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S Staffordshire Archaeol Hist Soc Trans 33
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
S Staffordshire Archaeol Hist Soc Trans 33
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Staffordshire Archaeological & Historical Society Transactions
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
33
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:
1993
Note
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Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1991 Date Of Issue To: 01
Source
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Source:
BIAB (The British Archaeological Bibliography (BAB))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
20 Jan 2002
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Further thoughts on Letocetum
Jim T Gould
1 - 3
Takes issue with points made in an earlier article (see also 94/1473) concerning a life size statue of Minerva and the dismissal of a Claudian phase.
A response
A A Round
3 - 6
A reply to earlier arguments on Letocetum (see also 94/1461), particularly with reference to the date of the earliest occupation.
Caer Lwytgoed: its significance in early medieval documents
Jim T Gould
7 - 10
An examination of the name favours the Letocetum attribution over Lichfield.
Master John of Burcestre and the castles of Stafford and Maxstoke
Malcolm J B Hislop
14 - 20
Details of the thirteenth-century castle architect, including documentary evidence from an indenture of 1348, with a `Translation of the indenture' by A M Hislop (19-20).
Post-medieval glazed coarseware from West Bromwich manor house
M A Hodder
21 - 24
Details of the most common pottery type found during work in the moat area. The assemblage consists of buff/orange fabric coarsewares with some quartz inclusions. Vessel types appear to be mostly jars and pancheon-type bowls or dishes, thought to have been produced at nearby Wednesbury.
Post-medieval glass from West Bromwich manor house
Wayne D Cocroft
25 - 41
This report forms part of a continuing series on the finds recovered during the restoration of the manor house during the 1950s and 1960s. The majority of the glass dates from the late sixteenth-to early seventeenth-centuries, providing a vivid insight into the material and social aspirations of the local gentry in Staffordshire. The glass, along with a more detailed archive report, is deposited at Wednesbury Art Gallery & Museum.
6, Market Street, Tamworth: a timber-framed building of 1695 and its context
Robert Meeson
A Kirkham
42 - 48
Report, facilitated by refurbishment work in 1992, on the survey of the building's timber frame and dendrochronological dates obtained. Partly timber-framed and partly of brick, the building is thought to have been constructed c1695, incorporating earlier, salvaged, timbers. The structure is described.
Excavations in the walled garden, Bescot Hall, Walsall
Martin Locock
49 - 56
Contour survey and excavation revealed nineteenth-century garden features. Post-medieval pottery was also unearthed.