skip to navigation
ADS Main Website
Help
|
Login
/
Browse by Series
/ Series
Series: Durobrivae
Series Publication Type:
Records per page:
10
20
50
100
200
Go
Previous
Page 1 of 1
Next
Filter results by issue title, e.g. 'roman military station'
Filter:
Go
Please click on an Issue link to go to the Issue Details.
Issue Title
Access Type
Publication
Type
Author / Editor
Abstract
Publication
Year
Durobrivae 2
1974
Durobrivae 3
1975
Durobrivae 5
1977
Durobrivae 6
1978
Durobrivae 8
1980
Durobrivae 9
1984
Nene Valley excavations 1978
John Peter Wild
Reports evidence for the early courses of the River Nene; the final season at Fengate, where a Bronze Age field bank survived well under unusually thick overburden, where evidence of flooding suggests a reason for the abandonment of such a well-managed site, and where LBA-EIA transitional material turned up together with an unploughed Iron Age house floor; discussion of Group VI material found as erratics; a pit alignment curving between two ring-ditches; progress on the Cambridgeshire sites and monuments record and related excavations; a new plan of the town of Durobrivae from aerial photographs; a Roman anvil; a 1st century Belgic settlement; and the loss since 1969 of many buildings of historical interest.
1979
The year's work in the Nene Valley 1975
Introduces the brief site reports by drawing attention to the most notable finds of the year: a well-furnished Beaker inhumation from Barnack (Beaker, tanged dagger, gold-studded wristguard) and the Roman Christian silver treasure from Water Newton. Work continued at the Fengate EIA farm settlement, where a multiple Neo burial was also found (one individual killed by an arrow). Excavation of the Late Roman settlement at Hall Farm, Orton Longueville was completed and various other sites, eg. medieval levels in Bridge St, Peterborough and a Roman lime-kiln at Helpston, are reported, together with a bronze 'eared' cauldron and pan from Stanground.
1976
The year's work in the Nene Valley: 1972
John Peter Wild
A new journal devoted to Nene Valley archaeology is introduced by an outline of the history of research in this palimpsest-like settlement area, now being developed for Greater Peterborough. Short illustrated interim reports follow on the Longthorpe Scheduled Area; the prehistoric and RB remains at Lynch Farm; the Castor nunnery of St Kyneburgha (c 655-870); the medieval house-sequence in Potter's Oven Field, Castor; the Neolithic ?house at Fengate; the EBA dagger-burial at Perio; the 4th-century farm tools from Lynch Farm; and the hunt-cup from Bedford Purlieus.
1973
Previous
Page 1 of 1
Next