9
Views
2
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Excavations and Survey at Bryn Cysegrfan, Llanfair Clydogau, Dyfed, 1979

, , &
Pages 130-165 | Published online: 23 May 2016

NOTES

  • J. Evans, ‘Llanfair Clydogau’, Trans. Cardiganshire Antiq. Soc., I (1913–14); T. Lewis, ‘Llanfair Clydogau and Bryn Cysegrfan’, Trans. Cardiganshire Antiq. Soc., 5 (1927), 90–93.
  • Lewis, op. cit. in note 1, 91–92.
  • C. C. Rudeforth, The Soils of North Cardiganshire: The Soil Survey of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (London, 1970).
  • F. Green, National Library of Wales, Calendar of Deeds and Documents, vol. 2 The Crosswood Deeds (Cardiff, 1927), 246–48.
  • See below.
  • G. Williams, ‘Unpublished notes on mounds at Bryn Cysegrfan’, Dyfed Archaeol. Trust: Sites and Monuments Record (Carmarthen).
  • M. Stuiver, ‘A high-precision calibration of the AD radiocarbon time-scale’, Radiocarbon, 24, no. 1 (1982), 1–26.
  • For example, G. R. J. Jones, ‘Agriculture in north-west Wales during the later Middle Ages’, 47–53 in J. A. Taylor (ed.), Climatic Change with Special Reference to Wales and its Agriculture (Aberystwyth, 1965), 44; C. B. Crampton, ‘Ancient settlement patterns in mid-Wales’, Archaeol. Cambrensis, 116 (1967), 57–70.
  • For example, E. Davies, ‘Hendre and hafod in Denbighshire’, Denbighshire Hist. Soc. Trans., 26 (1977), 49–72.
  • T. J. Pierce, ‘Landlords in Wales. A. The nobility and gentry’, 357–80 in J. Thirsk (ed.), The Agrarian History of England and Wales, vol. IV, 1500–1640 (Cambridge, 1967).
  • J. G. Thomas, ‘The distribution of the commons in Arwystli at the time of the enclosure’, Montgomeryshire Coll., 54 (1957), 27–33.
  • For example, R. U. Sayce, ‘The old summer pastures 1: a comparative study’, Montgomeryshire Coll., 54 (1956), 117–45; R. U. Sayce, ‘The old summer pastures 2: life at the hafodydd’, Montgomeryshire Coll., 55 (1957), 37–86; M. Richards, ‘Hafod and hafoty in Welsh place-names’, Montgomeryshire Coll., 56 (1959), 13–20; Pierce, op. cit. in note 10; E. Davies, op. cit. in note 9; E. Davies, ‘Hafod, hafoty and Iluest: their distribution, features and purpose’, Ceredigion, 9 (1980), 1–41.
  • For example, C. Fox, ‘A settlement of platform houses at Dyrysgol, St Harmon, Radnorshire’, Archaeol. Cambrensis, 94 (1939), 220–23; C. and A. Fox, ‘Platform house sites of South Wales type in Swydd Budugre, Maelienydd, Radnorshire’, Archaeol. Cambrensis, 100 (1948), 104–06; C. A. Gresham, ‘Platform houses in north-west Wales’, Archaeol. Cambrensis, 103 (1954), 18–53; L. A. S. Butler, ‘The study of deserted medieval settlements in Wales (to 1968)’, 249–76 in M. W. Beresford and J. G. Hurst, Deserted Medieval Villages (London, 1971).
  • For example, F. Lynch, ‘Brenig Valley excavations, 1973’, Trans. Denbighshire Hist. Soc., 23 (1974), 9–64; C. B. Crampton, ‘Hafotai platforms on the north front of the Carmarthen Fan’, Archaeol. Cambrensis, 117 (1968), 121–26; L. A. S. Butler, ‘The excavation of a long hut near Bwlch yr Hendre’, Ceredigion, 4 (1963), 400–07.
  • I. C. Peate, The Medieval Welsh House (Cardiff, 1936), 61–73.
  • Davies, op. cit. in note 12, 7.
  • Fox and Fox, op. cit. in note 13.
  • Lynch, op. cit. in note 14.
  • Butler, op. cit. in note 14.
  • R. S. Kelly, ‘The excavation of a medieval farmstead at Cefn Graeanog, Clynnog, Gwynedd’, Bull. Board Celtic Stud., 29 (1982), 859–908; see also L. A. S. Butler, ‘Domestic buildings in Wales and the evidence of the Welsh laws’, Medieval Archaeol., XXXI (1987), 47–58.
  • T.J. Pierce, ‘Aber Gwyn Gregin’, Trans. Caernarvonshire Hist. Soc., 23 (1962), 37–43; I am grateful to Lawrence Butler for pointing out this reference to me.
  • For example, E. M. Veale, ‘The rabbit in England’, Agricultural Hist. Rev., 5 (1957), 85–90.
  • G. E. H. Barrett-Hamilton, ‘The rabbit or cony’, 176–228 in G.E.H. Barrett-Hamilton and M.A.C. Hinton, A History of British Mammals, vol. 2, pt 1 (London, 1920–21).
  • J. Sheail, The Rabbit and its History (Newton Abbot, 1971), 110–11.
  • C. Matheson, ‘The rabbit and hare in Wales’, Antiquity, 15 (1941), 371–81.
  • Veale, op. cit. in note 22, 88.
  • S. Moorhouse, ‘Dovecotes and rabbit warrens’, 752–57 in M. L. Faull and S. Moorhouse (eds), West Yorkshire: An Archaeological Survey to A.D. 1500, vol. 3 The Rural Medieval Landscape (Wakefield, 1981), 755.
  • C.J. Spurgeon, ‘Rabbit warrens and pillow mounds’, 313–47 in Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales, An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Glamorgan: vol. 3, part II, Medieval Non-fortified (Cardiff, 1983).
  • O. G. S. Crawford, ‘Barrows’, Antiquity, 1 (1927), 419–34.
  • T. Williamson and R. Loveday, ‘Rabbits or ritual? Artificial warrens and the long mound tradition’ (forthcoming). I am grateful to Tom Williamson for sight of this paper in advance of publication.
  • R. C. Bosanquet, ‘Pillow mounds’, Antiquity, 2 (1928), 205–06.
  • Spurgeon, op. cit. in note 28, 321–22.
  • Sheail, op. cit. in note 24, 41.
  • F. Villy, ‘A preliminary note on certain earthworks at Sutton, near Keighley’, The Bradford Antiquary, 5 (1912), 335–42.
  • Ibid., 337.
  • C. J. Spurgeon, ‘Llanelwedd, Radnorshire’, various entries in Archaeology in Wales, 6 (1966), no. 23; 7 (1967), no. 18; 8 (1968), no. 32, 9 (1969), no. 34; 10 (1970), no. 55.
  • B. E. Vyner, ‘Archaeology and the M4 Bridgend Northern Bypass II. A group of pillow mounds on Cefn Hirgoed, Bridgend, Glamorgan’, Bull. Board Celtic Stud., 29 (1982), 850–58.
  • R. G. Haynes, ‘Vermin traps and rabbit warrens on Dartmoor’, Post-Medieval Archaeol., 4 (1970), 147–64.
  • Ibid., 155 and 164.
  • T.J. Pierce, ‘Medieval Cardiganshire—a study in social origins’, Ceredigion, 3 (1959), 265–83.
  • Pierce, op. cit. in note 10.
  • W. J. Lewis, Lead Mining in Wales (Cardiff, 1957), 106, 171 and 174.
  • J. Turner, ‘The anthropogenic factor in vegetational history. I. Tregaron and Whixall Mosses’, New Phytologist, 63 (1964), 73–90.
  • H. Gundlach, ‘Tupfelmethode auf Phosphat augewandt in Praehistorischer Forschung’, Mikrochemika Acta, 5 (1961), 735–37.
  • R. C. Eidt. ‘A rapid chemical field test for archaeological site surveying’, Amer. Anthropol., 38 (1973), 206–10; R. C. Eidt, ‘Detection and examination of anthrosols by phosphate analysis’, Science, 197 (1977), 1327–33.
  • D. Austin and B. C. Burnham, ‘A new milling and processing complex at Dolaucothi: some recent fieldwork results’, Bull. Board Celtic Stud., 31 (1984), 304–13.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.