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Cotswold Archaeol Trust Annu Rev 5
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Title
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Title:
Cotswold Archaeol Trust Annu Rev 5
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Cotswold Archaeology Annual Review
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
5
Publication Type
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Publication Type:
Monograph Chapter (in Series)
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
No Date
Source
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Source:
BIAB (TaggedExceptions)
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
10 Apr 2002
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Chapter Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Selected projects 1994
4 - 9
Short reports of evaluations and watching briefs carried out by the Cotswold Archaeological Trust in many counties of England and Wales.
Bishops Cleeve, Gloucestershire
Alistair J Barber
Graeme T Walker
10 - 12
Describes three main phases of ditches and boundaries excavated at the site near Home Farm. Smithing waste and a possible industrial processing pit are also noted. Saxon pottery attested to later occupation in the vicinity.
113--119 High Street, Oxford
Roy King
Graeme T Walker
13 - 14
Reports on the excavation of remains of Saxon and medieval buildings. At least three, possibly four, Saxon timber-lined cellars were found. Other features included, pits, wells, stone walls and stone-lined cesspits. There was some post-medieval occupation.
Heybridge, Essex
B Langton
Neil Holbrook
15 - 16
Summarises the findings of the Cotswold Archaeological Trust's excavations of an area on the periphery of the Roman town, conducted simultaneously with the large Essex County Council project. The site revealed occupation dating mainly from the Bronze and Iron Ages to the Early Roman period, situated adjacent to an infilled stream channel. Notable discoveries included a decorated BA beaker, BA or IA roundhouses, IA loomweights, and six RB cremations.
Llandough, South Glamorgan
Alan Thomas
Neil Holbrook
17 - 18
Briefly describes a major early Christian cemetery excavated in 1994. The town is documented as site of a pre-Conquest monastery. Four groups of burials are identified. A possible Iron Age pit burial and graves containing Roman artefacts (including beads, a brooch, coins, and hobnails) attest that the cemetery had a long history of use. Four radiocarbon dates from the bones range from AD~420--1015. A post-built structure post-dating the cemetery was also found.
Research objectives
19 - 20
Reports on progress with EH-funded work, namely a new survey of a Cotswold medieval settlement, the publication of Cirencester excavations of the 1960s and 1970s, and research on Roman small towns in the Cotswolds.
Publications and reports
22 - 24