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Bøger udgivet af Museum of London Archaeology

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  • af Lesley Dunwoodie
    331,95 kr.

    Excavation in 1997-2003 produced important new evidence for the development of Roman London. The site lay north-east of the bridge, towards the edge of the early town. Sparse commercial and domestic ribbon development here alongside early roads was ended by the Boudican revolt of AD 60/61.

  • - A History of the People and Landscape of East London
    af Pamela Greenwood
    108,95 kr.

    This book presents a short history of human habitation in East London, based on archaeological findings at gravel sites between 1963 and 1999.

  • af Anthony Mackinder
    181,95 kr.

    Archaeological investigations were carried out in 2006-9 on the north bank of the River Thames at Riverbank House, City of London, just upstream of the modern London Bridge and its medieval predecessor, in the heart of the medieval port.

  • af Robin Wroe-Brown
    172,95 kr.

    Excavations near the Roman forum on Londinium's eastern hill (modern Cornhill) have revealed archaeological evidence from the earliest period of London's history. The finds recovered have a heavily domestic bias, with household and personal items, including a large group of dress accessories.

  • af John Shepherd, Ian Freestone, Angela Wardle & mfl.
    275,95 kr.

    Excavations in the upper Walbrook valley, in a marginal area in the north-west of the Roman city, recovered over 70kg of broken vessel glass and production waste from a nearby workshop, giving new insights into the workings of the glass industry and its craftsmen.

  • af Bruno Barber
    129,95 kr.

    Religious belief was central to the lives - and deaths - of all medieval Londoners. Religion was fully integrated into the social and political order, providing the population with an understanding of their place in the world and inspiring artists, architects and craftspeople.

  • - Excavations at George Street, Richmond, and High Street, Mortlake
    af Barney Sloane
    129,95 kr.

    This richly illustrated volume presents important new evidence for early modern industry and settlement at two sites in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.

  • af Carrie Cowan
    190,95 kr.

    The river crossing and access to the River Thames were major influences on the siting of Roman Southwark, where Watling Street and Stane Street converged. Excavations at Courage's Brewery revealed an archaeological sequence dating back to Prehistoric times.

  • af Aaron Birchenough
    129,95 kr.

    The East London Line Project presented a unique opportunity, as structures were demolished and cleared for London's latest railway, to discover more about some of London's earliest railways. This included previously undiscovered parts of one of the world's first operational passenger railways, the Eastern Counties of 1840.

  • af Jeremy Taylor, Ken Pitt & Jez Taylor
    118,95 kr.

    Archaeological investigations at seven sites within the Finsbury Square area have revealed important evidence for the medieval and post-medieval development of this former marshy area north of the city walls.

  • - Excavations at Paternoster Square, City of London
    af Sadie Watson
    162,95 kr.

    Redevelopment of Paternoster Square in 2000-2001 provided the opportunity to reassess 1960s work at the site and review Roman activity on the western hill, south of the main east-west road from London to Silchester.

  • af David Whipp
    108,95 kr.

    This long-awaited publication elucidates a remarkable monument, now preserved in situ beside the Tower of London. Excavations at Tower Hill in 1979 uncovered substantial reamins of the medieval postern gate at the junction of the City's defensive wall and the moat of the Tower of London.

  • - Excavations at 3-9 Newgate Street and 16-17 Old Bailey, City of London
    af Ken Pitt
    129,95 kr.

    Important new evidence of Londons 2nd-century AD Roman pottery industry has been found along the western side of a tributary of the Walbrook stream. Up to eight kilns, producing Verulamium region white ware, and a probable potters workshop represent two phases of production.

  • - Archaeological Excavations 1998-2002
    af Pat Miller
    149,95 kr.

    Excavation work by Northamptonshire Archaeology and MoLAS revealed residual prehistoric and Roman artefacts and Middle Saxon settlement evidence in the form of a single sunken-floored building. Activity intensified in the Late Saxon to Norman period, when metalworking, crop processing and bone working took place at the site.

  • - Excavations at 20-28 Moorgate, City of London, 1998-2000
    af Fiona Seeley
    319,95 kr.

    Excavations have uncovered important new evidence of the second century AD Roman pottery industry, with up to eight kilns and a probable potters' workshop recorded on the west side of a major tributary of the Walbrook stream.

  • - An archaeological Reconstruction and History
    af John Schofield
    366,95 kr.

    This is an archaeological, architectural and historical study of one of the largest complexes of buildings in the medieval City of London, but one which is largely unknown and of which only two fragments survive above ground today. It is the fifth volume in a series on the monasteries of London.

  • af Taryn Nixon
    80,95 kr.

    The future of London archaeology is the focus of this volume, which follows on from The Archaeology of Greater London (MoLAS 2000). It sets out aims for improving and facilitating research and managing the archaeological resource more effectively.

  • - Excavations at Governor's House, City of London
    af Trevor Brigham
    147,95 kr.

    The north bank of the Thames near Cannon Street Station was occupied by some of London's most prominent buildings in both the Roman and Medieval periods. Substantial stone walls revealed at the site in 1969 were initially interpreted as part of a Roman townhouse attached to the 'Governor's Palace' building complex to the west.

  • - Excavations at Benbow House, Southwark, London, SE1
    af Anthony Mackinder
    81,95 kr.

    The multi-period site of Benbow House lies next to the Thames, and is a fine example of the multifarious and colourful activities that took place in London over the centuries. The earliest extant evidence of human activity within the excavation area was an attempt at land consolidation in the 12th or 13th century.

  • - Archaeology and the Jubilee Line Extension
    af James Drummond-Murray
    81,95 kr.

    The Jubilee Line extension runs through Westminster and north Southwark, traversing some of the most archaeologically sensitive areas of London. The tunnels themselves are so deep that they pass well below any archaeological remains, but there have to be a myriad of holes connecting the tunnels with the surface.

  • af Robin Brown
    333,95 kr.

    The latest in a series on post-medieval burial produced by MOLA, this volume reports on three non-Church of England burial grounds in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, excavated between 2004 and 2010.

  • af Lindy Casson
    277,95 kr.

    Good preservation in the western part of 10 Gresham Street has led to an unusually complete picture of the archaeological sequence. The discovery here of the largest group of Romano-British round houses yet excavated in London, clustered round a rectangular building, is of considerable significance for the Iron Age-Roman transition.

  • af Julian Bowsher
    221,95 kr.

    This guide to the unique theatrical venues of London, from 1567, when the first playhouse was built, to 1642, when Cromwell closed them down, sets out the rich dramatic history of this period in relation to the latest exciting archaeological evidence.

  • af Barney Sloane
    297,95 kr.

    The development of the nunnery site is revealed in this study - from evidence for Iron Age occupation, the nunnerys foundation in 1144 and the expansion of the early convent, through to its conversion in the 16th and 17th centuries to a close of large mansions surrounding the parish church.

  • af Friederike Hammer
    170,95 kr.

    This volume is the second of several volumes presenting previously unpublished findings relating to Roman Southwark. This looks at an extensive sequence of Roman metalworking workshops and hearths, from the late 1st-late 4th centuries AD.

  • af John Lewis
    275,95 kr.

    This eagerly awaited volume documents the evidence for human activity in the Colne valley at Three Ways Wharf, Uxbridge in the Lateglacial and Early Mesolithic periods.

  • af Adrian Miles
    210,95 kr.

    St Marylebone parish grew from humble beginnings on the city's margins to become, in the 18th and 19th centuries, one of the wealthiest in London, home to the elite and fashionable.

  • - Shelly-sandy ware and the greyware industries
    af Lyn Blackmore
    297,95 kr.

    A Dated Type Series of London Medieval Pottery: Part 5, Shelly-Sandy Ware and the Greyware Industries Aby Lyn Blackmore and Jacqueline Pearce An essential survey for all interested in the pottery of the London area, this study charts the development, peak and decline of two ceramic traditions: the shelly wares of c 11401220 and the greywares of ...

  • af Sue Hirst
    610,95 kr.

    The Anglo-Saxon cemeteries at Mucking, Essex, represent the burials of over 800 individuals from the 5th to early 7th centuries. This long-awaited report includes detailed illustrated catalogues in Part i, and comprehensive analysis and discussion of the burials, their relation to the excavated settlement evidence and wider context, in Part ii.

  • af Simon Blatherwick
    252,95 kr.

    Regeneration in the 1980s-90s on the south bank of the Thames resulted in archaeological and historical investigations at Platform Wharf, Rotherhithe, and next to London Bridge, in Southwark. The development of both sites from the 14th century is of major interest.

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