Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Studies in Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology: Papers in Honour of Martin G. Welch
Stuart Brookes, Sue Harrington and Andrew Reynolds
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
This volume of papers is offered to Martin Welch on the occasion of his retirement from UCL in 2010. It is a celebration of his long career of teaching and research in early medieval archaeology, particularly Anglo-Saxon England and its neighbours in the fifth to seventh centuries.
-
Front Cover
-
Title Page
-
Copyright
-
Opening Photo
-
Table of Contents
-
List of Figures
-
List of Tables
-
List of Contributors
-
Martin G. Welch MA DPhil FSA: An appreciation
-
Tabula Gratuloria
-
An unusual new gold A-bracteate find from Scalford, Leicestershire
-
Continuity in Cambridge? Pot-stamp evidence for continuity from the fourth to fifth centuries AD
-
Work-boxes or reliquaries? Small copper-alloy containers in seventh century Anglo-Saxon graves
-
Earlier or later? The rectangular cloisonné buckle from Sutton Hoo Mound 1 in context
-
Accidental losses, plough-damaged cemeteries and the occasional hoard: the Portable Antiquities Scheme and early Anglo-Saxon archaeology
-
Anglo-Saxon non-funerary weapon depositions
-
A fifth-century female from Weston Colley, Micheldever, Hampshire
-
The earliest Anglo-Saxons? The burial site at Ringlemere Farm, East Kent, and early cross-Channel migration
-
Between Frankish and Merovingian influences in Early Anglo-Saxon Sussex (fifth-seventh centuries)
-
The Third Way: thoughts on non-Saxon identity south of the Thames AD 450-600
-
Foreign identities in burials at the seventh-century English emporia
-
Beyond exogamy: marriage strategies in Early Anglo-Saxon England
-
Gender representation in early medieval burials: ritual re-affirmation of a blurred boundary?
-
‘The Weight of Necklaces’: some insights intothe wearing of women’s jewellery from Middle Saxon written sources
-
Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in the Tees Valley and associations with Neolithic and later monuments
-
Early to Middle Saxon settlement in the Chelmer-Blackwater river valley, Essex
-
Early Anglo-Saxon fish traps on the River Thames
-
Boundaries of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms: the example of the South Saxons
-
A reconsideration of East Wansdyke: its construction and date - a preliminary note
-
The lathes of Kent: a review of the evidence
-
Martin Welch – a bibliography
-
Index of People and Places
Citable Link
Published: 2011
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407321981 (ebook)
- 9781407307510 (paperback)
BAR Number: B527