The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) is recognised as a time of great change, from a largely subsistence-based economy to one more urban-oriented with growing political and social complexity. Little is understood of the human-animal interactions that existed in Saxon and Scandinavian England, and this thesis will use archaeozoological data with the aim of furthering the knowledge of social, political and economic hierarchies, cultural differences and debates regarding the nature of the urban context through the presence and spatial organisation of status, craft production and trade. To this end, both primary and secondary data were recorded from animal bone assemblages from Engli...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
The present study has only been concerned with the animal bones excavated from Emden. But what about...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
In this book an analysis of over 300 animal bone assemblages from English Saxon and Scandinavian sit...
Holmes Matilda Anne, Food, status and complexity in Saxon and Scandinavian England: an archaeozoolog...
This synthesizing study brings together for the first time information from various primary and seco...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
This thesis investigates the influence of socio-economic conditions on crop cultivation and consumpt...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
In tracing the development of Early Anglo-Saxon archaeology in England, it is shown that scholars ha...
Archaeology has yet to capitalise on the opportunities offered by bioarchaeological approaches to ex...
It has become an axiom of British archaeology that the results of developer-funded fieldwork are und...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
The present study has only been concerned with the animal bones excavated from Emden. But what about...
The period between the decline of Roman influence and the Norman Conquest in England (AD 450-1066) i...
In this book an analysis of over 300 animal bone assemblages from English Saxon and Scandinavian sit...
Holmes Matilda Anne, Food, status and complexity in Saxon and Scandinavian England: an archaeozoolog...
This synthesizing study brings together for the first time information from various primary and seco...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
This thesis investigates the influence of socio-economic conditions on crop cultivation and consumpt...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
In tracing the development of Early Anglo-Saxon archaeology in England, it is shown that scholars ha...
Archaeology has yet to capitalise on the opportunities offered by bioarchaeological approaches to ex...
It has become an axiom of British archaeology that the results of developer-funded fieldwork are und...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
The environmental archaeological evidence from the site of Flixborough (in particular the animal bon...
The present study has only been concerned with the animal bones excavated from Emden. But what about...