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No. 2. Clive Partridge, Skeleton Green: a Late
Iron Age and Romano-British Site |
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No. 5. Michael Fulford, Silchester: Excavations
on the Defences 1974-80 |
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No. 7. I. M. Stead and Valery Rigby, Baldock:
the Excavation of a Roman and pre-Roman Settlement, 1968-72 |
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No. 8. G. B. Dannell and J. P. Wild, Longthorpe
II: the Military Works Depot: an Episode in Landscape History |
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No. 9. S. S. Frere and J. J. Wilkes, Strageath:
Excavations within the Roman Fort, 1973-86 |
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No. 10. Michael Fulford, The Silchester
Amphitheatre: Excavations of 1979-85 |
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No. 12. A.G. Marvell and H.S. Owen-John, Leucarum:
Excavations at the Roman Auxiliary Fort at Loughor, West Glamorgan, 1982-4
and 1987-8 |
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No. 13, Lawrence Keppie, Roman Inscribed and
Sculptured Stones in the Hunterian Museum, University of Glasgow |
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No. 14, Rosalind Niblett, The Excavation of a
Ceremonial Site at Folly Lane, Verulamium |
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No. 15,
Michael Fulford and Jane Timby,
Late Iron Age and Roman Silchester: Excavations on the Site of the
Forum-Basilica, 1977, 1980-86 |
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No. 16, Edith Evans et al., The Caerleon Canabae:
Excavations in the Civil Settlement |
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No. 17, P. Rahtz, S. Wright and S. Hirst, Cannington
Cemetery |
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No. 18, P. Leach et al. Fosse Lane: Excavations
of a Romano-British Roadside Settlement at Shepton Mallet, Somerset |
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No. 19, A.S.
Anderson, J.S. Wacher and A.P. Fitzpatrick, The Romano-British ‘Small
Town’ at Wanborough, Wiltshire: Excavations 1966-1976 Wanborough, near modern
Swindon, is the site of a Romano-British small town on Ermin Street, between
Cirencester and Silchester. It is usually identified with the Durocornovium
of the Antonine Itinerary. This report presents the results of excavations
along the frontage of Ermin Street undertaken in advance of development
between 1966 and 1976. From possible military origins the settlement
developed into a ‘small town’ which in the late third and fourth century
extended to over 25 hectares and seems to have been divided into insulae.
Many buildings were excavated, including a rare type of timber-framed
building in which the joists rested on stones that raised them from the
ground. The large number of finds suggests that most of the buildings were
both residential and ‘commercial’ while the products of the local north
Wiltshire pottery industry are also prominent in the major pottery
assemblage. The excavations at Wanborough provide an insight into the
everyday life and crafts of an ordinary roadside settlement or ‘small town’
in southern England that flourished as civitas capitals and towns
declined. 2001.
400 pp., 126 line drawings, 11 black and white pls. Paperback. ISBN 0
907764 29 0. £44/US$88 |
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No. 20, Heather James, Excavations in Roman
Carmarthen 1973-1993 This is the first
detailed publication on Roman Carmarthen, Moridunum, tribal capital of
the Demetae of West Wales. The numerous illustrations include splendid
reconstruction drawings by Neil Ludlow. The volume covers seven excavations
carried out by the Dyfed Archaeological Trust between 1978 and 1993. Small
rescue excavations located the Roman auxiliary fort west of the later town.
The largest site at Priory Street encompassed the intersection of two Roman
streets, flanked by a sequence of buildings (early second to late fourth
century) with evidence of smithing and baking. Important evidence was
produced on the processes of laying out a Roman town. Other sites explored
the town defences, whose entire circuit is known through watching briefs and
topographical analysis. A substantial building, possibly a mansio, on
the south side of the town was also sampled. The finds assemblages are
valuable for comparison with other towns and especially in the context of the
supposedly lightly romanised hinterland. January 2004. 416 pp.,
140 figs, 23 pls. Paperback. ISBN 0 907764 30 4. £60/US$120 |
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No. 21, Hilary E.M. Cool, The Roman Cemetery at Brougham, Cumbria: Excavations 1966-67
The rescue excavations at Brougham uncovered the largest cemetery associated with a fort in the north yet dug. They revealed a third century cemetery where not only the soldiers, but also their wives and children were cremated and buried. The dead were provided with expensive pyre goods, such as elaborately decorated biers, jewellery, military equipment, household items and a wide range of animal offerings including horses. Their remains were generally deposited with pottery vessels including a large number in samian and Rhenish colour-coated wares. It has been possible to show that all parts of the funerary ritual was strongly structured by the age and sex of the deceased. There is good evidence that the unit was originally from the Danubian frontier. The volume includes detailed specialist reports on all aspects of the finds and funerary rituals. A database of the results is included on a CD to facilitate further analysis.
July 2004, 542 pp., incl. 349 illus. and CD-Rom. Paperback. ISBN 0 907764 31 2. £68/US$136 |
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No. 22, Michael Fulford, Amanda Clarke and Hella Eckardt, Life and Labour in Late Roman Silchester:
Excavations in Insula IX since 1997 The Society of Antiquaries’ excavation of
Silchester’s Insula IX in 1893-4 left most of the stratigraphy undisturbed. A
new programme of work has shown that the Insula underwent radical change, c.
AD 250/300, with the construction of new workshop and residential buildings
on the orientation of the Roman street-grid, following the demolition of
mid-Roman buildings arranged on different, pre- and early Roman alignments.
The plans of several properties and individual buildings were recovered, and
analysis of the rich range of artefactual and biological data has allowed a
detailed and differentiated characterisation of the life and occupations of
the inhabitants in the 4th century. The context of the 5th century
ogham-inscribed stone is explored and the history of the insula is followed
into the 5th/6th century. 2006, 404 pp., incl. 125 illus. Paperback. ISBN
0 907764 33 9 & 978 0 907764 33 5. £68/US$136
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No. 23,
W.S. Hanson with K. Speller, P.A. Yeoman and J. Terry Elginhaugh: A Flavian Fort and its Annexe Elginhaugh is the most completely excavated
timber-built auxiliary fort in the Roman Empire. This report provides an assessment of all the structures,
with particular emphasis on the identification of stable-barracks and the
implications for the identification of garrisons based on fort plans, while
extensive examination of the annexe makes a substantial contribution to the
debate about the function of these attached enclosures. Because the
occupation is so closely dated (A.D. 79–87), the site provides a very precise
dating horizon for the wide range of artefactual material reported on. Of particular importance is the
evidence for the local manufacture of coarseware and mortaria, including the
identification of a new mortarium potter. An extensive programme of
environmental analysis provides insight into issues of local environment and
food supply. Finally, there is
unique evidence that the site continued to function as a collection centre
for animals after the garrison had departed. November 2007, 2 vols. (c. 672 pages including
164 line-drawings and 58 plates). Paperback. ISBN 978 0 907764 34 2.
£43/US$86 till 31 March 2008, thereafter £58/US$116 |
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No. 24,
Philip Crummy, Stephen Benfield, Nina Crummy, Valery Rigby and Donald Shimmin Stanway: an Elite Burial Site at Camulodunum Excavations between 1987 and 2003 on the fringes
of the site of Camulodunum at December 2007, c. 480 pp. incl. 150 line
drawings and 30 black & white plates. Paperback. ISBN 978 0 907764 35 9.
£38/US$76 till 31 March 2008, thereafter £46/US$92 |
No.
1, Roman Mosaics in Britain (ISBN 0 907764 14 2); 3, Wall-Painting
in Roman Britain (ISBN 0 907764 15 0); 4, Vindolanda: the Latin
Writing-Tablets (ISBN 0 907764 02 9); 6, Inchtuthil: the Roman
Legionary Fortress - Excavations 1952-65 (ISBN 0 907764 05 3); 11, Research
on Roman Britain: 1960-89 (ISBN 0 907764 13 4) are out of print.
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