Christie, N., Edgeworth, M., Creighton, O. H., Hamerow, H., Hyam, A. and Speed, G. (2008). Wallingford: charting early medieval and medieval expansion and contraction.. Medieval Settlement Research 23. Vol 23, pp. 53-57. https://doi.org/10.5284/1059136. Cite this via datacite
Title The title of the publication or report |
Wallingford: charting early medieval and medieval expansion and contraction. | ||
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Issue The name of the volume or issue |
Medieval Settlement Research 23 | ||
Series The series the publication or report is included in |
Medieval Settlement Research | ||
Volume Volume number and part |
23 | ||
Number of Pages The number of pages in the publication or report |
89 | ||
Page Start/End The start and end page numbers. |
53 - 57 | ||
Downloads Any files associated with the publication or report that can be downloaded from the ADS |
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Licence Type ADS, CC-BY 4.0 or CC-BY 4.0 NC. |
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DOI The DOI (digital object identifier) for the publication or report. |
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Publication Type The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book |
Journal | ||
Abstract The abstract describing the content of the publication or report |
This article sets out the background to the Wallingford Burh to Borough Research Project, a three-year programme of study that commenced in 2008, outlining the historical and archaeological interest of the town and mentioning pilot study work in 2001--04. The results from the 2008 excavation of three trenches within three separate open areas are then described and discussed. In Castle Meadows, Trench 1 identified deep mixed medieval deposits relating to periodic presumed castle ditch clearance and also landscaping work beyond. Chiefly though, it exposed part of a chalk-clay platform relating to a presumed 17th-century Civil War bastion. Trench 2 was excavated in the north-west corner of an area known as the Bullcroft which, from the Norman period, formed a religious space linked to a priory. The trench was designed to test for Saxon and medieval activity but proved largely empty, suggesting that this urban zone was always open space. More tangible medieval evidence derived from Trench 3 on Kinecroft, also largely an open space. Here evidence for a large building, seemingly of 12th-century date, was revealed, as well as a hollow way or lane. 2009 will see further scrutiny through geophysics and excavation of the urban and suburban spaces of Wallingford. LD | ||
Year of Publication The year the book, article or report was published |
2008 | ||
Source Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in. |
ADS Archive
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Created Date The date the record of the pubication was first entered |
06 Dec 2015 |