Papers from the conference held at the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of York, England, in November 2006. Contents: 1) Preface (Julian D. Richards); 2) A dialogue of the deaf and the dumb: archaeology, history and philology (Alex Woolf); 3) The practical implications of interdisciplinary approaches: researches in Anglo-Saxon East Anglia (Morn Capper); 4) Archaeology, history and economics: exploring everyday life in Anglian Deira (Caroline Holas-Clark); 5) The end of Anglo-Saxon furnished burial: an interdisciplinary perspective (Zoe L. Devlin); 6) Sculpture and lordship in...
Papers from the conference held at the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of York, England, in November 2006. Contents: 1) Preface (Julian ...
In this study, the author examines the remembrance of the dead during the Anglo-Saxon period. Her work is based on monuments and remains from four cemeteries selected from the south-east of England, covering the date range from the late fifth to early tenth centuries. The first cemetery, Spong Hill, Norfolk, is a mixed cemetery dated to the late fifth to late sixth centuries and was the site of intensive excavations in the 1970s and '80s, which uncovered the whole site. The second cemetery, Edix Hill (Barrington A), Cambridgeshire, was a site for inhumation burial in the sixth and early...
In this study, the author examines the remembrance of the dead during the Anglo-Saxon period. Her work is based on monuments and remains from four cem...