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Original Articles

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Pages 208-224 | Published online: 18 May 2016

NOTES

  • D. E. Horne, ‘An incised stone at Holcombe Church’, Bath Branch Proc. Somerset Archaeol. Natur. Hist. Soc. (1908), 149–50; D. A. Watkin, ‘Some Archaeological experiences in Somerset’, Proc. Somerset Archaeol. Natur. Hist. Soc., 113 (1969), 11–16.
  • Notation after Royal Commission on Historical Monuments, An Inventory of Historical Monuments in the County of Dorset, Volume Two, South-East (London, 1970), 311.
  • Op. cit. in note 1, 12–13.
  • In litt.
  • W. G. Searle, Onomasticon Anglo-Saxonicum (Cambridge, 1897), 303.
  • Dr E. Okasha, in litt.
  • W. M. Lindsay, Notae Latinae (Cambridge, 1915), 175.
  • O. von Feilitzen, The Pre-Conquest Personal Names of Domesday Book (Uppsala, 1937).
  • In litt.
  • A. S. Robertson, S.C.B.I. 2: Hunterian and Coats Collections, University of Glasgow, Part 1 (London, 1961), no. 1057; H. A. Grueber and C. F. Keary, A Catalogue of English Coins in the British Museum. Anglo-Saxon Series II (London, 1893), no. 1115; Ibid., no. 543; Royal Coin Cabinet Stockholm, no. 23040/432.
  • G. Galster, S.C.B.I. 4: Royal Collection of Coins and Medals, National Museum Copenhagen (London, 1964), no. 184.
  • Royal Commission, op. cit. in note 2, 312.
  • In litt.
  • K. Branigan and P. J. Fowler, The Roman West Country (Newton Abbott, 1976), 224.
  • Dr E. Okasha, in litt.
  • P. Rahtz and P. J. Fowler, ‘Somerset A.D. 400–700’, 187–217 in P.J. Fowler (ed.), Archaeology and the Landscape (London, 1972), 189–90.
  • A. C. Thomas, Christianity in Roman Britain to A.D. 500 (London, 1981), 270.
  • Royal Commission, op. cit. in note 2, 310–12 and pls. 165–66.
  • S. Pearce, The Kingdom of Dumnonia (Padstock, 1978), 21.
  • A. Vowles, The History of the Caratacus Stone, Winsford Hill (Minehead, 1939).
  • Dr E. Okasha, in litt.
  • C. A. R. Radford, ‘The pre-Conquest church and the old minsters in Devon’, Devon Hist., 11 (1975), 5–6; compare the similar development of Welsh inscriptions, V. E. Nash-Williams, Early Christian Monuments of Wales (Cardiff, 1950), 13
  • A. Hamlin, ‘A chi-rho stone at Drumaqueran, Co. Antrim’, Ulsterf. Archaeol., 35 (1972), 24.
  • J. Higgitt, ‘The dedication inscription at Jarrow and its context’, Antiq.J., 59ii (1979), 346.
  • E. Okasha, Hand-list of Anglo-Saxon non-Runic Inscriptions (Cambridge, 1971), 7.
  • Higgitt, op. cit. in note 24, 346.
  • Okasha, op. cit. in note 25, 8.
  • There are references to inscribed pyramids at Glastonbury: C. Pooley, An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Old Stone Crosses of Somerset (London, 1877), 12–14.
  • Higgitt, op. cit. in note 24, 347.
  • Nash-Williams, op. cit. in note 22, 7 ff. and 25 ff.

NOTES

  • Yorkshire Archaeol. J., 29 (1927–29), 350; Antiq. J., XI (1929), 158–59; H. P. Kendall, History of the Abbey of Whitby (Whitby, 1932), 11, and pl. opp. 20; H. B. Browne, The Story of Whitby Museum (Whitby, 1949), 34.
  • A. J. White, ‘Finds from the Anglian Monastery at Whitby’, Yorkshire Archaeol. J., 56 (1984), 33–40: the findspot was in Black Horse Yard, Church Street, Whitby. For finds from excavations in the 1920s see C. Peers and C. A. Ralegh Radford, ‘The Saxon Monastery of Whitby’, Archaeologia, 89 (1943), 27–88.
  • Information from Dr Heiko Steuer, Historische Museen, Cologne.
  • By Dr W. Tempel, District Archaeologist for Rotenburg, to whom I am most grateful for supplying information and photographs. The comb has the inventory number FM 33–360. I should also like to record my thanks to Dr R. Kramer of the Friesmuseum for further details of the find.
  • Cf. P. Lasko, ‘The Comb’, 336–55 in C. F. Battiscombe, The Relics of St Cuthbert (Oxford, 1956). Of course this comb is of unusual size.
  • D. M. Wilson, Anglo-Saxon Ornamental Metalwork 700–1100 in the British Museum: Catalogue of Antiquities of the Later Saxon Period Volume 1 (London, 1964), 57, 147, 148, 153, 201, 203.
  • A. MacGregor, ‘Barred Combs of Frisian Type in England’, Medieval Archaeol., XIX (1975), 195–98; A. MacGregor, Bone Antler Ivory and Horn: the Technology of Skeletal Materials Since the Roman Period (London, 1985), 73–98.
  • A. Roes, Bone and Antler Objects from the Frisian Terp-Mounds (Haarlem, 1963), pl. XXIII, 2 (Province of Groningen), and also to a lesser degree, pl. XXIV, 5, pl. XXV, 1, 3, 5, 7, and pl. XXVI, 1–7.
  • F. M. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England (Oxford, 1971), 165–71.

NOTES

  • C. D. Morris, C. E. Batey and D.J. Rackham, ‘Excavation and Survey of the Cliff Side Trenches and Eroding Deposits at Freswick Links, Caithness’, Glasgow Archaeol. J., forthcoming.
  • The bell was found by Bryan Alvey in 1982.
  • D. Freke, Peel Castle Excavations- Interim Report 1984 (St Patrick's Isle (Isle of Man) Archaeological Trust, 1984); David Freke pers. comm.
  • S. M. Youngs, J. Clark and T. Barry, ‘Medieval Britain and Ireland in 1984’, Medieval Archaeol., XXIX (1985), 209; L. Garrard, Manx Museum, pers. comm.
  • T. C. Lethbridge, Merlin's Island. Essays on Britain in the Dark Ages (London, 1948).
  • K. Eldjárn, Kuml og Haugfé (Akureyri, 1956), 62–63.
  • Ibid., 95–97.
  • T. Magnusson, ‘Bátkumliđ í Vatnsdal i Patreksfirđi’, Árbók hins íslenska fomleifafélags, 19–20 (1966), 5–32: see fig. 12, 21.
  • R. Reece, Excavations in Iona 1964–1974 (London, Inst. Archaeol. Occ. Pub. 5, 1981), 23–24.
  • J. D. Bu'Lock, ‘The Celtic, Saxon and Scandinavian Settlement at Meols in Wirral’, Trans. Hist. Soc. Lancashire and Cheshire, 112 (1960), 11, 14 and fig. 4m.
  • The assemblage as a whole is currently under study by David Griffiths, Department of Archaeology, University of Durham.
  • Pers. comm. Jenny Mann, Trust for Lincolnshire Archaeology.
  • Pers. comm. Dominic Tweddle, York Archaeological Trust.
  • D. N. Marshall, ‘Report on Excavations at Little Dunagoil’, Trans. Buteshire Nat. Hist. Soc., XVI (1964), 48, 52 and pl. 18.
  • A. R. Goodall, ‘Objects of Copper Alloy and Lead’, 171–76 in G. Beresford, Goltho: the development of an early medieval manor c. 850–1150 (London, English Heritage Archaeol. Rep. 4, ed. J. Geddes).
  • A. King, ‘Gauber High Pasture, Ribblehead- an interim report’, 21–25 in A. Hall (ed.), Viking Age York and the North (London, Counc. Brit. Archaeol. Rep. 27, 1978).
  • Eldjárn, op. cit. in note 6, 330–32.
  • K. Eldjárn, Bjölurnar frá Kornsd og Brú, Árbok hins Íslensk Fornleifafélags 1966 (Reykjavik, 1967), 70.
  • K. Eldjárn, ‘Skriftlige og arkaeologiske vidnesbyrd om Islands aeldste bebyggelse’, Nyt fra Odense Universitet, August 1974, 11.
  • Eldjárn, op. cit. in note 6, 332.
  • A. P. Smyth, Warlords and Holy Men. Scotland AD 80–1000 (London, 1984), 163.
  • E122: 12955 and E122: 15938, pers. comm. Pat Wallace, National Museum of Ireland.
  • Pers. comm. E. P. Kelly, National Museum of Ireland.
  • H. Arbman, Birka I. Die Gräber, 2 Vols. (Uppsala, 1940), 10–18 and Taf 93.
  • C. E. Batey, Freswick Links, Caithness: A Re-appraisal of the Late Norse Site in its Context (Oxford, Brit. Archaeol. Rep. Brit. Ser. 179, 1987), 48–49.
  • C. E. Batey, ‘Viking and Late Norse Caithness: The Archaeological Evidence’, Tenth Viking Congress (Oslo, 1987), 131–48.
  • Batey, op. cit. in note 25, chapter 9.

NOTES

  • An interim report on the excavations is published in N. Palmer, Burton Dassett Excavations (Warwickshire Museum, 1987). For Burton Dassett see C. J. Bond, ‘Deserted medieval villages in Warwickshire and Worcestershire’, 157–60 in T. R. Slater and P. J. Jarvis (eds), Field and Forest—An historical geography of Warwickshire and Worcestershire (Norwich, 1982); N. W. Alcock, Warwickshire Grazier and London Skinner 1532–1555 (British Academy, London, 1981), 27–37.
  • Public Record Office, E 164/15; Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Record Office, Stratford-upon-Avon, DR98/154; L. Drucker (ed.), Warwickshire Feet of Fines (Dugdale Soc., XVIII, 1943), 13.
  • N. Orme, English Schools in the Middle Ages (London, 1973); id., Education in the West of England (Exeter, 1976); H. M. Jewell, ‘“The bringing up of children in good learning and manners”; a Survey of Secular Educational Provision in the North of England, c. 1350–1530’, Northern Hist., 18 (1982), 1–25; J. A. H. Moran, The Growth of English Schooling, 1340–1548 (Princeton, N.J., 1985).
  • E.g. P.R.O., SC 2 207/58 shows a serf of Oxhill (Warw.) paying 6s. 8d. for licence to tonsure his son in 1277: T. H. Aston, G. D. Duncan and T. A. R. Evans, ‘The Medieval Alumni of the University of Cambridge’, Past and Present, 86 (1980), 9–86.
  • Moran, op. cit. in note 2, 179–81; M. B. Parkes, ‘The Literacy of the Laity’, 555–77 in D. Daiches and A. Thorlby (eds), The Mediaeval World (London, 1973).
  • M. Aston, ‘Lollardy and Literacy’, History, LXII (1977), 347–71.

NOTES

  • J. G. Rutter, Medieval Pottery in the Scarborough Museum—13th and 14th Centuries (Scarborough and District Archaeological Society, Res. Rep. 3, 1961).
  • Ibid., 14.
  • Jean-Louis Vayssettes, Les potiers de terre de Saint-Jean-de-Fos (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1987), fig. 164.
  • Description, 164; colour plate, opp. 192.
  • The illustrations are photocopies of the originals and are about a quarter of the pots' actual size.

NOTES

  • R. Bertelsen, ‘Farm mounds in North Norway, a review of recent research’, Norwegian Archaeol. Rev., 12 no. 1 (1979), 48–56; I. M. Holm-Olsen, ‘Gårdhaugene go gårdene’, Foreningen til Norske Fortidsminnesmerkers Bevaring. Årbok 1983 (1984), 37–46.
  • R. Bertelsen, ‘The medieval Vågan, an Arctic urban experiment?’, Archaeology and Environment, 4 (1985), 49–63.
  • N. Bjørgo, ‘Kontakten mellom Bergen og Nord-Norge i mellomalderen’, 41–53 in I. Øye (ed.), Kjøpstad og rikssentrum (Bergen, Bryggens Museum, 1986); P. Urbańczyk, ‘The influence of Hansa's economic policy on the development and fall of Arctic trade centre Vågan’ (Paper read at the international archaeological conference, Elblag, 1986; publication forthcoming).
  • R. Bertelsen, Lofoten og Vesterålens historie bd 1 (Svolvaer, Felleshistorien for Lofoten og Vesterålens, 1985).

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