Archaeological deposits of the late fourth and early fifth centuries in towns can be fragile, fragmentary, and unfortunately all too infrequent. The artefacts associated with settlement of this period are poorly studied with little fresh analysis ef typologies. This essentially creates an archaeological 'gap' and potentially an archaeologically 'blank' generation. This problematic dataset is compounded by two differing dating systems used namely in terms of a predefined need to separate material artefacts and the associated activity into the cultural labels of 'Roman' or 'Saxon'. Prior to modern recording methods, urban excavations often failed to identify and record the (presumed) surviving evidence, and therefore information on late Roman...
This project investigates the depositional practices of the towns of Roman Britain. The material rem...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The question of how the earliest medieval towns emerged is often framed around a false dichotomy of ...
Archaeological deposits of the late fourth and early fifth centuries in towns can be fragile, fragme...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
What became of towns following the official end of ‘Roman Britain’ at the beginning of the 5th centu...
This paper discusses the rapid disappearance of the entire urban network in Britain in the decades a...
In this book, Adam Rogers examines the late Roman phases of towns in Britain. Critically analysing t...
The study was devised to consider archaeological remains for an understanding of continuity and ch...
The transition from Roman Britain to medieval England and Wales clearlysaw profound changes in socie...
When and how did urban life in Roman Britain end? The excavations conducted by Philip Barker at Wrox...
It has long been recognized that the landscape of Britain is one of the 'richest historical records ...
Crustumerium was an Iron Age settlement north of Rome, inhabited between 850 and 500 BC. On the basi...
"The darkest of the Dark Ages" might be an apt description of the fifth and sixth centuries in Brita...
Most of Britain’s larger towns have lost their former medieval character. In many cases, only isolat...
This project investigates the depositional practices of the towns of Roman Britain. The material rem...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The question of how the earliest medieval towns emerged is often framed around a false dichotomy of ...
Archaeological deposits of the late fourth and early fifth centuries in towns can be fragile, fragme...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
What became of towns following the official end of ‘Roman Britain’ at the beginning of the 5th centu...
This paper discusses the rapid disappearance of the entire urban network in Britain in the decades a...
In this book, Adam Rogers examines the late Roman phases of towns in Britain. Critically analysing t...
The study was devised to consider archaeological remains for an understanding of continuity and ch...
The transition from Roman Britain to medieval England and Wales clearlysaw profound changes in socie...
When and how did urban life in Roman Britain end? The excavations conducted by Philip Barker at Wrox...
It has long been recognized that the landscape of Britain is one of the 'richest historical records ...
Crustumerium was an Iron Age settlement north of Rome, inhabited between 850 and 500 BC. On the basi...
"The darkest of the Dark Ages" might be an apt description of the fifth and sixth centuries in Brita...
Most of Britain’s larger towns have lost their former medieval character. In many cases, only isolat...
This project investigates the depositional practices of the towns of Roman Britain. The material rem...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
The question of how the earliest medieval towns emerged is often framed around a false dichotomy of ...