Subjects -> ANTHROPOLOGY (Total: 398 journals)
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- ANT volume 102 Cover and Front matter
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Pages: 1 - 6 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000233
- ANT volume 102 Cover and Back matter
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Pages: 1 - 2 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000245
- GLASS BANGLES IN THE BRITISH ISLES: A STUDY OF TRADE, RECYCLING AND
TECHNOLOGY IN THE FIRST AND SECOND CENTURIES AD-
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Authors: Paynter; Sarah, Crew, Peter, Campbell, Richard, Hunter, Fraser, Jackson, Caroline Pages: 15 - 44 Abstract: Glass bangles are found in southern England and Wales from the mid-first century ad and become common in the north of England and southern Scotland in the late first century, before their numbers decline a century later. British bangles develop at a time of change, as Roman glassmaking practices were introduced across large areas of Britain, and as blown, transparent, colourless and naturally-coloured glassware became increasingly popular. In many communities, however, there was still a demand for strongly coloured opaque glass, including for bangles, and glassworkers devised ways of extending their supplies of opaque coloured glass. This study is based on over one hundred and fifty analyses of bangle fragments from sites in Wales, northern England and southern Scotland, spanning this transitional period. The bangle makers recycled coloured glass from imported vessels, and probably beads and bangle-making waste, to supplement supplies of fresh coloured glass. The novel methods used to modify and extend the coloured glass may derive from pre-Roman bead-making industries, and made use of widely available materials, including smithing hammerscale and possibly plant ashes. The results show the shifting balance of indigenous and Roman influences on different bangle types, depending on when and where they were made, and by whom. PubDate: 2022-03-11 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000378
- ‘TURREM ET CASTRUM’: SOME FRESH THOUGHTS ON THE ROMAN FORTLETS
OF THE YORKSHIRE COAST-
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Authors: White; Andrew Pages: 45 - 68 Abstract: This paper sets out to interpret the archaeological evidence of the five known Roman fortlets on the Yorkshire coast in a novel way, especially as to the structure and appearance of the sites, and how they were used. In particular it examines the use of stylobate blocks and vertical posts, and makes some comparisons with contemporary small forts and burgi on the Rhine and Danube frontiers, and with maritime defences in Wales. It also looks at evidence for barrack accommodation within the enclosure. The evidence comes from a detailed examination of excavation reports and local histories. Finally, it considers the nature and status of the troops that formed the garrisons here. PubDate: 2022-01-20 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000366
- UNDER THE IMPRESSION: MULTISPECTRAL IMAGING OF LORD FREDERICK CAMPBELL
CHARTER XXI 5-
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Authors: Hudson; Alison, Duffy, Christina Pages: 111 - 133 Abstract: Lord Frederick Campbell Charter xxi 5 is the only surviving English document that still has an authentic, legible, pre-Conquest seal attached to it. The text purports to be a writ of Edward the Confessor (1003x5–1066) granting a slew of rights to Christ Church Cathedral, Canterbury. We examined the writ using multispectral imaging to recover layers of erased text.Many scholars have noted that the text of the writ was altered on at least one occasion. Now, multispectral imaging confirms that there were multiple layers of erasures, even more than previously anticipated. The original writ may have been inscribed on reused parchment. This can be used as evidence for the conditions (and even the immense quantity) in which writs were produced during Edward’s reign. Alternatively – or additionally – the writ’s multiple alterations could suggest that it was rewritten repeatedly after the Conquest, during various phases of Canterbury’s post-Conquest property disputes. The results confirm Nicholas Brooks’ hypothesis that at one stage the text was altered from referring to the rights to the archbishop alone (in the singular), to instead refer to the whole community at Christ Church (in the plural). Taken together, these results reveal shifts in legal thinking in Canterbury between 1066 and 1100, while demonstrating the enduring authority of Edward the Confessor’s seal. These results also show the potential for using multispectral imaging to illuminate – literally – the history of manuscript production. PubDate: 2022-06-20 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000354
- EXTERIOR DECORATION AT SITES BELONGING TO THE NORMAN KINGS
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Authors: Wood; Rita Pages: 163 - 187 Abstract: The five most complete royal buildings remaining from the post-Conquest period in Britain have exterior decoration resembling that at churches. It is widely appreciated that the scale of royal buildings demonstrated the earthly power of the Norman kings, but their decoration, largely overlooked, can be shown to proclaim that the power of God was also present there. The sacred power of the king was explicit in the coronation rite at the anointing, and the subsequent investiture with regalia was re-staged by the crown-wearing practised in varying degrees by the Norman kings. PubDate: 2022-09-14 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000099
- LOVE, ALLEGIANCE AND WEALTH IN FIFTEENTH-CENTURY WALES: THE RAGLAN RING
AND ITS CONTEXT-
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Authors: Redknap; Mark Pages: 206 - 227 Abstract: In 1998 a massive gold signet ring was found by metal detecting in the parish of Raglan, Monmouthshire (Gwent), close to Raglan Castle. Now generally known as the Raglan ring, it is a remarkable example of late medieval goldsmiths’ work. This paper considers its motifs, legend, date and stylistic affinities. Its findspot is close to the castle-building programme at Raglan continued by William Herbert (executed 1469), who projected his position as premier supporter of the House of York in a variety of ways. Possible ownership is discussed, as is its wider context (including newly discovered signet rings from Wales). PubDate: 2022-06-02 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000329
- THE WRITING BEHIND THE WALL: TEXT AND IMAGE IN LATE MEDIEVAL CHURCH
DECORATION-
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Authors: Gray; Madeleine Pages: 228 - 251 Abstract: The relationship between text and image in later medieval art is complex and has a growing literature. Wall paintings in two churches in South Wales suggest ways in which text could inspire sophisticated programmes of paintings. At Llandeilo Talybont, a sequence telling the story of the Crucifixion through the Instruments of the Passion relates to medieval devotions to the Instruments and to readings from the Holy Week liturgy. At Llancarfan, a medieval satirical poem on fashionable clothing and a verse translation of the life of St George suggest links between the wall paintings of Death and the Gallant, the Seven Deadly Sins and St George. Apparently random collections of wall paintings may therefore reflect a process of interaction between public art and public knowledge of texts. PubDate: 2022-01-19 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000408
- CHURCHBUILDING AT BIDDENHAM AND BOLNEY RECONSIDERED
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Authors: Bernard; G W Pages: 252 - 259 Abstract: In a paper on the north aisle of St James, Biddenham, Bedfordshire, published in The Antiquaries Journal in 2015, in a related paper on the west tower of Bolney, West Sussex, and in a recent book, Church Building and Society in the Later Middle Ages, Gabriel Byng has questioned the typicality of church-rebuilding single-handedly directed and financed by wealthy individuals such as the Sussex knight Sir William de Etchingham. In a close study of Bolney and Biddenham, Byng argues instead that church-rebuilding ‘was run and financed by comparatively wealthy groups of peasants or townsfolk’. The case rests on Byng’s assessment of unusual surviving sources, a series of informal accounts for Bolney and a draft contract for Biddenham. This paper offers a rather different reading, and questions Byng’s claim. The decisive role at both was played by the lords, John Bolney at Bolney, and Sir William Butler at Biddenham. PubDate: 2022-03-07 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000317
- STALLWORK IN CHRISTCHURCH PRIORY, DORSET: A FRANCO-FLEMISH
ALL’ANTICA WORK OF THE EARLY 1520s-
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Authors: Riall; Nicholas Pages: 260 - 291 Abstract: Critical analysis of the quire stalls in the Augustinian priory in Christchurch has revealed that they are an important set of early all’antica styled stalls that were created by ‘alien’ craftsmen, no earlier than c 1520. Many traces of Continental joinery techniques, not then used in England, particularly the use of lamination, support this view. It has long been thought that they were cobbled together from sets of stalls of various dates, but they are all of one period. Much has been lost and many of the parts have been replaced, especially so among the dossiers. The idea that many of the misericords are missing can be discounted because the design of the stalls disproves this. This important set of quire stalls represents one of the last made prior to the Reformation – but they are much misunderstood. PubDate: 2022-03-18 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000391
- PARCHMENT, PRINT AND PAINT: THE DISSEMINATION OF THE CECIL GENEALOGY
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Authors: Moll; Richard J Pages: 292 - 315 Abstract: William Cecil’s interests in heraldry and genealogy, and his particular concern for the antiquity of his own pedigree, are well known, but it is often presented as a personal hobby. This paper explores the means by which William Cecil used printed heraldic treatises, kings of arms and even domestic decoration to make his private genealogical research public. Rather than using genealogical study as a refuge from the world, Cecil actively used print, the office of arms and architecture to publicise his pedigree far more widely than other new men who sought the legitimacy of antiquity. PubDate: 2022-05-13 DOI: 10.1017/S000358152100038X
- ICONOCLASM AND PROFIT: SALES OF DESPOILED MONUMENTAL BRASSES AND TOMBS IN
LONDON, 1547–53-
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Authors: Hutchinson; Robert Pages: 316 - 341 Abstract: This analysis of the despoilation of monumental brasses and tombs in London during Edward vi’s reign is based on evidence provided by contemporary inventories of church goods and churchwardens’ accounts, supported by fieldwork and discoveries of recycled brasses during conservation. It reveals how the Reformation impacted the fortunes of the London marblers producing brasses, describes how plundered memorials were sold and provides evidence on their fate. Estimates, based on volumes of metal sold, create a potential range of 700–812 brasses lost from possibly forty-three London churches over 1548–53. After c 1550, marblers engraved 2mm thick hammered plate (cast from despoiled latten church goods, such as candlesticks and crucifixes) to sustain production when supplies of looted brasses diminished. The trade in plundered brasses ended after the accession of Edward’s Catholic half-sister, Mary, in August 1553. PubDate: 2022-09-16 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000075
- A LAST EASTER SEPULCHRE: THOMAS WEVER AND ST MARY’S CHURCH, TARRANT
HINTON, DORSET-
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Authors: Connor; Timothy P Pages: 342 - 369 Abstract: The defaced and probably unfinished Easter sepulchre at St Mary’s Church, Tarrant Hinton, in Dorset is exceptional in its scale and sophisticated renaissance decoration, in comparison to other sixteenth-century structures associated with contemporary Easter liturgy. Previous notice of it has been impeded by failure to assess properly the upper part of the monument, which new photography now renders accessible. This demonstrates a remarkable resemblance between its (defaced) angels and the bronze angels by Benedetto da Rovezzano being prepared at Westminster in the late 1520s for the tomb of Cardinal Wolsey; while the lower part of the structure displays influence from contemporary French decoration.This structure is assessed in the contexts of other monuments of the early sixteenth century intended to support a temporary Easter sepulchre and of what can be reconstructed of the career of the minor but wealthy cleric who was responsible for its erection. Thomas Wever MA (d. 1536) made additions to two of his rectories besides building substantial extensions on the north side of Tarrant Hinton church. It is suggested that both his building there and the Easter sepulchre itself are unfinished and were abandoned at his death as a result of his continued indebtedness. The sepulchre itself suggests a direction that English church decoration never took. PubDate: 2022-01-10 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000342
- A CONSPECTUS OF LETTERS TO AND FROM SIR HENRY SPELMAN (1563/4–1641)
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Authors: Lucas; Peter J Pages: 370 - 388 Abstract: Sir Henry Spelman, a founding member of the Society of Antiquaries of London who may be considered the doyen of English antiquaries, made a substantial contribution through his many publications, particularly his Glossarium of 1626, his Concilia of 1639 and, together with his son John, the Psalterium Latino-Saxonicum of 1640. He pioneered the methodical study of historical documents, compiling a guide to the abbreviations and contractions found in medieval manuscripts, and, because some of the documents are in Old English, he made a plan to prepare an Anglo-Saxon grammar and established a lectureship in Anglo-Saxon at the University of Cambridge. After his death his books and papers were dispersed in stages, many of them being bought by subsequent antiquaries. The printed part of this paper surveys the history of his books and papers, with particular attention to his letters, which have never been listed or presented in an organized form despite calls for this to be done since 1930. The supplementary part (online) offers a conspectus of the letters in chronological order with indications of where they are found and of their more important contents. They throw considerable light on how he worked and on his relationship with those who helped him. Themes running through the letters include Spelman’s publications and the preparations for them, the Glossarium, the Concilia and the Anglo-Saxon Psalterium, the reading and transcription of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts, the preparation of an Anglo-Saxon grammar and dictionary and various scholarly enquiries. PubDate: 2022-06-27 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000026
- WESTMINSTER HALL’S LOST STUART DOOR PASSAGE REDISCOVERED
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Authors: Hallam Smith; Elizabeth, Crook, John Pages: 389 - 417 Abstract: In 2018 unpublished archaeological evidence was discovered recording a doorway and passageway concealed inside the Romanesque wall of Westminster Hall, near the south-east corner. Although commemorated by a bronze plaque in situ, their existence had largely been forgotten. Further investigations revealed an access panel in the 1951 cloakroom fittings in adjoining St Stephen’s cloister: this was located, and the space accessed, seemingly for the first time since c 1952. The many features of interest found within included the doorcase and soffits of a great doorway and iron pintles for the doors; Purbeck flagstones on the floor; complex masonry and plaster from several different eras; graffiti by masons from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; a still-functional Osram lightbulb dating from the early 1950s; and wooden joists supporting the masonry of the ceiling. Isotope dating of the timbers produced a date of 1659, and works accounts showed that the doorway and passageway were created in 1660–1, to form a ceremonial route for the coronation of Charles ii. Further archaeological and historical investigations have enabled the authors to establish a full chronology for the changing fabric and uses of the doorway and passageway from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century, and to trace the masons who walled in the space in 1851. They have also established why the brass plaque in Westminster Hall marking the space erroneously ascribes it with Tudor origins: that ‘fake history’ was created by an over-enthusiastic late-nineteenth century Clerk of the House of Commons. PubDate: 2022-03-17 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000014
- BLACKBALLING BUCKLER: THE LETTERS OF JOHN BUCKLER (1770–1851), THE
CARTER SCHOOL AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF AN ANTIQUARIAN DYNASTY-
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Authors: Mardell; Joshua Pages: 418 - 446 Abstract: This paper examines the story, hitherto neglected by scholarship, of the antiquarian artist and architect John Buckler (1770–1851) through a remarkable cache of his letters at the Bodleian Library. Most of the letters relate to Buckler’s attempts to be elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. Having twice been blackballed in 1808 and 1809, he canvassed Britain’s leading antiquarian figures for support. With the blackballing of the architect James Wyatt in 1797 frequently alluded to, Buckler’s blackballing was the result of a cabal against him led by Sir Joseph Banks and Samuel Lysons, which had to do with both factionalism – ie his closeness to the preservationist faction led by Richard Gough and John Carter, termed the Carter school – and the Society’s onslaught against professionals. His eventual success in 1810 institutionalised his practice, allowed him entry into polite society and brought him closer to aristocratic patronage. The remainder of the Bodleian letters relate to Buckler’s topographical work recording medieval buildings across the UK, showing how he took on the revisionist medievalist project promoted by the Carter school. The article will explain Buckler’s role in the developing discourses of antiquarianism and the Gothic Revival, and how his association with the Carter school laid the foundations for the work of the Buckler dynasty. Over three generations, in line with the family name (meaning ‘to protect’), they sought to embody the idea of the architect-antiquary as a protector. PubDate: 2022-06-29 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000038
- THE BILLY AND CHARLEY FORGERIES
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Authors: Halliday; Robert Pages: 447 - 469 Abstract: Billy Smith and Charley Eaton were mudlarks in London. In 1857 they began to manufacture counterfeit antiquities. Their creations displayed many significant errors and anachronisms, and some archaeologists were immediately sceptical. Nevertheless, other leading experts were convinced that Billy and Charley’s supposed discoveries were authentic archaeological finds. The ensuing debate resulted in an inconclusive court case. Eventually a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London used subterfuge to expose the fraud. Even after this, Billy Smith and Charley Eaton continued producing forgeries for another decade. This paper explores how the forgeries were made, why they generated controversy, how the fraud was detected and how Billy Smith and Charley Eaton could produce their forgeries over such a long time-span. PubDate: 2022-06-20 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000087
- Neolithic Spaces: social and sensory landscapes of the first farmers of
Italy. By Sue Hamilton and Ruth Whitehouse. 300mm. Pp xvii + 421,figs (many col), tabs. Accordia Specialist Studies on Italy vol 19.1, Accordia Research Institute, University of London, 2020. isbn 9781873415412. £60 (hbk). Neolithic Spaces: the Bradford archive of aerial photographs. By Mike Seager Thomas. 300mm. Pp 288, figs. Accordia Specialist Studies on Italy vol 19.2, Accordia Research Institute, University of London, 2020. isbn 9781873415429. £60 (hbk).-
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Authors: Walker; Katharine Pages: 470 - 471 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S000358152200018X
- Assessing Iron Age Marsh-Forts: with reference to the stratigraphy and
palaeoenvironment surrounding The Berth, North Shropshire. By Shelagh Norton. 290mm. Pp viii + 211, 109 ills (many col), 13 tabs, 3 app. Archaeopress, Oxford, 2021. isbn 9781789698633. £38 (pbk).-
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Authors: Malim; Tim Pages: 471 - 472 PubDate: 2022-09-19 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000208
- The Roman Baths at Wallsend. By Nick Hodgson, with contributions by R
Brickstock, Alexandra Croom, W B Griffiths and K F Hartley. 295mm. Pp x + 91, 65 figs (many col), Arbeia Society Roman Archaeological Studies 2, South Shields, 2020. isbn 9781527257696. £18 (pbk).-
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Authors: Breeze; David Pages: 472 - 473 PubDate: 2022-04-27 DOI: 10.1017/S000358152100041X
- Roman Bath: a new history and archaeology of Aquae Sulis. By Peter
Davenport. 230mm. Pp 249, 118 figs. The History Press, Stroud, 2021. isbn 97807509955661. £20 (pbk). - The Sanctuary at Bath in the Roman Empire. By Eleri H Cousins. 250mm. Pp x + 228, 41 figs. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2020. isbn 9781108493192. £85 (hbk).-
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Authors: Henig; Martin Pages: 473 - 475 PubDate: 2022-01-10 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000433
- London in the Roman World. By Dominic Perring. 233mm. Pp xix + 573, 90 b/w
figs, tabs. Oxford University Press, 2022. isbn 9870198789000. £40 (hbk). -
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Authors: Watson; Bruce Pages: 475 - 477 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000051
- A Cult Centre on Rome’s North-West Frontier: excavations at Maryport,
Cumbria, 1870–2015. By Ian Haynes and Tony Wilmott. 295mm. Pp xxviii + 252, 247 figs, tabs. Published on behalf of the Trustees of the Senhouse Roman Museum, Maryport, by the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, Research Series No 12, 2020. isbn 978187312464. £35 (pbk).-
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Authors: Bidwell; Paul Pages: 477 - 478 PubDate: 2022-06-02 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000142
- Royal Forteviot: excavations at a Pictish power centre in eastern
Scotland. By Ewan Campbell and Stephen Driscoll , with contributions from Alice Blackwell , Nicholas Evans , Katherine Forsyth , Meggen Gondek , Mark Hall , Derek Hamilton , Adrián Maldonado , Tessa Poller , Susan Ramsey and Ian Scott . 216mm. Pp xxiii + 242, 172 figs. Council for British Archaeology Research Report 177, York, 2020. Isbn 9781909990050. £30 (hbk).-
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Authors: Aitchison; Nick Pages: 478 - 479 PubDate: 2022-06-02 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000130
- Peasant Perceptions of Landscape: Ewelme Hundred, South Oxfordshire,
500–1650. By Stephen Mileson and Stuart Brookes. 245mm. Pp xx + 363, 93 figs (mostly col), 11 tabs. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2021. isbn 9780192894892. £85.00 (hbk).-
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Authors: Rippon; Stephen Pages: 479 - 480 PubDate: 2022-09-15 DOI: 10.1017/S000358152200021X
- The March of Ewyas: the story of Longtown Castle and the de Lacy dynasty.
By Martin Cook and Neil Kidd. 242mm. Pp xvi + 254, num ills. Logaston Press, Eardisley, 2020. isbn 9781910839478. £12.95 (pbk).-
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Authors: Kenyon; John R Pages: 480 - 481 PubDate: 2022-01-19 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000457
- The Agincourt Campaign of 1415: the retinues of the Dukes of Clarence and
Gloucester. By Michael P Warner. Pp xi + 239. The Boydell Press Woodbridge, 2021. isbn 9781783276363. £60 (hbk).-
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Authors: Saul; Nigel Pages: 481 - 483 PubDate: 2022-08-08 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000470
- A Soldiers’ Chronicle of the Hundred Years War. College of Arms
Manuscript M9. Edited by Anne Curry and Rémy Ambühl. 234 mm. Pp xx +455, 5 b&w figs, 4 maps, 7 tabs. D S Brewer, Woodbridge, 2022. isbn 9781843846192. £90 (hbk).-
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Authors: Saul; Nigel Pages: 483 - 484 PubDate: 2022-05-30 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000129
- The Inca: lost civilizations. By Kevin Lane. 225mm. Pp 208, 53 ills.
Reaktion Books, London, 2022. isbn 9781789145465. £15 (hbk).-
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Authors: Meddens; Frank Pages: 484 - 485 PubDate: 2022-09-19 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000221
- ‘The Hidden Treasures of this Happy Island’: a history of numismatics
in Britain from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment (3 vols). By Andrew Burnett. 300mm. Vol I: pp xxxv + 1–566, frontis, 200 figs, tabs; vol II: pp xvi + 567–1178, frontis, 140 figs, tabs; vol III: pp xiii + 1179–1804, 37 figs. British Numismatic Society special publication no. 14; Royal Numismatic Society special publication no. 58, Spink, London, 2021. isbn 0901405361. £150 (hbk).-
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Authors: Mayhew; Nick Pages: 485 - 487 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000063
- The Display of Heraldry: the heraldic imagination in arts and culture.
Edited by Fiona Robertson and Peter N Lindfield. 238mm. Pp xii + 243, 97 figs mixed col and b&w. The Heraldry Society, London, 2019. isbn 9780904858044 £35 (pbk).-
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Authors: Fox; Paul A Pages: 487 - 488 PubDate: 2022-09-15 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000421
- Music and Instruments of the Elizabethan Age: the Eglantine Table. Edited
by Michael Fleming and Christopher Page. 245mm. Pp xviii + 291, 34 b/w figs, 16 col pls. The Boydell Press, Woodbridge, 2021. isbn 9781783274215. £40 (hbk).-
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Authors: Jervis; Simon Swynfen Pages: 488 - 490 PubDate: 2022-08-08 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000445
- Chancel Screens Since the Reformation: proceedings of the Ecclesiological
Society Conference, London, 2019. Edited by Mark Kirby. 245mm. Pp 184, frontis, num ills, many col. Ecclesiological Society, London, 2019. isbn 9780946823260. £20 (pbk).-
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Authors: Meara; David Pages: 490 - 492 PubDate: 2022-01-28 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581521000469
- The Cultural Legacy of the Royal Game of the Goose: 400 years of printed
board games. By Adrian Seville. 245mm. Pp 384, many figs. Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2019. isbn 9789462984974. €117 (hbk).-
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Authors: de Voogt; Alex Pages: 492 - 493 PubDate: 2022-06-02 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000154
- Searching for the 17th Century on Nevis: the survey and excavation of two
early plantation sites. By Robert A Philpott, Roger H Leech and Elaine L Morris. 285mm. Pp xii + 224, 118 figs, tabs. Archaeopress Archaeology, Oxford, 2021. isbn 9781789698862. £42 (pbk).-
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Authors: Finneran; Niall Pages: 493 - 494 PubDate: 2022-06-08 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000117
- Town: prints and drawings of Britain before 1800. By Bernard Nurse. 245mm.
Pp 224, 110 col ills, Bodleian Library, Oxford, 2020. isbn 9781851245178. £35 (hbk).-
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Authors: Cherry; Bridget Pages: 495 - 496 PubDate: 2022-05-30 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000105
- The Making of our Urban Landscape. By Geoffrey Tyack. 235mm. Pp xv + 367,
144 b/w ills. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2022. isbn 9780198792635. £25 (hbk).-
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Authors: Holden; Paul Pages: 496 - 497 PubDate: 2022-06-02 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000166
- Two Huguenot Brothers: letters of Andrew and James Coltée Ducarel,
1732–1773. Edited by Gerard de Lisle and Robin Myers with the assistance of Lorren Boniface. 350 mm. Pp 240, 21 col pls. Garendon Press, Leicester, 2019; distributed by Bernard Quaritch Ltd. isbn 9781527237223. £85 (hbk). -
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Authors: Ramsay; Nigel Pages: 497 - 498 PubDate: 2022-11-14 DOI: 10.1017/S000358152200004X
- Stukeley and Stamford, Part 1. Cakes and Curiosity: the sociable
antiquarian, 1710–1737. Edited by Diana Honeybone and Michael Honeybone. 240mm. Pp lvii + 254. Publications of the Lincoln Record Society, vol 109. The Boydell Press, Woodbridge, 2021. isbn 9781910653074. £40 (hbk).-
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Authors: Sweet; Rosemary Pages: 498 - 500 PubDate: 2022-09-16 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000178
- John Outram. By Geraint Franklin. 238mm. Pp xix + 180, many col ills.
Liverpool University Press on behalf of Historic England, Swindon, 2022. isbn 9781800856226. £30 (pbk).-
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Authors: Whyte; William Pages: 500 - 501 PubDate: 2022-06-23 DOI: 10.1017/S0003581522000191
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