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Antiquity 82 (315)
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Antiquity 82 (315)
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Antiquity
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
82 (315)
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Editor
The editor of the publication or report
Editor:
Martin O H Carver
Publisher
The publisher of the publication or report
Publisher:
Antiquity Publications Ltd
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
2008
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Relations
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Relations:
URI:
http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/082/315/default.htm
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
06 Mar 2008
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Refitting megaliths in western France
Emmanuel Mens
25 - 36
Using the same principle as the refitting of flakes to cores to investigate how stone tools were made, the author attempts to refit the stone blocks of menhirs, orthostats and megalithic tombs to their quarries. The results reveal the order of erection in a row of menhirs, the method of construction in a passage grave and the monumental chronology of a region.
From Sicily to Salcombe: a Mediterranean Bronze Age object from British coa...
Stuart P Needham
Claudio Giardino
60 - 72
Bronze Age objects found in the English Channel off Salcombe, Devon, include an implement associated with Sicilian agriculture -- perhaps as a plough shoe. The authors assemble and classify the objects and consider the web of exchange networks that brought the artefact from Sicily to Devon via France around the thirteenth century BC. Includes
Appendix: list of Sicilian finds of Strumenti con immanicatu...
69 - 70
A traitor's death?; The identity of a drawn, hanged and quartered man ...
Mary E Lewis
113 - 124
Analysis of a set of bones redeposited in a medieval abbey graveyard showed that the individual had been beheaded and chopped up, and this in turn suggested one of England's more gruesome execution practices. Since quartering was generally reserved for the infamous, the author attempts to track down the victim and proposes him to be Hugh Despenser, the lover of King Edward II.