This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how various factors caused continuity and change in the insular material culture, the settlements, and ultimately in social identity. These cycles of change, brought about by influences both within and outside the region, appear to reoccur throughout the study period, and are evidenced through a regional (macro-scale) and micro-regional (site-specific) scale assessment of the evidence. An overriding sense of long-term continuity is perceived in the ability of these insular identities to retain former traditions and develop their material culture, despite the apparent political domination by far-reaching and overarching social groups in the Anglo-S...
The traditional Romanisation model of Roman Britain is disputed by a number of researchers who claim...
Beginning in the late eighth century A.D., the Vikings of Scandinavia expanded westward, first to ra...
My research examines how Roman-style material culture was used to express identity, how this changed...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This thesis explores the relationship between people and material culture in the south-west of Engla...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAP Societa Archaeologica via the link in t...
This thesis examines the material reflections of community identity and the dynamics of social chan...
This study examines the archaeological reflections of group identity and socio-economic networks in ...
This thesis is a study of social change in Britain in the Late Iron Age and Romano-British periods. ...
The central theme of this study is an examination of the processes of change in Iron Age social orga...
This thesis is a study of the transition from Romano-British to Anglo-Saxon culture in East Anglia f...
The thesis explores social transformations in the settlement and economy of Anglo-Saxon England, bet...
This study focuses on the creation of both British ethnic or ‘national’ identity and Brittonic regio...
Using the example of pottery imported into the Channel ports of southern England, an approach to ex...
The traditional Romanisation model of Roman Britain is disputed by a number of researchers who claim...
Beginning in the late eighth century A.D., the Vikings of Scandinavia expanded westward, first to ra...
My research examines how Roman-style material culture was used to express identity, how this changed...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This thesis explores the relationship between people and material culture in the south-west of Engla...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAP Societa Archaeologica via the link in t...
This thesis examines the material reflections of community identity and the dynamics of social chan...
This study examines the archaeological reflections of group identity and socio-economic networks in ...
This thesis is a study of social change in Britain in the Late Iron Age and Romano-British periods. ...
The central theme of this study is an examination of the processes of change in Iron Age social orga...
This thesis is a study of the transition from Romano-British to Anglo-Saxon culture in East Anglia f...
The thesis explores social transformations in the settlement and economy of Anglo-Saxon England, bet...
This study focuses on the creation of both British ethnic or ‘national’ identity and Brittonic regio...
Using the example of pottery imported into the Channel ports of southern England, an approach to ex...
The traditional Romanisation model of Roman Britain is disputed by a number of researchers who claim...
Beginning in the late eighth century A.D., the Vikings of Scandinavia expanded westward, first to ra...
My research examines how Roman-style material culture was used to express identity, how this changed...