A Note on the Dating of Barhobble Chapel Bones and the Historical Context of their Deposition Richard Oram The context and significance of a small cache of human bone apparently deliberately inserted into the structure of a medieval altar, discovered during excavation of the ruined chapel at Barhobble in Wigtownshire in the 1980s, is re-examined in the light of recent C14 determinations. Their re-dating raises interesting questions concerning the development of local cults in 13th-century Galloway and the wider processes of cult-formation in the Gaelic areas of Scotland
This work studies religious change through the archaeology of death and burial. In the period after ...
This paper presents the results of the re-analysis and dating of skeletal material from two Early Br...
Around the beginning of the 3rd millennium cal bc a cremation cemetery was established at Forteviot,...
Baltinglass is a multi-chamber Neolithic passage tomb in Co. Wicklow, Ireland, excavated in the 1930...
Review of the physical evidence for the early church in Scotland. Characterises the nature of the ev...
In early 2005 a particularly severe storm exposed human bones on the foreshore immediately east of ...
Baltinglass is a multi-chamber Neolithic passage tomb in Co. Wicklow, excavated in the 1930s. Here, ...
Crannogs are ancient artificial islands found in Scotland and Ireland, which typically had some sort...
As part of the study of the early medieval cemetery at Broechem (Belgium), human bones from 32 crema...
Radiocarbon dating of cremated bone is a well-established practice in the study of prehistoric crema...
Through analysis of written sources, architectural evidence, excavation reports and antiquarian reco...
Part 2 of results and interpretation of interdisciplinary project to survey the over-built remains o...
Radiocarbon dating of cremated bone is a well-established practice in the study of prehistoric crema...
Peri-mortem treatment of the body and the fate of the soul after death throughout the English mediev...
Since the early Middle Ages, relics of Catholic saints played an important role in popular religion ...
This work studies religious change through the archaeology of death and burial. In the period after ...
This paper presents the results of the re-analysis and dating of skeletal material from two Early Br...
Around the beginning of the 3rd millennium cal bc a cremation cemetery was established at Forteviot,...
Baltinglass is a multi-chamber Neolithic passage tomb in Co. Wicklow, Ireland, excavated in the 1930...
Review of the physical evidence for the early church in Scotland. Characterises the nature of the ev...
In early 2005 a particularly severe storm exposed human bones on the foreshore immediately east of ...
Baltinglass is a multi-chamber Neolithic passage tomb in Co. Wicklow, excavated in the 1930s. Here, ...
Crannogs are ancient artificial islands found in Scotland and Ireland, which typically had some sort...
As part of the study of the early medieval cemetery at Broechem (Belgium), human bones from 32 crema...
Radiocarbon dating of cremated bone is a well-established practice in the study of prehistoric crema...
Through analysis of written sources, architectural evidence, excavation reports and antiquarian reco...
Part 2 of results and interpretation of interdisciplinary project to survey the over-built remains o...
Radiocarbon dating of cremated bone is a well-established practice in the study of prehistoric crema...
Peri-mortem treatment of the body and the fate of the soul after death throughout the English mediev...
Since the early Middle Ages, relics of Catholic saints played an important role in popular religion ...
This work studies religious change through the archaeology of death and burial. In the period after ...
This paper presents the results of the re-analysis and dating of skeletal material from two Early Br...
Around the beginning of the 3rd millennium cal bc a cremation cemetery was established at Forteviot,...