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Yorkshire Archaeol J 42 (165)
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Yorkshire Archaeol J 42 (165)
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Yorkshire Archaeological Journal
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
42 (165)
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
1967
Note
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Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1967
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The Archaeological Bibliography for Great Britain & Ireland (ABGBI))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
05 Dec 2008
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Yorkshire archaeological register, 1966
Jeffrey Radley
1 - 9
Excavation of the Roman Ridge, Nut Hill, Hazlewood, near Aberford
M Thackrah
10 - 12
Becca Banks - near Aberford, Yorks WR
R T Brooks
12 - 14
New Bronze Age spearheads from Yorkshire and a provisional list of Yorkshire spearheads
Jeffrey Radley
15 - 19
Excavations at Crosely Wood, Bingley
Philip Mayes
19 - 23
Norton (Malton) treasure trove 1963
Elizabeth J E Pirie
23 - 24
The painted glass in Gray's Court, York
J T Brighton
61 - 62
An addendum to the article in vol. 41, describing the discovery of three more panels of 17th century glass.
Whitby 1958, Site Two
Philip A Rahtz
72 - 73
This note describes a small excavation some 500 ft south-east of Whitby Abbey. Skeletons were located, with remains representing 21 individuals in the area excavated. Some, if not all, of the skeletons were of 13th century or later date. They were male and female of all ages including infants; the area is presumably part of the lay cemetery of the Abbey
Recent excavations at the Slack Roman fort, near Huddersfield
J K T Hunter
Terence G Manby
J E H Spaul
74 - 97
Investigations in 1958-63 of the fort's defences, annexe and bath-house confirm the three phases of construction - Agricolan, Trajanic and Hadrianic - indicated by Richmond, though the structural sequence and dating of the bath-house are uncertain. Pottery now suggests military occupation well after 122; the fort was reduced in size under Hadrian (when its NE quarter was walled off) and only one of its barrack blocks was rebuilt in stone. Its earthen ramparts were not replaced by stone defences. In mid-2nd cent its importance overshadowed that of nearby Castleshaw and was probably related to Brigantian unrest. But while the final withdrawal was probably linked with the Antonine advance, the civilian settlement - larger than previously thought (though little excavated) - was, on pottery evidence, occupied to at least the end of 2nd cent. BLC
Neville Castle, Kirkbymoorside; excavations 1963 and 1965
Ann M Dornier
98 - 102
NGR 92:697869. The buildings at this N Riding manor lay near the margins of the area available for excavation and were therefore only partially exposed. The principal building was of cruck construction with sill walls alternating with wall-posts. This building was later modified by the addition of an E wing, for solar or kitchen; this was subsequently demolished. In 15th or 16th cent this complex was succeeded by a house of substantial stone construction, possibly lying round a courtyard. The associated pottery (not illustrated) ranged from 12th-16th cent. The descent of the manor is worked out from 13th-17th cent and an appendix gives the spectrophotometric analysis of a number of unglazed tile fragments. HEJLP