Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and sixth centuries AD. Amongst these beads is a type that was particularly common: decorated polychrome beads in red, yellow, and green glass in a variety of styles and combinations. Birte Brugmann, in her 2004 analysis of Saxon-period glass beads (Brugmann, 2004), named these beads “Traffic Light” (TL) beads because of the colours and drew attention to the fact that they were probably made in England as they do not appear on the continent
Peter Francis Jr. has devoted much of his research to Indo-Pacific glass beads. These productions ar...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...
New research has shed light on the origin of the Danish glass beads dating to the BronzeAge and the ...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
Birte Brugmann's 'Beads from Anglo-Saxon Graves' digital archive consists of a spreadsheet containin...
Over 300 glass beads found at Sewerby, Bridlington, East Yorkshire, in a cemetery used in the sixth ...
A total of seventeen annular transparent blue glass beads and one cylindrical glass bead with opaque...
This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as i...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
Glass bangles are found in southern England and Wales from the mid-first century AD and become commo...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Compositional analysis has proved to be a powerful tool for investigating the recycling of transpare...
Mosaic glass tesserae were imported to Dutch sites during the Early Medieval period, probably to add...
This book discusses the glass beads of Britain and Ireland. It provides a classification and chronol...
Peter Francis Jr. has devoted much of his research to Indo-Pacific glass beads. These productions ar...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...
New research has shed light on the origin of the Danish glass beads dating to the BronzeAge and the ...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
Birte Brugmann's 'Beads from Anglo-Saxon Graves' digital archive consists of a spreadsheet containin...
Over 300 glass beads found at Sewerby, Bridlington, East Yorkshire, in a cemetery used in the sixth ...
A total of seventeen annular transparent blue glass beads and one cylindrical glass bead with opaque...
This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as i...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
Glass bangles are found in southern England and Wales from the mid-first century AD and become commo...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
This is the first dedicated and comprehensive study of glass beads from Early Medieval Ireland, pres...
Compositional analysis has proved to be a powerful tool for investigating the recycling of transpare...
Mosaic glass tesserae were imported to Dutch sites during the Early Medieval period, probably to add...
This book discusses the glass beads of Britain and Ireland. It provides a classification and chronol...
Peter Francis Jr. has devoted much of his research to Indo-Pacific glass beads. These productions ar...
Glass beads. Among finds from an Anglo-Saxon cemetery discovered at The Meads, Sittingbourne, Kent. ...
New research has shed light on the origin of the Danish glass beads dating to the BronzeAge and the ...