This report presents an overview of Roman urban development in London south of the Thames. The establishment of the Roman bridge and the first approach roads and landing places made Southwark an ideal location for the development of facilities for the trans-shipment of goods between land and river. A wide range of data from 41, previously unpublished, north Southwark sites provides the means for ‘mapping’ Roman activity in Southwark – an early trading settlement and later administrative centre, contracting by the mid 4th century AD to the area around the bridgehead – and documenting changing patterns of land use and broader processes of social and economic change
This thesis is concerned with the hydrology of the River Walbrook and its influence on Roman London....
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Essex Society for Ar...
Whilst Roman architecture has long stood as a discrete branch of classical studies, investigated for...
An unusually extensive sequence of Roman metalworking workshops and hearths of later 1st- to late 4t...
New evidence for Roman London’s riverfront development is presented here, constituting an important ...
Excavations near Newgate revealed important evidence of the area’s development, beginning with a nat...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
This chapter investigates the character of the chartered towns in Roman Britain, their mature form i...
Report funded by English Heritage, London (GB)SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Ce...
In this chapter, the significance and complexity of the archaeological characteristics of the early ...
This book is the first concerted attempt to synthesise the available prehistoric and topographic inf...
AbstractUsing archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpola...
Waterlogged plant macrofossils were analysed from 15 samples from the Roman phases of the Bloomberg ...
This monograph investigates the development of urbanism in the North-Western Roman provinces (i.e. n...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
This thesis is concerned with the hydrology of the River Walbrook and its influence on Roman London....
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Essex Society for Ar...
Whilst Roman architecture has long stood as a discrete branch of classical studies, investigated for...
An unusually extensive sequence of Roman metalworking workshops and hearths of later 1st- to late 4t...
New evidence for Roman London’s riverfront development is presented here, constituting an important ...
Excavations near Newgate revealed important evidence of the area’s development, beginning with a nat...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
This chapter investigates the character of the chartered towns in Roman Britain, their mature form i...
Report funded by English Heritage, London (GB)SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Ce...
In this chapter, the significance and complexity of the archaeological characteristics of the early ...
This book is the first concerted attempt to synthesise the available prehistoric and topographic inf...
AbstractUsing archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpola...
Waterlogged plant macrofossils were analysed from 15 samples from the Roman phases of the Bloomberg ...
This monograph investigates the development of urbanism in the North-Western Roman provinces (i.e. n...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
This thesis is concerned with the hydrology of the River Walbrook and its influence on Roman London....
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Essex Society for Ar...
Whilst Roman architecture has long stood as a discrete branch of classical studies, investigated for...