Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age but, like much of Europe, very little is known of the funerary traditions of communities in this region. Formal burial appears to have been rare, and evidence for alternative mortuary treatments is dispersed, varied and, to date, poorly understood. This study sets out to examine for the first time all human remains dating to the Iron Age in Atlantic Scotland, found in a variety of contexts ranging from formal cemeteries to occupied domestic sites. This data-set, despite its limitations, forms the basis for a new understanding of funerary treatment and daily life in later prehistoric Atlantic Scotland, signifying the development of an extraord...
This thesis focuses on the British Iron Age and challenging the current hypotheses of exposing the d...
The study of the inhumation cemeteries of Late Iron Age Scotland tends to revolve around the vexed q...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
NoThe occurrence of human remains in Iron Age domestic contexts in southern England is well-attested...
Evidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries are ...
Coming from a family which is Scottish on one side and English on the other, Andrew Lamb has been cu...
NoEvidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries ar...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
This thesis examines the parts played by human remains in communities during the Later Iron Age, and...
Archaeological excavations were conducted by EASE Archaeology at the Knowe of Skea on the island of...
This edited volume explores how (what is today) Scotland can be compared with, contrasted to, or was...
The following thesis investigates potential regional patterns of Iron Age burial practices and the c...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
The Irish Sea has long been considered to be a central hub for the movement of people and ideas for ...
This thesis focuses on the British Iron Age and challenging the current hypotheses of exposing the d...
The study of the inhumation cemeteries of Late Iron Age Scotland tends to revolve around the vexed q...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
Atlantic Scotland provides plentiful and often dramatic evidence for settlement during the Iron Age ...
NoThe occurrence of human remains in Iron Age domestic contexts in southern England is well-attested...
Evidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries are ...
Coming from a family which is Scottish on one side and English on the other, Andrew Lamb has been cu...
NoEvidence for Iron Age funerary treatments remains sporadic across Britain and formal cemeteries ar...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
This thesis examines the parts played by human remains in communities during the Later Iron Age, and...
Archaeological excavations were conducted by EASE Archaeology at the Knowe of Skea on the island of...
This edited volume explores how (what is today) Scotland can be compared with, contrasted to, or was...
The following thesis investigates potential regional patterns of Iron Age burial practices and the c...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
The Irish Sea has long been considered to be a central hub for the movement of people and ideas for ...
This thesis focuses on the British Iron Age and challenging the current hypotheses of exposing the d...
The study of the inhumation cemeteries of Late Iron Age Scotland tends to revolve around the vexed q...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...