For over a hundred years people had searched for the Roman amphitheatre of London. In 1988, during a dig at the City's medieval Guildhall, the astonishing discovery was made. The curving stone walls of the arena and timber beams for the seating tiers confirmed that the gladiators' place of spectacle – lost for over 1500 years – had finally been found. The amphitheatre lay abandoned for centuries until – when little more than a hollow in the landscape – it became the site of a Viking trading settlement. The dig revealed some of the most complete remains of 11th-century timber houses to be found anywhere in Europe, showing how London thrived under King Cnut and the Danes. These simple buildings gave way to the first Guildhall, which evolved i...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
This project looks at the reproduction of one mid-12th-century Roman text by analyzing sixteen versi...
The lay fraternities of late medieval London are relatively well known, yet detailed knowledge of th...
This book is about a remarkable archaeological dig on a site which has been at the heart of London f...
This publication presents new evidence of fundamental importance to understanding the Middle Saxon s...
It is nearly 25 years since the last major survey of the archaeology of the London region was writte...
When Grimes received a CBE for the discovery of the Temple of Mithras, he remarked that he was proud...
Humming with the energy of millions of residents, workers, shoppers, and tourists, London is one of ...
The site of 1 Poultry is located near the Bank of England, in the heart of the City of London. Durin...
This publication details the discovery and excavation in 1997–2003 at Plantation Place of a previous...
The purpose of this Shakespeare Connected exhibition is to highlight the contribution that archaeolo...
This project investigates the depositional practices of the towns of Roman Britain. The material rem...
Our extensive knowledge of Roman London is the result of over four decades of large-scale excavation...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:OP-92/MGC / BLDSC - British Library ...
The aim of this thesis is to explain why the early Anglo-Saxon great hall complexes were built, why ...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
This project looks at the reproduction of one mid-12th-century Roman text by analyzing sixteen versi...
The lay fraternities of late medieval London are relatively well known, yet detailed knowledge of th...
This book is about a remarkable archaeological dig on a site which has been at the heart of London f...
This publication presents new evidence of fundamental importance to understanding the Middle Saxon s...
It is nearly 25 years since the last major survey of the archaeology of the London region was writte...
When Grimes received a CBE for the discovery of the Temple of Mithras, he remarked that he was proud...
Humming with the energy of millions of residents, workers, shoppers, and tourists, London is one of ...
The site of 1 Poultry is located near the Bank of England, in the heart of the City of London. Durin...
This publication details the discovery and excavation in 1997–2003 at Plantation Place of a previous...
The purpose of this Shakespeare Connected exhibition is to highlight the contribution that archaeolo...
This project investigates the depositional practices of the towns of Roman Britain. The material rem...
Our extensive knowledge of Roman London is the result of over four decades of large-scale excavation...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:OP-92/MGC / BLDSC - British Library ...
The aim of this thesis is to explain why the early Anglo-Saxon great hall complexes were built, why ...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
This project looks at the reproduction of one mid-12th-century Roman text by analyzing sixteen versi...
The lay fraternities of late medieval London are relatively well known, yet detailed knowledge of th...