10 research outputs found
Las relaciones en el bronce final, entre la Península Ibérica y las Islas Británicas con respecto a Francia y la Europa Central y Mediterránea
The European Inheritance. Edited by SirErnest Barker, SirGeorge Clark, and ProfessorP. Vaucher. 3 vols, 8½ + 5¼. Pp. 543, 384, 385 + pls. 51 and maps. Oxford: at the Clarendon Press, 1954. £5· 5<i>s</i>.
On Some Buckets and Cauldrons of the Bronze and Early Iron Ages: The Nannau, Whigsborough, and Heathery Burn Bronze Buckets and the Colchester and London Cauldrons
The purpose of this paper is to present five large prehistoric bronze vessels, from Wales, Ireland, and the north and south of England, found at various dates from the early nineteenth century to 1932, but published as yet imperfectly or not at all, and to consider, with reference to their affinities abroad, their significance for these islands’ Late Bronze and earliest Iron Ages. The starting-point for any such study must in general be the article in Archaeologia, vol. lxxx, by the late E. T. Leeds. In the twenty-seven years since he wrote, new finds and new work have indeed supplemented and somewhat varied his conclusions, but they leave us still deeply in his debt.</jats:p
Camulodunum: first report on the excavations at Colchester, 1930–1939
This work describes excavations in Colchester, England, carried out in 1930–9. Colchester was the site of the pre-Roman oppidum of Camulodunon and later town of Colonia Claudia Victricensis. This first report records the exploration of its principal inhabited centre, the area known as Sheepen. The description of the work is introduced by a topographical and historical account of Camulodunum, an exposition of the chronology of the Sheepen site, and a synopsis of the results in general. It is followed by a systematic presentation of the finds—coins, pottery, glass, metalwork, and animal and vegetable remains
