Cetacean (whale, dolphin, and porpoise) remains are occasionally encountered at Roman and medieval sites in London and are regularly the topic of medieval historical sources. These sources are often concerned with whale strandings and the subsequent claims on the carcass by the king, queen, or other members of the nobility or clergy with jurisdiction over the coastline that the whale stranded upon. The meat stripped from the carcasses was regularly transported to London and cetaceans have therefore been ascribed as a “high-status food source”. Besides, strandings, several historical sources also suggest that active whaling was undertaken, and that meat was sold at several London markets. Based on these historical sources it however remains ...
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially a...
Taxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavations is problematic due t...
International audienceTaxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavation...
Cetacean (whale, dolphin, and porpoise) remains are occasionally encountered at Roman and medieval s...
Cetacean (whale, dolphin, and porpoise) remains are occasionally encountered at Roman and medieval s...
Medieval cetacean exploitation has been connectedto various societies, including the Basques, Norse,...
Medieval historical sources suggest that cetacean exploitation was, for large parts of Europe, restr...
Medieval historical sources suggest that cetacean exploitation was, for large parts of Europe, restr...
THE ANGLO-SAXON SITE OF HAMWIC (modern Southampton, Hampshire, UK) has been identified as a major bo...
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially a...
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially a...
Taxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavations is problematic due t...
International audienceTaxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavation...
Cetacean (whale, dolphin, and porpoise) remains are occasionally encountered at Roman and medieval s...
Cetacean (whale, dolphin, and porpoise) remains are occasionally encountered at Roman and medieval s...
Medieval cetacean exploitation has been connectedto various societies, including the Basques, Norse,...
Medieval historical sources suggest that cetacean exploitation was, for large parts of Europe, restr...
Medieval historical sources suggest that cetacean exploitation was, for large parts of Europe, restr...
THE ANGLO-SAXON SITE OF HAMWIC (modern Southampton, Hampshire, UK) has been identified as a major bo...
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially a...
Cetacean remains have been recovered from archaeological sites all over Europe, but are especially a...
Taxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavations is problematic due t...
International audienceTaxonomic identification of whale bones found during archaeological excavation...