It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth century AD are an expression of new forms of ethnic identity, based on the putative memorialisation of a ‘Germanic’ heritage. This article considers the empirical basis for this assertion and evaluates it in the light of previously proposed ethnic constructivist approaches. No sound basis for such claims is identified, and the article calls for the development of new interpretative approaches for the study of early medieval mortuary archaeology in Britain
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...
This thesis is the result of a decision to extend the approach used by me when examining Irish buria...
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript, for an article forthcoming in Antiquity (2019), and remains subject ...
This article considers a recent critical problematisation of the discussion of ›Otherness‹ in Merovi...
This thesis aims to reassess one of the principal concepts used by archaeologists in their attempts ...
Coming from a family which is Scottish on one side and English on the other, Andrew Lamb has been cu...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
This thesis is the first major study of modern archaeological attempts to infer ethnic identity from...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
When Vikings migrated to England they had an enormous impact on the Anglo-Saxon political system and...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
The portrayal of the ‘Vikings’ as an archetypal barbarian ‘other,’ wreaking ...
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...
This thesis is the result of a decision to extend the approach used by me when examining Irish buria...
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript, for an article forthcoming in Antiquity (2019), and remains subject ...
This article considers a recent critical problematisation of the discussion of ›Otherness‹ in Merovi...
This thesis aims to reassess one of the principal concepts used by archaeologists in their attempts ...
Coming from a family which is Scottish on one side and English on the other, Andrew Lamb has been cu...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
This thesis is the first major study of modern archaeological attempts to infer ethnic identity from...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
When Vikings migrated to England they had an enormous impact on the Anglo-Saxon political system and...
Many questions are still left unanswered regarding the period c. 450-700 AD, when hordes of Anglo-Sa...
The portrayal of the ‘Vikings’ as an archetypal barbarian ‘other,’ wreaking ...
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...
This thesis is the result of a decision to extend the approach used by me when examining Irish buria...
In the early Middle Ages, when settlers began to leave Scandinavia to find new homes for themselves ...