Coming from a family which is Scottish on one side and English on the other, Andrew Lamb has been curious about cultural differences between closely related groups from a young age. Combined with a long lasting interest in the European Iron Age (due in no small part to Asterix comics), his current research focuses on the southern counties of England between c.500 BC and AD 70, examining the variation in human remains across this area
This thesis concerns the treatment of the non-cremated dead in the Iron Age of eastern Britain, an a...
This thesis examines the dynamics of the creation of Anglo-Saxon societies in the central transept o...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
This thesis examines the parts played by human remains in communities during the Later Iron Age, and...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
Over 1700 prehistoric burial sites have been summarised and analysed for Southern Britain from the s...
Evidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries are ...
The following thesis investigates potential regional patterns of Iron Age burial practices and the c...
This thesis focuses on the British Iron Age and challenging the current hypotheses of exposing the d...
NoThe occurrence of human remains in Iron Age domestic contexts in southern England is well-attested...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
British and French archaeology have both dedicated a central place to the study of the nature and im...
NoEvidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries ar...
Social practices concerning the treatment of human and animal remains in the Iron Age have long been...
This thesis concerns the treatment of the non-cremated dead in the Iron Age of eastern Britain, an a...
This thesis examines the dynamics of the creation of Anglo-Saxon societies in the central transept o...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
This thesis examines the parts played by human remains in communities during the Later Iron Age, and...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
Over 1700 prehistoric burial sites have been summarised and analysed for Southern Britain from the s...
Evidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries are ...
The following thesis investigates potential regional patterns of Iron Age burial practices and the c...
This thesis focuses on the British Iron Age and challenging the current hypotheses of exposing the d...
NoThe occurrence of human remains in Iron Age domestic contexts in southern England is well-attested...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
British and French archaeology have both dedicated a central place to the study of the nature and im...
NoEvidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries ar...
Social practices concerning the treatment of human and animal remains in the Iron Age have long been...
This thesis concerns the treatment of the non-cremated dead in the Iron Age of eastern Britain, an a...
This thesis examines the dynamics of the creation of Anglo-Saxon societies in the central transept o...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...