The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seventh centuries AD. In western and northern Britain, hillforts are interpreted as power centres associated with militarized elites, but research has paid less attention to their landscape context, hence we know little about the factors that influenced their siting and how this facilitated elite power. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) provide opportunities for landscape research, but are constrained by limitations of source data and the difficulty of defining appropriate parameters for analysis. This article presents a new methodology that combines data processing and analytical functions in GIS with techniques and principles drawn from ‘trad...
The excavations conducted on the Swedish prehistoric hillforts are very limited. However, a lot of p...
Abstract The location of hillforts is an extremely important issue in terms of understanding the fun...
Around 1400 BC, Bronze Age communities in many parts Ireland began to construct large enclosures, kn...
The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seven...
For the better part of the 20th century, Swedish hillforts were seen strictly as an iron age phenome...
Moving away from the highly regionalised and constrained purely humanistic and empirical studies of ...
PhD ThesisThis study is an analysis of the development of rural settlement patterns and field system...
This is the final version. Available from MDPI via the DOI in this record. Data available on request...
The Canterbury Hinterland Project (CHP) has combined aerial photographic and LiDAR analysis, synthes...
The social organization of Iron Age and Roman east Kent has been subjected to generalizing commentar...
Scholarship regarding the early medieval Welsh Marches is frequently disparate and disjointed. Studi...
Extended version from paper published in Ausserer, K.F., Börner, w., Goriany, M. & Karlhuber-Vöckl, ...
This paper examines the landscape context of the Bartlow Hills, a group of large Romano-British barr...
This thesis analyses the nature and distribution of archaeological sites, dated to the pre-Roman and...
Hillforts represent the largest and arguably most impressive archaeological monuments in the Irish l...
The excavations conducted on the Swedish prehistoric hillforts are very limited. However, a lot of p...
Abstract The location of hillforts is an extremely important issue in terms of understanding the fun...
Around 1400 BC, Bronze Age communities in many parts Ireland began to construct large enclosures, kn...
The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seven...
For the better part of the 20th century, Swedish hillforts were seen strictly as an iron age phenome...
Moving away from the highly regionalised and constrained purely humanistic and empirical studies of ...
PhD ThesisThis study is an analysis of the development of rural settlement patterns and field system...
This is the final version. Available from MDPI via the DOI in this record. Data available on request...
The Canterbury Hinterland Project (CHP) has combined aerial photographic and LiDAR analysis, synthes...
The social organization of Iron Age and Roman east Kent has been subjected to generalizing commentar...
Scholarship regarding the early medieval Welsh Marches is frequently disparate and disjointed. Studi...
Extended version from paper published in Ausserer, K.F., Börner, w., Goriany, M. & Karlhuber-Vöckl, ...
This paper examines the landscape context of the Bartlow Hills, a group of large Romano-British barr...
This thesis analyses the nature and distribution of archaeological sites, dated to the pre-Roman and...
Hillforts represent the largest and arguably most impressive archaeological monuments in the Irish l...
The excavations conducted on the Swedish prehistoric hillforts are very limited. However, a lot of p...
Abstract The location of hillforts is an extremely important issue in terms of understanding the fun...
Around 1400 BC, Bronze Age communities in many parts Ireland began to construct large enclosures, kn...