The evidence of the character and purpose of settlements previously described as defended ‘small towns’ is reviewed in the light of knowledge accrued since the implementation of Planning Policy Guidance 16 in 1990, the same year as the publication of Burnham and Wacher's survey, The ‘Small Towns’ of Roman Britain. This review focuses on four of the more extensively excavated settlements: Alcester, Cambridge, Godmanchester and Worcester. In the absence of convincing urban attributes, it is suggested that this category of settlement should more appropriately be regarded as defended villages (vici). These cluster in and around the West Anglian plain and on Ermine Street, suggesting a strategic function to protect grain and other food supplies ...
This study attempts to shed new light on the development of towns in early England from late-Roman t...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The later Iron Age was a time of considerable change in both Britain and Temperate Europe, with this...
The evidence of the character and purpose of settlements previously described as defended ‘small tow...
Although the vast majority of the population of Roman Britain continued to live in small rural farms...
The publication of the RurLand project (Rural Landscape in North-East Gaul) has provided an opportun...
Archaeology has been firmly embedded in the British planning systems for over a quarter of century, ...
The Late-Roman/Anglo-Saxon transition has been heavily debated for the last twenty years. A hard and...
The Roman period is well represented in Kent’s long history of excavation and discovery and it has s...
This resource brings together the excavated evidence for the rural settlement of Roman Britain with ...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
The Late Iron Age, Roman and early Saxon settlement at Elms Farm, Heybridge, Essex was excavated in ...
This thesis comprises an analysis and reinterpretation of rural settlements in Wales and the Marches...
Excavation of the Roman tilery at Little London, Pamber, Hampshire has prompted a re-assessment of t...
YesDespite much work on the frontier of Roman Britain, major questions concerned with society and se...
This study attempts to shed new light on the development of towns in early England from late-Roman t...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The later Iron Age was a time of considerable change in both Britain and Temperate Europe, with this...
The evidence of the character and purpose of settlements previously described as defended ‘small tow...
Although the vast majority of the population of Roman Britain continued to live in small rural farms...
The publication of the RurLand project (Rural Landscape in North-East Gaul) has provided an opportun...
Archaeology has been firmly embedded in the British planning systems for over a quarter of century, ...
The Late-Roman/Anglo-Saxon transition has been heavily debated for the last twenty years. A hard and...
The Roman period is well represented in Kent’s long history of excavation and discovery and it has s...
This resource brings together the excavated evidence for the rural settlement of Roman Britain with ...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
The Late Iron Age, Roman and early Saxon settlement at Elms Farm, Heybridge, Essex was excavated in ...
This thesis comprises an analysis and reinterpretation of rural settlements in Wales and the Marches...
Excavation of the Roman tilery at Little London, Pamber, Hampshire has prompted a re-assessment of t...
YesDespite much work on the frontier of Roman Britain, major questions concerned with society and se...
This study attempts to shed new light on the development of towns in early England from late-Roman t...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The later Iron Age was a time of considerable change in both Britain and Temperate Europe, with this...