The Later Iron Age in Britain was a transformative period: material culture, settlement patterns, technology, trade networks, and the structures of power changed, creating the conditions which attracted the attention of the Romans. In turn, the Roman conquest brought another wave of change and societal reorganization. Radical changes in the relationship between humans and domestic animals are known for the Romano-British period, while diachronic developments were much less obvious during the Iron Age, due to dating issues and less substantial material evidence. Therefore, research on the subject has so far mostly treated the Iron Age as a uniform and static continuum or focused on the subsequent impact of Romanisation. Since the relation...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
Throughout the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, greater economic and political connectivity ha...
Following the argument of cultural change between the Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon periods in Brit...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
This article reviews aspects of the development of animal husbandry in Roman Britain, focusing in pa...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
The period between the Roman withdrawal from Britain and the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon period is ...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
Roman conquest is known to have had a significant impact on animal husbandry across the Western prov...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Anthropologists and cultural geographers have long accepted that animals play an important role in t...
The animal bones from the Roman-period small town at Ashton represent an excellent opportunity to ex...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:1863.1856(282) / BLDSC - British Libr...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
Throughout the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, greater economic and political connectivity ha...
Following the argument of cultural change between the Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon periods in Brit...
In this paper zooarchaeological evidence from Iron Age and Roman sites in South-East Britain is pres...
This article reviews aspects of the development of animal husbandry in Roman Britain, focusing in pa...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
The period between the Roman withdrawal from Britain and the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon period is ...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
The animal remains from British later prehistory have frequently been treated as generally only able...
Roman conquest is known to have had a significant impact on animal husbandry across the Western prov...
The evolution of human-animal relationships in central England is reviewed. In the Mesolithic, the m...
Anthropologists and cultural geographers have long accepted that animals play an important role in t...
The animal bones from the Roman-period small town at Ashton represent an excellent opportunity to ex...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:1863.1856(282) / BLDSC - British Libr...
Concentrating mainly on the zooarchaeological data, this chapter reviews the evidence for the exploi...
Throughout the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, greater economic and political connectivity ha...
Following the argument of cultural change between the Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon periods in Brit...