Wednesday, 25 March 2015
Class Dates
Please note, there is no class on Wednesday 25th March or Wednesday 1st April. The final two sessions are on Wednesday 8th April and Wednesday 15th April.
Wednesday, 18 March 2015
Assignment
Take a look at Marilyn Palmer’s paper on
the Leicester Framework Knitters.
Can you summarise the developments in
this industry from the 18th
to 19th centuries
How did the industry change over this
period? What drove the changes? What is the nature of the evidence?
Class 7. The East Midlands, 1500-1900
The slides for Class 7, The East Midlands 1500-1900 are available to download from here.
Friday, 13 March 2015
The Southwell Archaeology Project
Also mentioned in this week's class, the University of Nottingham's Southwell Archaeology Project is on-going research "combining a range of desk-based and archaeological survey techniques (e.g. test-pitting, geophysics, fieldwalking, environmental and standing buildings recording) to examine how the area developed from the Roman period to the present day. " Work has uncovered tantalising evidence for the nature of Late Saxon Southwell and the possibility of a reconquest period burgh.
Nottingham Caves Survey
Trent & Peak Archaeology's superb Nottingham Caves Survey, mentioned in this week's class and funded by English Heritage, has used the latest laser scanning and digital technology to document Nottingham's 540 plus man-made caves.
Wednesday, 11 March 2015
Assignment: The East Midlands 1600-1900
What changes overtook the East Midlands in the period 1600-1900?
Think about broad changes affecting towns and the countryside and in particular how each are best evidenced (by archaeology or by documentary history?)
Can you come up with one solid example of significant change (enclosure/industrial growth/population movement, etc.) that is evidenced best by archaeology?
Use the chapters from the East Midland Research Framework as your guide.
Think about broad changes affecting towns and the countryside and in particular how each are best evidenced (by archaeology or by documentary history?)
Can you come up with one solid example of significant change (enclosure/industrial growth/population movement, etc.) that is evidenced best by archaeology?
Use the chapters from the East Midland Research Framework as your guide.
Wednesday, 4 March 2015
Treasures of the Bodliean: The 1635 Map of Laxton
Mark Pierce's wonderful 1635 map of Laxton (mentioned in this week's class) is owned by the Bodliean Library at the University of Oxford. Here the Nick Millea the map librarian introduces the map in all its glory.
Assignment; Medieval Nottingham
Take a look at Maurice Barley’s seminal 1969 historical summary of Nottingham and the more recent taster paper by David
Knight et al on excavations revealing the origins of the town. You might like to supplement this with your
own reading – local studies libraries are bursting with Nottingham material. We will discuss Nottingham as an example
of the development of a great Midland’s town in the Middle Ages – come
prepared!
Class 5: The Medieval Countryside
The slides for Class 5: Th Medieval Countryside of the East Midlands are available to download from here.
Wednesday, 25 February 2015
Scandinavian Place Names
We have mentioned place names several time in class, and archaeologists are always drawn to place name studies as a form of evidence for past settlement, particularly when tangible material remains are lacking!
The University of Nottingham's Institute of Place Name Studies, holds a fantastic on-line resource in the form of searchable interactive maps of place names of all ages and origins across England. It is a spectacular resource, access it here.
On the subject of Scandinavian Place Name elements, usually taken as a sign of Norse settlement, the British Museum's Vikings Live initiative maintains an excellent interactive map of Scandinavian Place Names in Britain, which is here.
Viking Winter Camps
There is an interesting discussion on looking for Viking winter camp locations in Lancashire on Stephen Lewis's Wild Peak blog, here.
It makes interesting reading as a wider context for the archaeologically documented winter camps from Mercia, at Repton and Torksey.
It makes interesting reading as a wider context for the archaeologically documented winter camps from Mercia, at Repton and Torksey.
Assignment
The assignment for the next class, on Wednesday 4th March is focused on the Medieval countryside. Take a look at Carenza Lewis’s lengthy but excellent account of the Middle Ages in the East Midlands, download from here.
- What are the key themes for the countryside? (eg nucleation of settlement, open field origins, settlement desertion, etc).
- Identify one or two key sites that Carenza uses to illustrate one theme and find out as much as you can about those sites. Do you agree with her ideas and analysis? Why/why not?
Class 4: A Disputed Land
The slides for Class 4: A Disputed Land: Angles, Saxons and Vikings in the East Midlands can be downloaded from here.
Tuesday, 17 February 2015
Half Term
Reminder that Wednesday 18th falls within Nottinghamshire half-term and so there is no class. We resume on Wednesday 25th.
Wednesday, 11 February 2015
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
The complex collection of historical annals known collectively as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is the Anglo-Saxon's own attempt to write history, both theirs and their place in the wider narrative of Christendom. Here for example is the entry for AD 449, which contains the Anglo-Saxon origin myth.
"This
year Marcian and Valentinian assumed the empire, and reigned seven winters. In
their days Hengest and Horsa, invited by Wurtgern, king of the Britons to his
assistance, landed in Britain in a place that is called Ipwinesfleet; first of
all to support the Britons, but they afterwards fought against them. The king
directed them to fight against the Picts; and they did so; and obtained the
victory wheresoever they came. They then sent to the Angles, and desired them
to send more assistance. They described the worthlessness of the Britons, and the
richness of the land. They then sent them greater support. Then came the men
from three powers of Germany; the Old Saxons, the Angles, and the Jutes. From
the Jutes are descended the men of Kent, the Wightwarians (that is, the tribe
that now dwelleth in the Isle of Wight), and that kindred in Wessex that men
yet call the kindred of the Jutes. From the Old Saxons came the people of Essex
and Sussex and Wessex. From Anglia, which has ever since remained waste between
the Jutes and the Saxons, came the East Angles, the Middle Angles, the
Mercians, and all of those north of the Humber. Their leaders were two
brothers, Hengest and Horsa; who were the sons of Wihtgils; Wihtgils was the
son of Witta, Witta of Wecta, Wecta of Woden. From this Woden arose all our
royal kindred, and that of the Southumbrians also."
Originally compiled in Wessex, probably at about the time of Alfred the Great (849-899) multiple copies were distributed around English monasteries and independently updated. Nine manuscripts of varying historical value survive.
Assignment. Repton and the Vikings
This week's assignment, to be discussed at class on Wednesday 25th February, concerns the Vikings in Derbyshire. There are three papers to read, browse all three or take your pick.
First off, Prof Martin Biddle's ground breaking excavations at St Wystan's Church, Repton, published in summary in Antiquity, back in 1992.
Second, Prof Julian Richards's excavation of the nearby Viking Age cremation cemetery at Heath Wood, Ingleby - published in the Antiquaries Journal in 2004.
Finally, Prof Richard's insightful discussion of stereotyping of the Vikings - and what may have been the reality of their English incursions.
We will discuss the evidence from Repton and Ingleby for the Vikings in the East Midlands, whether it allows us to draw any general conclusions about the nature of their presence and try and figure out what really went on when the Great Army arrived in Derbyshire in Winter 873AD.
First off, Prof Martin Biddle's ground breaking excavations at St Wystan's Church, Repton, published in summary in Antiquity, back in 1992.
Second, Prof Julian Richards's excavation of the nearby Viking Age cremation cemetery at Heath Wood, Ingleby - published in the Antiquaries Journal in 2004.
Finally, Prof Richard's insightful discussion of stereotyping of the Vikings - and what may have been the reality of their English incursions.
We will discuss the evidence from Repton and Ingleby for the Vikings in the East Midlands, whether it allows us to draw any general conclusions about the nature of their presence and try and figure out what really went on when the Great Army arrived in Derbyshire in Winter 873AD.
Class 3: Iron Age to Dark Age
The slides for Class 3, Iron Age to Dark Age are available for download from here.
Wednesday, 4 February 2015
The Origins of Andesite
The primitive andesitic hand axes (called bifaces) such as those from the Bytham River gravels at Brooksby in Leicestershire are made from andesitic tuff, a kind of volcanic rock found only in the Lake District and North Wales. Archaeologists speculate that hominins (early humans) may have carried such tools for a considerable while before they were lost or discarded - so they may have been brought into the region by nomadic groups from further north. However, andesitic boulders are occasionally found in the river gravels of the Midlands, having arrived through natural processes of erosion and deposition associated with glaciation, and so it is not impossible that some of the hand axes may have been made locally from such material. You can read more in John McNabb's authoritative The British Lower Palaeolithic: Stones in Contention.
Phil Harding Lecture
John was kind enough to point out tonight that Time Team's Phil Harding, a great expert on lithics and flint technology, is speaking in Nottingham soon. Phil's Lecture will be at the East Midlands Geological Society, on 18th April at 2.15pm. The Society meet in the Biology building at the University of Nottingham and non-members are welcome. Full details of Phil's talk and the venue are here.
Assignment
This week the assignment concerns the archaeology of the Anglo Saxon period in the East Midlands. Choose at least one of the county-based essays below and read to get a flavour of the period in that county.
You will want to make some notes on the themes of evidence for settlement, burial and the broad changes that take place over the period (notionally c400-c850 AD). We'll spend some time considering these themes in the session on Wednesday 12th February.
You might also want to look at Chapter 7 of the East Midlands Research Framework, the Anglo-Saxon Period, by the late Alan Vince, to get an overall flavour of the period in the East Midlands.
You will want to make some notes on the themes of evidence for settlement, burial and the broad changes that take place over the period (notionally c400-c850 AD). We'll spend some time considering these themes in the session on Wednesday 12th February.
You might also want to look at Chapter 7 of the East Midlands Research Framework, the Anglo-Saxon Period, by the late Alan Vince, to get an overall flavour of the period in the East Midlands.
Class 2: Earlier Prehistory of the Midlands
The slides for Class 2: Earlier Prehistory in the Midlands are available to download from here.
Thursday, 29 January 2015
Doing Archaeology
If you are interested in getting involved in practical archaeology there are plenty of opportunities in the Nottingham area. Commercial archaeological organisations often run fieldwork projects for volunteers and provide appropriate training. In Nottinghamshire we are particularly fortunate to have Mercian Archaeology, a Community Interest Company, set up specifically to serve the public by providing training and opportunities in archaeology. Their training projects are particularly focused on the archaeology of Sherwood Forest.
You can discover more about Mercian Archaeology here.
Trent & Peak Archaeology, based in Chilwell, also often run community led archaeological projects, read more here.
Further afield, University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS; they found Richard III in a car park in Leicester) also provide opportunities for volunteers. More details here.
You can discover more about Mercian Archaeology here.
Trent & Peak Archaeology, based in Chilwell, also often run community led archaeological projects, read more here.
Further afield, University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS; they found Richard III in a car park in Leicester) also provide opportunities for volunteers. More details here.
Wednesday, 28 January 2015
Class 1: Introduction
The slides for Class 1, An Introduction to the East Midlands, can be downloaded from here.
Tuesday, 27 January 2015
Welcome to An Archaeology of the East Midlands
There are many things that are unique and special about the East Midlands region; its varied topography from the uplands of the Peak District to the Trent Valley and its hugely varied archaeology, from Ice Age hunters to the birth of industry. This class aims to provide students with an introduction to the archaeology of the East Midlands from the end of the last Ice Age to the modern Era. Focusing particularly on the archaeology of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, classes will explore some of the concepts of archaeological study of the past, give students a broad appreciation of the region’s past and introduce practical skills in archaeological research.
Taught on behalf of the WEA and running over nine weeks from the 28th January 2015 this class takes place at the Community Room, Tesco Extra, Swiney Way, Toton, Nottingham, between 7.30pm and 9pm.
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