Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T07:23:13.313Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Burial of A Princess? The Later Seventh-Century Cemetery At Westfield Farm, Ely

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 August 2009

Sam Lucy
Affiliation:
Sam Lucy, FSA, Cambridge Archaeological Unit, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Richard Newman
Affiliation:
Richard Newman, Cambridge Archaeological Unit, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Natasha Dodwell
Affiliation:
Natasha Dodwell, Cambridge Archaeological Unit, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Catherine Hills
Affiliation:
Catherine Hills, FSA, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Michiel Dekker
Affiliation:
Michiel Dekker, Institute for Geo- and Bioarchaeology, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail: [email protected]
Tamsin O’Connell
Affiliation:
Tamsin O’Connell, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3ER, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Ian Riddler
Affiliation:
Ian Riddler, FSA, Tatra, Diddies Road, Stratton, Nr Bude, Cornwall EX23 9DW, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Penelope Walton Rogers
Affiliation:
Penelope Walton Rogers, FSA, The Anglo-Saxon Laboratory, Marketing House, 8 Bootham Terrace, York YO30 7DH, UK. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

This paper reports on the excavation of a small, but high-status, later seventh-century Anglo-Saxon cemetery in Ely. Of fifteen graves, two were particularly well furnished, one of which was buried with a gold and silver necklace that included a cross pendant, as well as two complete glass palm cups and a composite comb, placed within a wooden padlocked casket. The paper reports on the skeletal and artefactual material (including isotopic analysis of the burials), and seeks to set the site in its wider social and historical context, arguing that this cemetery may well have been associated with the first monastery in Ely, founded by Etheldreda in ad 673.

Résumé

Cette communication présente un rapport sur les fouilles effectuées à Ely dans un cimetière anglo-saxon, petit mais aristocratique, datant de la fin du septième siècle. Deux des quinze sépultures étaient particulièrement bien nanties, et l’un des morts avait été enterré avec un collier d’or et d’argent comportant une croix pendentif, ainsi que deux coupes de paume en verre entières et un peigne composé à l’intérieur d’un coffret en bois muni d’un cadenas. Cette communication présente un rapport sur le matériel osseux et les objets façonnés (y compris une analyse isotopique des sépultures) et s’efforce de situer le site dans son contexte social et historique plus large. Elle soutient que ce cimetière aurait bien pu être associé au premier monastère d’Ely, fondé par Etheldreda en l’an 673.

Zusammenfassung

Diese Abhandlung berichtet von einer Ausgrabung in einem kleinen, aber hochrangigen angelsächsischen Friedhofs in Ely. Von den fünfzehn Gräbern waren zwei besonders gut ausgestattet, und einer der Verstorbenen wurde mit einer goldenen und silbernen Kette mit Kreuzanhänger bestattet, sowie zwei kompletten Glasbechern und einem Kamm, der sich in einer mit Vorhängeschloß versehenen hölzernen Schatulle befand. Es wird über die Skelette und Artefake berichtet (inklusive der Analyse von Isotopen der Bestattungen), und versucht den Ort in seinen sozialen und historischen Zusammenhang einzuordnen. Es wird argumentiert, daß dieser Friedhof mit dem ersten Kloster in Ely in Verbindung gebracht werden kann, daß ad 673 von Etheldreda gegründet wurde.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ambrose, S H 1990. ‘Preparation and characterization of bone and tooth collagen for isotopic analysis’, J Archaeol Sci, 18, 293317CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ambrose, S H 1993. ‘Isotopic analysis of palaeodiets: methodological and interpretive considerations’, in Investigations of Ancient Human Bone: chemical analyses in anthropology (ed M K Sandford), 59130, Amsterdam: Kluwer Academic/Plenum PublishersGoogle Scholar
Andrews, P 1995. Excavations at Redcastle Furze, Thetford, 1988–9, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 72, Gressenhall: Norfolk Museums ServiceGoogle Scholar
Baker, R 1880. ‘On the discovery of Anglo-Saxon remains at Desborough, Northamptonshire’, Archaeologia, 45, 466471CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balasse, M, Ambrose, S H, Smith, A B Price, T D 2002. ‘The seasonal mobility model for prehistoric herders in the south-western cape of South Africa assessed by isotopic analysis of sheep tooth enamel’, J Archaeol Sci, 29, 917932CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, J H, Locker, A M Roberts, C M 2004. ‘The origin of intensive marine fishing in medieval Europe: the English evidence’, Proc Roy Soc London, B, 271, 24172421Google Scholar
Bass, W M 1987. Human Osteology, Columbia: Missouri Archaeology SocietyGoogle Scholar
Bayley, J Butcher, S 2004. Roman Brooches in Britain, Rep Res Comm Soc Antiq London 68, London: Society of Antiquaries of LondonGoogle Scholar
Bede 1969. Ecclesiastical History of the English People (eds B Colgrave and R A B Mynors), Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Birbeck, V with Smith, R, Andrews, P and Stoodley, N 2005. The Origins of Mid-Saxon Southampton: excavations at the Friends Provident St Mary’s Stadium 1998–2000, Salisbury: Wessex ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Blair, J 2005. The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Blake, E O (ed) 1962. Liber Eliensis, London: Royal Historical SocietyGoogle Scholar
Boddington, A 1987. ‘Chaos, disturbance and decay in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery’, in Boddington et al (eds) 1987, 27–42Google Scholar
Boddington, A, Garland, A N Janaway, R C (eds) 1987. Death, Decay and Reconstruction: approaches to archaeology and forensic science, Manchester: Manchester University PressGoogle Scholar
Boyle, A, Jennings, D, Miles, D Palmer, S 1998. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Butler’s Field, Lechlade, Gloucestershire. Vol I, Thames Valley Landscapes Monogr 10, Oxford: Oxford Archaeological UnitGoogle Scholar
Brooks, S Suchey, J 1990. ‘Skeletal age determination based on the os pubis: a comparison of the Acsádi-Nemeskéri and Suchey-Brooks methods’, Human Evolution, 5, 227238CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brothwell, D R 1981. Digging Up Bones, London: British Museum (Natural History)Google Scholar
Brothwell, D R 1987. ‘Decay and disorder in the York Jewbury skeletons’, in Boddington et al (eds) 1987, 22–6Google Scholar
Brown, P D C 1977. ‘Firesteels and pursemounts again’, Bonner Jahrbücher, 177, 451477Google Scholar
Brown, W A B 1985. ‘Identification of human teeth’, Univ London Inst Archaeol Bull, 21–2, 130Google Scholar
Brugmann, B 2004. Glass Beads from Early Anglo-Saxon Graves, Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Budd, P, Millard, A, Chenery, C, Lucy, S Roberts, C 2004. ‘Investigating population movement by stable isotope analysis: a report from Britain’, Antiquity, 78, 127141Google Scholar
Buikstra, J E Ubelaker, D (eds) 1994. Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains: proceedings of a seminar at the Field Museum of Natural History, Fayetteville: Arkansas Archaeological Survey PressGoogle Scholar
Cameron, E Fell, V 2001. ‘The remarkable survival of organic remains’, in Snape Anglo-Saxon Cemetery: excavations and surveys, 1824–1992 (W Filmer-Sankey and T Pestell), E Anglian Archaeol Rep 95, 204207, Ipswich: Suffolk County CouncilGoogle Scholar
Carr, R D, Tester, A Murphy, P 1988. ‘The middle Saxon settlement at Staunch Meadow, Brandon’, Antiquity, 62, 371377Google Scholar
Cessford, C with Dickens, A 2007. ‘Ely Cathedral and environs: recent investigations’, Proc Cambridge Antiq Soc, 96, 161174Google Scholar
Chisholm, B 1989. ‘Variations in diet reconstructions based on stable isotopic evidence’, in The Chemistry of Prehistoric Human Bone (ed T D Price), 1037, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Cobbett, L 1934. ‘A Saxon carving found at Ely’, Antiq J, 14, 6263Google Scholar
Connell, B 2004. ‘Compiling a dental inventory’, in Guidelines to the Standards of Recording Human Remains (eds M Brickley and J I McKinley), Inst Fld Archaeol Pap 7, Southampton and Reading: British Association for Biological Anthropology and Osteoarchaeology and Institute of Field ArchaeologistsGoogle Scholar
Coplen, T B 1995. ‘New IUPAC guidelines for the reporting of stable hydrogen, carbon and oxygen isotope-ratio data’, J Res Nat Inst Standards and Technology, 100, 285285Google Scholar
Crawford, S 1991. ‘When do Anglo-Saxon children count?’, J Theor Archaeol, 2, 1724Google Scholar
Crawford, S 1999. Childhood in Anglo-Saxon England, Stroud: SuttonGoogle Scholar
Daniels, R 1999. ‘The Anglo-Saxon monastery at Hartlepool, England’, in Northumbria’s Golden Age (eds J Hawkes and S Mills), 105112, Stroud: SuttonGoogle Scholar
Delgardo Huertas, A, Iacumin, P, Stenni, B, Sanchez Chillon, B Longinelli, A 1995. ‘Oxygen-isotope variations of phosphate in mammalian bone and tooth enamel’, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 59/20, 42994305CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeNiro, M J 1985. ‘Post-mortem preservation and alteration of in vivo bone collagen isotope ratios in relation to palaeodietary reconstruction’, Nature, 317, 806809CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dodwell, N, Lucy, S Tipper, J 2004. ‘Anglo-Saxons on the Cambridge Backs: the Criminology site settlement and King’s Garden Hostel cemetery’, Proc Cambridge Antiq Soc, 93, 95124Google Scholar
Duhig, C 1998. ‘The human skeletal material’, in Malim and Hines 1998, 154–99Google Scholar
Duncan, H, Duhig, C Phillips, M 2003. ‘A late migration/final phase cemetery at Water Lane, Melbourn’, Proc Cambridge Antiq Soc, 92, 57134Google Scholar
Dunlevy, M 1988. ‘A classification of early Irish combs’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, C, 88, 341422Google Scholar
Dupras, T L Schwarcz, H P 2001. ‘Strangers in a strange land: stable isotope evidence for human migration in the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt’, J Archaeol Sci, 28, 1199–1208CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evison, V I 1987. Dover: the Buckland Anglo-Saxon Cemetery, HBMC Archaeol Rep 3, London: Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for EnglandGoogle Scholar
Evison, V I 2000. ‘Glass vessels in England AD 400–1100’, in Glass in Britain and Ireland AD 350–1100 (ed J Price), Brit Mus Occas Pap 127, 47104, London: British MuseumGoogle Scholar
Evison, V I 2008. Catalogue of the Anglo-Saxon Glass in the British Museum (ed S Marzinzik), Brit Mus Res Pub 167, London: British Museum PressGoogle Scholar
Fairweather, J (trans) 2005. Liber Eliensis: a history of the Isle of Ely from the seventh century to the twelfth, Woodbridge: BoydellGoogle Scholar
Faussett, B 1856. Inventorium Sepulchrale, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fowler, G 1948. ‘Cratendune: a problem of the Dark Ages’, Proc Cambridge Antiq Soc, 41, 7076Google Scholar
Friedman, L O’Connell, T C forthcoming. ‘The isotopic data’, in A Romano-British Cemetery and its Associated Settlement at Babraham Research Campus, Cambridgeshire (eds S Timberlake, N Armour, N Dodwell and K Anderson), E Anglian Archaeol MonogrGoogle Scholar
Fuller, B T, Fuller, J L, Sage, N E, Harris, D A, O’Connell, T C Hedges, R E M 2004. ‘Nitrogen balance and δ15N: why you aren’t what you eat when you’re pregnant’, Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 18, 28892896Google Scholar
Gannes, L Z, Martinez del Rio, C Koch, P 1998. ‘Natural abundance variations in stable isotopes and their potential uses in animal physiological ecology’, Comprehensive Biochem Physiol, 119A/3, 725737Google Scholar
Geake, H 1997. The Use of Grave-goods in Conversion-period England c 600–c 850, BAR Brit Ser 261, Oxford: British Archaeological ReportsGoogle Scholar
Hall, D 1996. The Fenland Project, No. 10: Cambridgeshire survey, Isle of Ely and Wisbech, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 79, Cambridge: University of CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Härke, H 1989. ‘Knives in early Saxon burials: blade length and age at death’, Medieval Archaeol, 33, 144148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S C 1973. ‘The dating and social significance of the burials in the Polhill Cemetery’, in Excavations in West Kent 1960–1970 (B Philp), 186201, Dover: Kent Archaeological Rescue UnitGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S C 1990. ‘The Anglo-Saxon necklace from Lower Brook Street’, in Object and Economy in Medieval Winchester, Winchester Studies, Vol 7 (ed M Biddle), Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S C 2003. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Worthy Park, Kingsworthy, near Winchester, Hampshire, Oxford: Oxford University School of ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S C Grainger, G 2006. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Finglesham, Kent, Oxford: Oxford University School of ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Hedges, J Reynard, L M 2007. ‘Nitrogen isotopes and the trophic level of humans in archaeology’, J Archaeol Sci, 34, 12401251CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedges, R E M, Clement, J G, David, C, Thomas, L O’Connell, T C 2007. ‘Collagen turnover in the adult femoral mid-shaft: modelled from anthropogenic radiocarbon tracer measurements’, American J Physical Anthropol, 133/2, 808816CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Henderson, I 1997. ‘Anglo-Saxon sculpture’, in Cambridgeshire Churches (ed C Hicks), 216232, Stamford: Paul WatkinsGoogle Scholar
Hills, C M 1977. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham. Part I: Catalogue of Cremations, Nos 20–64 and 1000–1690, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 6, Gressenhall: Norfolk Archaeological UnitGoogle Scholar
Hills, C M Penn, K J 1981. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham. Part II: Catalogue of Cremations, Nos 22, 41 and 1691–2285, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 11, Gressenhall: Norfolk Archaeological UnitGoogle Scholar
Hinton, D A 2000. A Smith in Lindsey: the Anglo-Saxon grave at Tattershall Thorpe, Lincolnshire, Soc Medieval Archaeol monogr 16, London: Society for Medieval ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Hinton, D A 2005. Gold and Gilt, Pots and Pins: possessions and people in Medieval Britain, Oxford: Oxford University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoefs, J 1997. Stable Isotope Geochemistry, Berlin: SpringerCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holton-Krayenbuhl, A 2005. ‘The historical context’, in Mortimer et al 2005, 4–5Google Scholar
Hoppe, K A, Amundson, R, Vavra, M, McClaran, M P Anderson, D L 2004. ‘Isotopic analysis of tooth enamel carbonate from modern North American feral horses: implications for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions’, Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol, 203/3–4, 299311Google Scholar
Huggett, J W 1988. ‘Imported grave goods and the early Anglo-Saxon economy’, Medieval Archaeol, 32, 6394CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hull, B O’Connell, T C forthcoming. ‘Diet: recent evidence from analytical chemical techniques’, in The Oxford Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Archaeology (eds H Hamerow, S Crawford and D Hinton), Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Hyslop, M 1963. ‘Two Anglo-Saxon cemeteries at Chamberlains Barn, Leighton Buzzard’, Archaeol J, 120, 161200CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iacumin, P, Bocherens, H, Mariotti, A Longinelli, A 1996. ‘Oxygen isotope analyses of co-existing carbonate and phosphate in biogenic apatite: a way to monitor diagenetic alteration of bone phosphate?’, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 142, 16CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jay, M Richards, M P 2008. ‘Iron Age diet at Glastonbury lake village: the isotopic evidence for negligible aquatic resource consumption’, Oxford J Archaeol, 27, 201216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katzenberg, M A Weber, A 1999. ‘Stable isotope ecology and palaeodiet in the Lake Baikal region of Siberia’, J Archaeol Sci, 26, 651659CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenney, S 1999. Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Deposits at 2 West End, Ely: an archaeological evaluation, Cambridgeshire CC Archaeol Fld Unit Rep 164, Cambridge: Cambridgeshire County CouncilGoogle Scholar
Layard, N 1907. ‘Anglo-Saxon burials from Hadleigh Road, Ipswich’, Archaeologia, 60, 325352Google Scholar
Leeds, E T 1936. Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology, Rhind Lectures delivered in Edinburgh, 1935, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Lethbridge, T C 1931. Recent Excavations in Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk, Cambridge Antiq Soc Quarto Publ 3, Cambridge: Bowes & BowesGoogle Scholar
Lethbridge, T C 1936. A Cemetery at Shudy Camps, Cambridgeshire: report of the excavation of a cemetery of the Christian period in 1933, Cambridge Antiq Soc Quarto Publ 5, Cambridge: Bowes & BowesGoogle Scholar
Levinson, A A, Boaz, L Kolodny, Y 1987. ‘Variations in oxygen isotopic compositions of human teeth and urinary stones’, Applied Geochemistry, 2, 367371Google Scholar
Longinelli, A 1984. ‘Oxygen isotopes in mammal bone phosphate: a new tool for palaeohydrological and paleoclimatological research’, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 48, 385390Google Scholar
Lovejoy, C O, Meindl, R S, Pryzbeck, T R Mensforth, R P 1985. ‘Chronological metamorphosis of the auricular surface of the ilium: a new method for the determination of adult skeletal age at death’, American J Physical Anthropol, 68/1, 1528Google Scholar
Lucy, S 1994. ‘Children in early medieval cemeteries’, Archaeol Rev Cambridge, 13/2, 2134Google Scholar
Lucy, S Reynolds, A 2002. Burial in Early Medieval England and Wales, Soc Medieval Archaeol monogr 17, London: Society for Medieval ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Lucy, S, Tipper, J Dickens, A forthcoming. The Anglo-Saxon Settlement and Cemetery at Bloodmoor Hill, Carlton Colville, Suffolk, E Anglian Archaeol Monogr 131, Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological UnitGoogle Scholar
Luz, B, Kolodny, Y Horowitz, M 1984. ‘Fractionation of oxygen isotopes between mammalian bone phosphate and environmental drinking-water’, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 48, 16891693Google Scholar
MacGregor, A 1978. ‘Industry and commerce in Anglo-Scandinavian York’, in Viking Age York and the North (ed R A Hall), CBA Res Rep 27, 3457, London: Council for British ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
MacGregor, A, Mainman, A J Rogers, N S H 1999. Craft, Industry and Everyday Life: bone, antler, ivory and horn from Anglo-Scandinavian and medieval York, Archaeology of York 17/12, York: York Archaeological TrustGoogle Scholar
Mackay, D Swaysland, C 2006. ‘Land at Westfield Farm, Ely: an archaeological evaluation’, unpublished CAU Rep 738Google Scholar
Malim, T Hines, J 1998. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Edix Hill (Barrington A), Cambridgeshire, CBA Res Rep 112, York: Council for British ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Marzinzik, S 2003. Early Anglo-Saxon Belt Buckles, BAR Brit Ser 357, Oxford: ArchaeopressGoogle Scholar
Mays, S A, Richards, M P Fuller, B T 2002. ‘Bone stable isotope evidence for infant feeding in medieval England’, Antiquity, 76, 654656Google Scholar
Meaney, A 1964. A Gazetteer of Early Anglo-Saxon Burial Sites, London: Allen & UnwinGoogle Scholar
Meaney, A 1981. Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones, BAR Brit Ser 96, Oxford: British Archaeological ReportsGoogle Scholar
Meaney, A Hawkes, S C 1970. Two Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries at Winnall, Winchester, Hampshire, Soc Medieval Archaeol monogr 4, London: Society for Medieval ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Minagawa, M Wada, E 1984. ‘Stepwise enrichment of 15N along food chains: further evidence and the relation between 15N and animal age’, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 48, 11351140CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mortimer, R, Regan, R Lucy, S 2005. The Saxon and Medieval Settlement at West Fen Road, Ely: the Ashwell site, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 110, Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological UnitGoogle Scholar
Müssemeier, U, Nieveler, E, Plum, R Pöppelmann, H 2003. Chronologie der merowingerzeitlichen Grabfunde vom linken Niederrhein bis zur nördlichen Eiffel, Materialien zur Bodendenkmalpflege im Rheinland 15, Cologne: Rheinland-VerlagGoogle Scholar
Newman, J 1993. ‘The Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Boss Hall, Ipswich’, Sutton Hoo Res Comm Bull, 8, 3336Google Scholar
Newman, R 2007. ‘Westfield Farm, Ely: an archaeological excavation’, unpublished CAU Rep 780Google Scholar
O’Connell, T C Lawler, A forthcoming. ‘Stable isotope analysis of human and faunal remains’, in Lucy et al forthcoming, 310–15Google Scholar
Penn, K J 2000. Excavations on the Norwich Southern Bypass, 1989–91. Part II: The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Harford Farm, Caistor St Edmund, Norfolk, E Anglian Archaeol Rep 92, Dereham: Norfolk Museums ServiceGoogle Scholar
Plunkett, S J 1994. Guardians of the Gipping: Anglo-Saxon treasures from Hadleigh Road, Ipswich, Ipswich: Tate PublishingGoogle Scholar
Privat, K L, O’Connell, T C Richards, M P 2002. ‘Stable isotope analysis of human and faunal remains from the Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Berinsfield, Oxfordshire: dietary and social implications’, J Archaeol Sci, 29, 779790Google Scholar
Prowse, T L, Schwarcz, H P, Garnsey, P, Knyf, M, Macchiarelli, R Bondioli, L 2007. ‘Isotopic evidence for age-related immigration to imperial Rome’, American J Physical Anthropol, 132, 510519CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Riddler, I D forthcoming. ‘Combs’, in Lucy et al forthcoming, 179–82Google Scholar
Riddler, I D, Trzaska-Nartowski, N I A Barton, R forthcoming. ‘The antler combs’, in Excavations at Knowth 5: the early medieval settlement (G Eogan), Dublin: Royal Irish AcademyGoogle Scholar
Riddler, I D, Trzaska-Nartowski, N I A Hatton, S forthcoming. An Early Medieval Craft: antler and bone working from Ipswich excavations 1974–1994, E Anglian Archaeol Rep, Bury St Edmunds: Suffolk County Council Archaeological ServiceGoogle Scholar
Roberts, C Cox, M 2003. Health and Disease in Britain: from prehistory to the present day, Stroud: Sutton PublishingGoogle Scholar
Rogers, J Waldron, T 1995. A Field Guide to Joint Disease in Archaeology, Chichester: John Wiley & SonsGoogle Scholar
Rozanski, K, Araguas-Araguas, L Gonfiantini, R 1992. ‘Relation between long-term trends of oxygen-18 isotope composition of precipitation and climate’, Science, 258/5084, 981985Google Scholar
Rozanski, K, Araguas-Araguas, L Gonfiantini, R 1993. ‘Isotopic patterns in modem global precipitation’, in Climate Change in Continental Isotopic Records (eds P K Swart, K C Lohman, J McKenzie and S Savin), Geophysical Monograph 78, 136, Washington, DC: American Geophysical UnionGoogle Scholar
Scheuer, L Black, S 2000. Developmental Juvenile Osteology, London: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Scull, C forthcoming a. ‘The human burials’, in Lucy et al forthcoming, 379–420Google Scholar
Scull, C forthcoming b. ‘Early medieval (late 5th–early 8th centuries AD) cemeteries at Boss Hall and Buttermarket, Ipswich, Suffolk’, Soc Medieval Archaeol Monogr Ser, London: Society for Medieval ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Scull, C Bayliss, A 1999. ‘Dating burials of the seventh and eighth centuries: a case study from Ipswich, Suffolk’, in The Pace of Change: studies in early medieval chronology (eds J Hines, K Høilund Nielsen and F Siegmund), 8088, Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Shoesmith, R 1985. Hereford City Excavations. Vol 3: the finds, CBA Res Rep 56, London: Council for British ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Speake, G 1989. A Saxon Bed Burial on Swallowcliffe Down, HBMC Archaeol Rep 10, London: Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for EnglandGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A, Duhig, C Hines, J 1997. ‘An Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Oakington, Cambridgeshire’, Proc Cambridge Antiq Soc, 86, 5790Google Scholar
Trotter, M Gleser, G 1952. ‘Estimation of stature from the long bones of American whites and negroes’, American J Physical Anthropol, 10/4, 463514Google Scholar
Ubelaker, D H 1989. Human Skeletal Remains: excavation, analysis, and interpretation, Washington, DC: Taraxacum PressGoogle Scholar
Van der Merwe, N J 1992. ‘Light stable isotopes and the reconstruction of prehistoric diets’, in New Developments in Archaeological Science (ed A M Pollard), 247253, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Walton Rogers, P 2007. Cloth and Clothing in Early Anglo-Saxon England, AD 450–700, CBA Res Rep 145, York: Council for British ArchaeologyGoogle Scholar
Webster, L Backhouse, J 1991. The Making of England: Anglo-Saxon art and culture AD 600–900, London: British Museum PublicationsGoogle Scholar
White, C D, Spence, M W, Stuart-Williams, H, Le, Q Schwarcz, H P 1998. ‘Oxygen isotopes and the identification of geographical origins: the Valley of Oaxaca versus the Valley of Mexico’, J Archaeol Sci, 25, 643655Google Scholar
White, R 1990. ‘Scrap or substitute: Roman material in Anglo-Saxon graves’, in Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries: a reappraisal. Proceedings of a Conference held at Liverpool Museum 1986 (ed E Southworth), 125152, Stroud: Alan SuttonGoogle Scholar
Wilson, D M Hurst, J G 1960. ‘Medieval Britain in 1959’, Medieval Archaeol, 4, 134165Google Scholar
Yorke, B 2005. Nunneries and the Anglo-Saxon Royal Houses, London: ContinuumGoogle Scholar