Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

The early Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of southern Britain, AD 450-650 : beneath the Tribal Hidage / Sue Harrington and Martin Welch.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford ; Philadelphia : Oxbow Books, (c)2014.Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781782976158
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DA152 .E275 2014
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
The Early Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms of Southern Britain: evidence and questions -- Introduction -- The kingdoms in the written sources (text by Martin Welch, edited by Barbara Yorke) -- Research questions -- What are the data? -- What is the landscape context of that data? -- Why is the data located within this context -- what were the criteria behind site location selection? -- How can this evidence be explained and interpreted -- is this evidence of wealth creation and state formation? -- Methodology -- Overview of the contents of this volume -- The Early Anglo-Saxon Census -- Southern Britain south of the Thames and the archaeological data -- The database -- Data-quality assessment -- The dating framework -- The sites -- Populating the landscape -- These individuals and their graves -- Phasing the burials -- The artefacts -- Type -- Provenance -- Regional -- Kentish; Saxon; Anglian; Wessex -- Romano-British -- British West -- Curated/Roman; Curated/Jutlandic -- Kentish/ -- Imported -- Imported/ -- Position in grave -- Material component -- Object weights -- Findspots and their contents -- Other datasets used -- Late Roman sites -- Place-name evidence -- Concluding remarks -- The Environmental Context of Southern Britain -- Introduction -- Mapping the evidence -- The geology of southern Britain -- Definitions of landscape units -- Soil types and fertility: the mapping of land use potential -- A new definition of landscape units in southern Britain -- Climate -- Rivers and floodplains -- Palaeo-environmental evidence -- Woodland -- Travelling and Using the Land- and Sea-Scapes -- Coastal erosion and tide patterns -- Changes to the southern coast of Britain -- Roads, droveways and trackways south of the Thames -- Agricultural practices -- Pastoral practices -- The environmental evidence from selected excavation reports for southern Britain -- The Upper Thames Valley and chalklands to the south -- Central chalk lands to the south coast -- The eastern area of the Thames, the Weald and the coast -- The western area -- Conclusions -- Sites, Locations and Soils -- Introduction -- Theories of site location -- Settlement and wealth in the three kingdoms -- Kent -- Wessex -- Sussex -- What was the spatial relationship between early cemeteries and their parent settlements? -- Case study: The Lower Ouse Valley, East Sussex -- Where were the sites with the earliest artefactual evidence? -- What are the spatial relationships of the cemeteries and settlements to routeways and other topographical features? -- What kinds of soils do the cemetery/settlement communities occupy for their resource base and how does this compare with those occupied by the Later Roman sites? Were there spatial and temporal variations in site selection criteria? -- Roman sites -- Early Anglo-Saxon complexes -- What relationships can be determined between the place-name data and the phase A and early phase B sites (AD 450 -- 600)? -- Conclusions -- Surrey: A Case Study -- Surrey in the documentary sources -- The archaeological evidence -- Conclusions -- A Common Wealth in Iron? -- Introduction -- Sources of iron ore -- The regional settlement pattern and proximity to iron ore deposits -- The processes of iron working -- Iron working in Roman Britain -- Iron working in the Western Roman Empire -- Iron working in the northern European Barbaricum in the study period (AD 450 -- 650) -- Iron working in southern Britain AD 450 -- 650 and later -- Discussion -- Community Wealth in Iron Compared -- Iron case study 1: shield bosses (AD 450 -- 700) -- Iron case study 2: swords (AD 450 -- 700) -- Iron case study 3: knives (AD 450 -- 700) -- The iron-wealth over time and space (AD 450 -- 700) -- Phase A comparative study -- Phase B comparative study -- Phase C comparative study -- Conclusions on the value of iron in the study region and period -- A Restricted Wealth in Copper Alloys? -- European copper alloy production -- Copper alloy production in Britain -- Weights of copper alloy artefacts -- Community access to copper alloy material over time and space -- Phase A comparative study -- Phase B comparative study -- Phase C comparative study -- Copper alloy case study 1: buckle loops and plates -- Copper alloy case study 2: bowls and escutcheons -- Phase A distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Phase B distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Phase C distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Sheet vessel fragments -- Escutcheons -- Conclusions on copper alloy bowl distributions -- Esoteric Materials: Amber, Amethyst, Gold and Silver -- Case study: amber beads -- Case study: amethyst beads -- Conclusions concerning amber and amethyst bead usage and distribution -- The role of precious metals: gold and silver -- Gold -- Phase A gold distribution -- Phases B and C gold distribution -- Silver -- Phase A silver distributions -- Phase B silver distributions -- Phase C silver distributions -- Conclusions -- External Forces? A Review of the Frankish Influence within Southern Britain -- The Frankish Data Examined -- Research questions -- Phase A Frankish data -- Frankish artefacts in Kent and Surrey -- Isle of Wight -- Westwards from the East Sussex coast -- Central Wiltshire and the Salisbury Plain -- Upper Thames Valley -- Conclusions relating to Phase A -- Phase B Frankish data -- Phase C Frankish data -- Frankish weapon burials -- Conclusions -- Synthesis: Beneath the Tribal Hidage.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction DA152 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available ocn879034171

Includes bibliographies and index.

The Early Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms of Southern Britain: evidence and questions -- Introduction -- The kingdoms in the written sources (text by Martin Welch, edited by Barbara Yorke) -- Research questions -- What are the data? -- What is the landscape context of that data? -- Why is the data located within this context -- what were the criteria behind site location selection? -- How can this evidence be explained and interpreted -- is this evidence of wealth creation and state formation? -- Methodology -- Overview of the contents of this volume -- The Early Anglo-Saxon Census -- Southern Britain south of the Thames and the archaeological data -- The database -- Data-quality assessment -- The dating framework -- The sites -- Populating the landscape -- These individuals and their graves -- Phasing the burials -- The artefacts -- Type -- Provenance -- Regional -- Kentish; Saxon; Anglian; Wessex -- Romano-British -- British West -- Curated/Roman; Curated/Jutlandic -- Kentish/ -- Imported -- Imported/ -- Position in grave -- Material component -- Object weights -- Findspots and their contents -- Other datasets used -- Late Roman sites -- Place-name evidence -- Concluding remarks -- The Environmental Context of Southern Britain -- Introduction -- Mapping the evidence -- The geology of southern Britain -- Definitions of landscape units -- Soil types and fertility: the mapping of land use potential -- A new definition of landscape units in southern Britain -- Climate -- Rivers and floodplains -- Palaeo-environmental evidence -- Woodland -- Travelling and Using the Land- and Sea-Scapes -- Coastal erosion and tide patterns -- Changes to the southern coast of Britain -- Roads, droveways and trackways south of the Thames -- Agricultural practices -- Pastoral practices -- The environmental evidence from selected excavation reports for southern Britain -- The Upper Thames Valley and chalklands to the south -- Central chalk lands to the south coast -- The eastern area of the Thames, the Weald and the coast -- The western area -- Conclusions -- Sites, Locations and Soils -- Introduction -- Theories of site location -- Settlement and wealth in the three kingdoms -- Kent -- Wessex -- Sussex -- What was the spatial relationship between early cemeteries and their parent settlements? -- Case study: The Lower Ouse Valley, East Sussex -- Where were the sites with the earliest artefactual evidence? -- What are the spatial relationships of the cemeteries and settlements to routeways and other topographical features? -- What kinds of soils do the cemetery/settlement communities occupy for their resource base and how does this compare with those occupied by the Later Roman sites? Were there spatial and temporal variations in site selection criteria? -- Roman sites -- Early Anglo-Saxon complexes -- What relationships can be determined between the place-name data and the phase A and early phase B sites (AD 450 -- 600)? -- Conclusions -- Surrey: A Case Study -- Surrey in the documentary sources -- The archaeological evidence -- Conclusions -- A Common Wealth in Iron? -- Introduction -- Sources of iron ore -- The regional settlement pattern and proximity to iron ore deposits -- The processes of iron working -- Iron working in Roman Britain -- Iron working in the Western Roman Empire -- Iron working in the northern European Barbaricum in the study period (AD 450 -- 650) -- Iron working in southern Britain AD 450 -- 650 and later -- Discussion -- Community Wealth in Iron Compared -- Iron case study 1: shield bosses (AD 450 -- 700) -- Iron case study 2: swords (AD 450 -- 700) -- Iron case study 3: knives (AD 450 -- 700) -- The iron-wealth over time and space (AD 450 -- 700) -- Phase A comparative study -- Phase B comparative study -- Phase C comparative study -- Conclusions on the value of iron in the study region and period -- A Restricted Wealth in Copper Alloys? -- European copper alloy production -- Copper alloy production in Britain -- Weights of copper alloy artefacts -- Community access to copper alloy material over time and space -- Phase A comparative study -- Phase B comparative study -- Phase C comparative study -- Copper alloy case study 1: buckle loops and plates -- Copper alloy case study 2: bowls and escutcheons -- Phase A distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Phase B distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Phase C distribution of copper alloy bowls -- Sheet vessel fragments -- Escutcheons -- Conclusions on copper alloy bowl distributions -- Esoteric Materials: Amber, Amethyst, Gold and Silver -- Case study: amber beads -- Case study: amethyst beads -- Conclusions concerning amber and amethyst bead usage and distribution -- The role of precious metals: gold and silver -- Gold -- Phase A gold distribution -- Phases B and C gold distribution -- Silver -- Phase A silver distributions -- Phase B silver distributions -- Phase C silver distributions -- Conclusions -- External Forces? A Review of the Frankish Influence within Southern Britain -- The Frankish Data Examined -- Research questions -- Phase A Frankish data -- Frankish artefacts in Kent and Surrey -- Isle of Wight -- Westwards from the East Sussex coast -- Central Wiltshire and the Salisbury Plain -- Upper Thames Valley -- Conclusions relating to Phase A -- Phase B Frankish data -- Phase C Frankish data -- Frankish weapon burials -- Conclusions -- Synthesis: Beneath the Tribal Hidage.

COPYRIGHT NOT covered - Click this link to request copyright permission:

https://lib.ciu.edu/copyright-request-form

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.