The construction of identities continues to attract a significant amount of attention in Anglo-Saxon mortuary archaeology, in particular the expression of the life cycle and gender in the inhumation rite. However, the identities of groups who were afforded the cremation ritual have been neglected due to the fragmentary nature of cremated bone and lack of contextual information from early excavations. Nonetheless, the work of Jacqui McKinley has demonstrated that similar osteological methods, which are more frequently used to assess articulated inhumation burials, can be utilised in the analysis of cremated material. The development of osteological techniques and the growing body of research concerning early Anglo-Saxon cremation burials can...
This paper concerns a comparative analysis between two pre-Roman burial ground and the cremated indi...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
Studies of early Anglo-Saxon social identity have been largely based on information obtained from th...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
One of the most defining characteristics of early Anglo-Saxon inhumation burials is the gendered gra...
Cremated bone from archaeological contexts are typically subjected to macroscopic analyses, whereby ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
Our understanding of the cremation rite in early Anglo-Saxon England (5th-mid 6th century A.D.) has ...
Seeking to challenge simplistic narratives of cremation in the past and present, the studies in this...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
This chapter shows how archaeological investigations of early Anglo-Saxon cremation practices can be...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
The lack of grave goods in cemeteries from later Anglo‐Saxon England (eighth to 11th century AD) has...
This paper concerns a comparative analysis between two pre-Roman burial ground and the cremated indi...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...
Studies of early Anglo-Saxon social identity have been largely based on information obtained from th...
This thesis provides a detailed osteological and social analysis of the cremated human remains from ...
One of the most defining characteristics of early Anglo-Saxon inhumation burials is the gendered gra...
Cremated bone from archaeological contexts are typically subjected to macroscopic analyses, whereby ...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
Our understanding of the cremation rite in early Anglo-Saxon England (5th-mid 6th century A.D.) has ...
Seeking to challenge simplistic narratives of cremation in the past and present, the studies in this...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
This chapter shows how archaeological investigations of early Anglo-Saxon cremation practices can be...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
AbstractIron Age (c. 700 BC–43AD) funerary practice has long been a focus of debate in British archa...
The lack of grave goods in cemeteries from later Anglo‐Saxon England (eighth to 11th century AD) has...
This paper concerns a comparative analysis between two pre-Roman burial ground and the cremated indi...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
Late Iron Age and Roman Britain witnessed numerous cultural transitions. While these processes have ...