite of nov...
In the late third millennium BC, diverse groups of people throughout Europe adopted aspects of a sui...
This chapter introduces the individuals in the BPP Database, focusing on those dating to the Project...
The appearance of the distinctive ‘Beaker package’ marks an important horizon in British prehistory,...
The Beaker People: Isotopes, Mobility and Diet in Prehistoric Britain presents the results of a majo...
Ever since large amounts of Bell Beaker complex pottery were first discovered within megalithic grav...
One of the most interesting and intriguing of the cultural complexes is that of the Bell Beaker Comp...
This essay aims to investigate the use of an origin-ID within the Beaker Complex, as defined by John...
Throughout northern Europe, thousands of burial mounds were erected in the third millennium BCE. Sta...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
The Bell Beaker Culture embodies the transition between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age during the ...
Recent treatments of burial practices in prehistoric Europe have tended to emphasise the variety of ...
This paper critically evaluates how archaeologists define ‘grave goods’ in relation to the full spec...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
Excavation of an Early Beaker-Early Bronze Age funerary monument at Porton Down revealed an unusuall...
During the mid-third millennium BC, people across Europe started using an international suite of nov...
In the late third millennium BC, diverse groups of people throughout Europe adopted aspects of a sui...
This chapter introduces the individuals in the BPP Database, focusing on those dating to the Project...
The appearance of the distinctive ‘Beaker package’ marks an important horizon in British prehistory,...
The Beaker People: Isotopes, Mobility and Diet in Prehistoric Britain presents the results of a majo...
Ever since large amounts of Bell Beaker complex pottery were first discovered within megalithic grav...
One of the most interesting and intriguing of the cultural complexes is that of the Bell Beaker Comp...
This essay aims to investigate the use of an origin-ID within the Beaker Complex, as defined by John...
Throughout northern Europe, thousands of burial mounds were erected in the third millennium BCE. Sta...
The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon...
The Bell Beaker Culture embodies the transition between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age during the ...
Recent treatments of burial practices in prehistoric Europe have tended to emphasise the variety of ...
This paper critically evaluates how archaeologists define ‘grave goods’ in relation to the full spec...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
Excavation of an Early Beaker-Early Bronze Age funerary monument at Porton Down revealed an unusuall...