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Brit Archaeol 37
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Title:
Brit Archaeol 37
Series:
British Archaeology
Volume:
37
Publication Type:
Journal
Year of Publication:
1998
Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1998
Source:
BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Created Date:
20 Jan 2002
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page Start/End
Abstract
News
4 - 5
Notes remains of early modern industry found at Reading (Berks); new proposals for improvements to the road systems surrounding and visitor centre at Stonehenge; and a medieval water system in east London (Spitalfields). In brief notes the discovery of a stone inscribed with the Latinised name Artognou, at Tintagel, the conviction and fining of a farmer who destroyed over 800m of medieval hedgerows in Herefordshire near Hay-on-Wye, and traces of what may be one of the oldest churches in Britain at Vindolanda fort on Hadrians Wall (Nthumb).
Farm buildings and perpetual change
Paul S Barnwell
6 - 7
Building adaptation to technological change in the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries.
Togidubnus and the Roman liberation
Martin Henig
8 - 9
Argues that southern Britain had Romanised prior to the invasion of 43BC.
The lost defensive ditches of wartime
William Foot
10 - 11
Being the thousands of miles of anti-tank ditches constructed in Britain during the Second World War (from June 1940 therein), and now filled-in.
From Buttermere to the bobbin factory
Robert H Bewley
12 - 13
Industrial sites across the Lake District.
Dating a cottage and saving a windmill
Simon Denison
Notes important voluntary work aided by the CBA, including the dating of medieval cottages in Shropshire and Broad Eye windmill in Stafford.
Riding down the road to regional chaos
Richard Morris
DCMS review of activities as part of the government's Comprehensive Spending Review may instigate a form of regionalisation that will have uneven consequences for national conservation practice. The government is entreated to enter into an informed debate with relevant interested parties.