We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above for information on how to access this content.
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
Avent, R1975. Anglo-Saxon Garnet Inlaid Disc and Composite Brooches,bar, II, 2 vols. (Oxford).Google Scholar
Brown, P.D.c. & Schweizer, F. 1973. X-ray fluorescent analysis of Anglo-Saxon jewellery, Archaeometry, 15, 2,75–92.Google Scholar
Evison, V.I. 1951. The white material in Kentish discbrooches, Antiq. J., XXXI, 197–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jessup, R. 1974. Anglo-Saxon jewellery (London).Google Scholar
Whitelock, D. 1955. English historical documents, Vol. I500–1042 (London).Google Scholar
Åkerström, A1978. Mycenaean problems 1: on the Mycenaean chariot, OpAthen12, 19–37.Google Scholar
Borchhardt, H. 1977. Frühe griechische Schildformen, Archaeol. Homerica, I, Ch. E, 31–32.Google Scholar
Cassola Guida, P. 1973. Le armi difensive det Micenei nelle figurazioni (Incunabula Graeca 56) (Rome).Google Scholar
Catling, H.W. 1968. A Mycenaean puzzle from Ivefkandi in Euboea, AJA, LXXII, 41–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
1977. Panzer, Archaeol. Homerica, I,Ch. E, 74–32.Google Scholar
Davahas, C. 1976. Guide to Cretan antiquities (Park Ridge).Google Scholar
Greenhalgh, P. 1980. The Dendra charioteer, Antiquity, LIV, 201–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kilian, K. 1980. Zur Darstellung eines Wagenrennens aus Spatmykenischer Zeit, AM, 95, 21–32.Google Scholar
Littauer, M.A. 1972. The military use of the chariot in the Aegean in the Late Bronze Age, AJA, LXXVI, 145–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lorimer, H.L. 1950, Homer and the monuments (London).Google Scholar
Matz, F. 1951. Forschungen auf Kreta (Berlin).Google Scholar
Slenczka, E, 1974. Figürlich bemalte Mykenische Keramik aus Tiryns, TirynsVII (Mainz).Google Scholar
Snodgrass, A. 1971. The Dark Age of Greece (Edinburgh).Google Scholar
1977. Archaeology and the rise of the Greek state (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Spyropoulos, T.G. 1970. Excavation in the Mycenaean cemetery of Tanagra in Boeotia, AAA, 3, 184–32.Google Scholar
Wiesner, J. 1968. Fahren und Reiten. Archaeol. Homerica, I,F.Google Scholar
Adams, B. 1975. Petrie‧s manuscript notes on the Koptos foundation deposits of Tuthmosis III, JEALXI, 102–11 [112–13].Google Scholar
Clutton-Brock, J. & Burleigh, R. 1979. Notes on the osteology of the Arab horse with reference to a skeleton collected in Egypt by Sir Flinders Petrie, Bull. Br. Mus. Nat. Hist. (Zool),35 (2), 191–32.Google Scholar
Petrie, W.M.F. 1883. The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh (London).Google Scholar
Pitt, Rivers, Maj, .-Gen. 1882. On the discovery of chert implements in stratified gravel in the Nile Valley near Thebes, J. Anthrop. Inst., XI, 382–400. Pls. XXVIII-XXXVI.Google Scholar
Sandford, K.S. & Ahkell, W.J. 1929. Palaeolithic Man and the Nile-Faiyum Divide, Oriental Inst. Publications, x (Chicago).Google Scholar
Thompson, M.W. 1976. Catalogue of the correspondence and papers of Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers (1827-1900) in the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum (London: Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts).Google Scholar
1977. General PituRivers: evolution and archaeology in the nineteenth century (Bradford-on-Avon).Google Scholar
Burleigh, R.Matthews, K, Ambers, J & Kinnes, I. 1981. British Museum Natural Radiocarbon MeasurementsXII, Radiocarbon23, 14–23.Google Scholar
Renfhew, A.C, 1973. Before civilisation (London).Google Scholar
Waterbolk, H.T. 1971. Working with radiocarbon dates, Proc. Prehist. Soc., XXVII, 2, 15–32.Google Scholar
Bahn, P.G. 1977. Seasonal migration in S.W. France during the Late Glacial period, J. Archaeol. Sci, IV, 245–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cordier, G. 1956. Les coquilles des Faluns de Touraine ont-elles été colportées en Dordogne à l'âge du renne?, Bull. Soc. d'Éludes et de Recherches Préhistoriques: Les Eyzies, No. 7, 39–55.Google Scholar
Fischer, P. 1876. Sur les coquilles récentes et fossiles trouvées dans les cavernes du Midi de la France et de la Ligurie, Bull. Soc. Géol. France, 3e Sér., 329–42.Google Scholar
Hemingway, M.F. 1979. Possible long-distance contact in the Magdalenian: a comment, Antiquity,LIII, 136–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
1980. The Initial Magdalenian in France, Part 1. BAR International Series (Oxford).Google Scholar
Klein, R.G. 1973. Ice Age hunters of the Ukraine, (Chicago).Google Scholar
Kozlowski, S.K. 1975. The system of providing flint raw materials in the Late Palaeolithic in Poland, Staringia, 3, 66–9.Google Scholar
Oakley, K. 1965. Folklore of fossils, Part 1, Antiquity, XXXIX, 9–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taborin, Y, 1979. Les coquillages de Lascaux, in (eds.), Leroi-Gourhan, A. & Allain, J. Lascaux inconnu, CNRS (Paris), 143–5.Google Scholar
Bahn, P.G. 1982. Inter-site and inter-regional links during the Upper Palaeolithic: the Pyrenean evidence, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 1 (3).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, M. 1977. Excavations at Bishopstone, Sussex, Sussex Arch. Coll, 115.Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D. 1932. The curved flint sickle blades of Britain, Proc. Prehist. Soc. East Anglia, vii (1), 67–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liddon, A. 1982. A flint sickle blade from Scarrington, Notts, Antiquity, LVI, 56–7.Google Scholar
Payne, , 1880. Celtic remains discovered at Grovehurst, in Milton-next-Sittingbourne, Arch. Cantiana, XIII, 122–6.Google Scholar
Piggott, S1931. The neolithic pottery of the British Isles, Archaeol. J.LXXXVIII, 67–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pryor, U. 1974. Excavation at Fengate, Peterborough, England: the first report, Royal Ontario Museum Archaeology Monograph 3.Google Scholar
Smith, I. 1954. The pottery, in Childe, V.G. & Smith, I. Excavation of a neolithic long barrow on Whiteleaf Hill, Bucks, Proc. Prehist, Soc.,XX (II), 212–32. Google Scholar
Crummy, P.J. 1980. The temples of Roman Colchester, in (ed.) Rodwell, W.J. Temples, churches and religion: recent research in Roman Britain, (Oxford), 243–84.Google Scholar
Green, C.J.S. 1977. The significance of plaster burials for the recognition of Christian cemeteries, in (ed.) Reece, R.M. Burial in the Roman World (London), 46–52.Google Scholar
Meates, G.W. 1979. Lullitigstone Roman Villa, vol.I (Maidstone).Google Scholar
Radford, C.A.R. 1968. The archaeological background on the continent, in (ed.) Barley, M.W. and Hanson, R.P.C. Christianity in Britain, 300–700 (Leicester), 19–36.Google Scholar
Rodwell, W.J. 1981. The ʻLady Chapel by the Cloisterʼ, at Wells and the site of the Anglo-Saxon cathedral, in Medieval Art and Architecture at Wells Cathedral (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans, for 1978), 1–39.Google Scholar