Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of England between the Late Middle Ages and the Modern Era, this period of crucial changes has received less attention by archaeologists. In this paper, zooarchaeological evidence dated between the Late Middle Ages and the Early Modern period is analysed to investigate changes in animal husbandry during the long' sixteenth century. The size and shape of the main domestic animals (cattle, sheep, pig and chicken) is explored through biometrical data and discussed in line with evidence of taxonomic frequencies, ageing and sex ratios. Data from 12 sites with relevant chronologies and located in different areas of the country are considered. The results show that, altho...
Cattle were the tractors of medieval England and provided power essential for agricultural...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of Europe between the l...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of England between the ...
This paper seeks to revisit the debate concerning the nature and timing of the British Agricultural ...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
The late Medieval and early Post-Medieval periods in England are often associated with agricultural ...
Archaeological evidence and historic records are often at variance on the subject of animal husbandr...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
SUMMARY: Almost 200 horse bone measurements from 38 sites excavated across the city of London, datin...
Abstract Between the sixteenth and nineteenth century, British agriculture underwent a ‘revolutionar...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
Cattle were the tractors of medieval England and provided power essential for agricultural...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of Europe between the l...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of England between the ...
This paper seeks to revisit the debate concerning the nature and timing of the British Agricultural ...
Zooarchaeological enquiry of animals and their products in the post-medieval period has largely been...
The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, te...
The late Medieval and early Post-Medieval periods in England are often associated with agricultural ...
Archaeological evidence and historic records are often at variance on the subject of animal husbandr...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
SUMMARY: Almost 200 horse bone measurements from 38 sites excavated across the city of London, datin...
Abstract Between the sixteenth and nineteenth century, British agriculture underwent a ‘revolutionar...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
Across medieval Europe, cattle commanded a major, if shifting, economic and social value, and their ...
Cattle were the tractors of medieval England and provided power essential for agricultural...
This paper presents the results of the first comprehensive scientific study of the fallow deer, a no...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...