Data copyright © UCL Institute of Archaeology unless otherwise stated
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Dr
Stuart
Brookes
Institute of Archaeology
UCL Institute of Archaeology
31-34 Gordon Square
London
WC1H 0PY
England
A total of 3 archives have been added to the Early Medieval Atlas Projects. These can be accessed below.
Domesday Shires and Hundreds of England. Authors: Stuart Brookes This archive contains digitised shapefiles of the administrative boundaries of England and parts of Wales as they are believed to have existed in AD 1086, as recorded in Domesday Book. The data-package consists of three ESRI shapefiles, describing three tiers of administrative district that can be reconstructed from Domesday Book, ranging from small (DBhundreds.shp) to large (DBshires.shp) in scale, with some areas also having intermediate (DBinter.shp) administrative divisions. Released: 31 January 2020 Collection doi: 10.5284/1058999 |
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Inland Navigation in England and Wales before 1348: GIS Database. Authors: Eljas Oksanen A GIS database describing the extent of navigable rivers and canals in England and Wales from the eleventh century to the mid-fourteenth. The database consists of CSV point data files and ESRI polyline shapefiles that give the following information: a) navigable waterway courses, b) heads of navigation, c) place-name information related to waterway traffic. Released: 08 November 2019 Collection doi: 10.5284/1057497 |
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Bridges of Medieval England to c.1250. Authors: Eleanor Rye, Eljas Oksanen, Stuart Brookes This dataset, in shapefile and csv formats, brings together information on medieval bridges attested in written records and archaeological surveys in England to the middle of the thirteenth century. By combining documentary references, archaeological material and place-name evidence, it provides a comprehensive digital resource of this key aspect of medieval English transport and communications infrastructure. Released: 25 July 2019 Collection doi: 10.5284/1053676 |