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Evolution of a Community: The Colonisation of a Clay Inland Landscape

- Neolithic to post-medieval remains excavated over sixteen years at Longstanton in Cambridgeshire
Af: Samantha Paul, John Hunt Engelsk Paperback

Evolution of a Community: The Colonisation of a Clay Inland Landscape

- Neolithic to post-medieval remains excavated over sixteen years at Longstanton in Cambridgeshire
Af: Samantha Paul, John Hunt Engelsk Paperback
Tjek vores konkurrenters priser
The movement of people from the fen edge and river valleys into the clay lands of eastern England has become a growing area of research. The opportunity of studying such an environment and investigating the human activities that took place there became available 9 km to the north-west of Cambridge at the village of Longstanton. The archaeological excavations that took place over a sixteen year period have made a significant contribution to charting the emergence of a Cambridgeshire clayland settlement and its community over six millennia. Evolution of a Community chronologically documents the colonisation of this clay inland location and outlines how it was not an area on the periphery of activity, but part of a fully occupied landscape extending back into the Mesolithic period. Subsequent visits during the Late Neolithic became more focused when the locality appears to have been part of a religious landscape that included a possible barrow site and ritual pit deposits. The excavations indicate that the earliest permanent settlement at the site dates to the Late Bronze Age, with the subsequent Iron Age phases characterised as a small, modest and inward-looking community that endured into the Roman period with very little evidence for disjuncture during the transition. The significant discovery of a group of seventh-century Anglo-Saxon burials which produced rare evidence for infectious deceases is discussed within the context of ‘final phase’ cemeteries and the influence of visible prehistoric features within the local landscape. The excavation of the Late Anglo-Saxon and medieval rural settlement defined its origins and layout which, alongside the artefactual and archaeobotanical assemblages recovered creates a profile over time of the life and livelihood of this community that is firmly placed within its historical context.
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The movement of people from the fen edge and river valleys into the clay lands of eastern England has become a growing area of research. The opportunity of studying such an environment and investigating the human activities that took place there became available 9 km to the north-west of Cambridge at the village of Longstanton. The archaeological excavations that took place over a sixteen year period have made a significant contribution to charting the emergence of a Cambridgeshire clayland settlement and its community over six millennia. Evolution of a Community chronologically documents the colonisation of this clay inland location and outlines how it was not an area on the periphery of activity, but part of a fully occupied landscape extending back into the Mesolithic period. Subsequent visits during the Late Neolithic became more focused when the locality appears to have been part of a religious landscape that included a possible barrow site and ritual pit deposits. The excavations indicate that the earliest permanent settlement at the site dates to the Late Bronze Age, with the subsequent Iron Age phases characterised as a small, modest and inward-looking community that endured into the Roman period with very little evidence for disjuncture during the transition. The significant discovery of a group of seventh-century Anglo-Saxon burials which produced rare evidence for infectious deceases is discussed within the context of ‘final phase’ cemeteries and the influence of visible prehistoric features within the local landscape. The excavation of the Late Anglo-Saxon and medieval rural settlement defined its origins and layout which, alongside the artefactual and archaeobotanical assemblages recovered creates a profile over time of the life and livelihood of this community that is firmly placed within its historical context.
Produktdetaljer
Sprog: Engelsk
Sider: 257
ISBN-13: 9781784910860
Indbinding: Paperback
Udgave:
ISBN-10: 1784910864
Udg. Dato: 26 feb 2015
Længde: 19mm
Bredde: 212mm
Højde: 300mm
Forlag: Archaeopress
Oplagsdato: 26 feb 2015
Forfatter(e): Samantha Paul, John Hunt
Forfatter(e) Samantha Paul, John Hunt


Kategori Arkæologi efter periode og region


ISBN-13 9781784910860


Sprog Engelsk


Indbinding Paperback


Sider 257


Udgave


Længde 19mm


Bredde 212mm


Højde 300mm


Udg. Dato 26 feb 2015


Oplagsdato 26 feb 2015


Forlag Archaeopress

Kategori sammenhænge