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Proc Dorset Natur Hist Archaeol Soc 102
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Proc Dorset Natur Hist Archaeol Soc 102
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
102
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:
1982
Note
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Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1982
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (British Archaeological Abstracts (BAA))
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
Excavation of three round barrows in the parish of Kingston Russell
C J Bailey
19 - 31
SY 578904 etc. The barrows, which lay in the S Dorset Ridgeway Group R2, yielded a female burial with Step 5-6 Beaker, secondary burials, cremations, etc; and a pit cluster contained 1 material and a child inhumation. Deverel-Rimbury pottery was also found.
Syncretistic symbolism and the Christian Roman mosaic at Hinton St Mary: a closer reading
Roy T Eriksen
43 - 48
Argues that the hunt scenes on the mosaic indicate an assimilation of the Actaeon myth, and perhaps also the Celtic stag cult, to the Passion of Christ.
The medieval floor tiles of Christchurch Priory
E C Norton
49 - 64
Records and discusses six groups of tiles in 57 designs, ranging from the very early inlaid tiles of c 1242-4 to products of c 1530. They illustrate most stages of the development of the Dorset tile industry until its decline into local production; a number of plain Flemish imports are also represented.
Hengistbury Head, Dorset: 1979 and 1980
Barry Cunliffe
85 - 88
Preliminary account of excavations which demonstrated the high potential of the various sites on the Head for understanding the cultural sequence (1m of stratified deposits), the Iron Age topography, industrial activity, and socioeconomic factors affecting S Britain and the opposite French coast. See also 82/8945.
Excavation of a 17th century glasshouse, Kimmeridge, 1980
David W Crossley
92 - 93
SY 909788. A four-wing furnace is under exploration; it is of Lorraine type but was fired by coal instead of wood; it was making drinking glasses and consuming its own cullet.
A survey of barrows on the South Dorset Ridgeway: threat, destruction, and survival
Peter J Woodward
96 - 97
Revision by OS allowed an assessment to be made of barrow survival in arable, heathland, and woodland over OS map squares SY68 NW & NE. Only 13% survive as intact undisturbed burial mounds, and this 'in an area where some care has been taken to ensure their preservation'. Moreover even these barrows are now divorced from their settlement and contemporary land use contexts.
A comparison of coin groups from Romano-British settlements in Purbeck - a reflection of their contrasting status?
Peter J Woodward
102 - 104
Coins from five Purbeck sites with stratified series have been analysed into 'Reece groups' and compared. Coin loss rates compare with those on other rural sites of the period; but coins cannot be easily used for dating site desertion since the use of coins ceases first on farms, then on estate villas, and finally on industrial sites.
Settlement patterns in the Bride Valley
C J Bailey
104 - 106
Summarizes 25 years' fieldwork in the area, listing 17 sites and mapping the Iron Age/RB sites in relation to the English settlements and parish boundaries. Valleyward movement of late RB is less in evidence here.
Early ecclesiastical settlement in Dorset: a note on the topography of Sherborne, Beaminster and Wimborne Minster
Katherine Barker
107 - 112
Continues to explore the notion of Sherborne as 'Lanprobi' by looking at the topography of Beaminster and Wimborne where traces of a subcircular layout may also be discerned.