Life and economy at early medieval Flixborough, c. AD 600-1000 : the artefact evidence
- Publication/Creation:
- Oxford ; Oakville : Oxbow Books, [2009]
- Resource Type:
- Book
More Details
Additional/Related Title Information
- Full Title:
- Life and economy at early medieval Flixborough, c. AD 600-1000 : the artefact evidence / edited by D.H. Evans and Christopher Loveluck ; with contributions by Marion M. Archibald [and thirty-five others].
- Series Titles:
- Excavations at Flixborough ; v.2
Excavations at Flixborough
Related Names
- Additional Author/Creators:
- Evans, D. H., editor
Loveluck, Christopher, editor
Archibald, Marion, contributor
Subjects/Genre
- Subjects:
- Excavations (Archaeology)--England--Lincolnshire
Anglo-Saxons--England--Lincolnshire--History--To 1500
Flixborough Site (England)
Lincolnshire (England)--Antiquities
Lincolnshire (England)--History--To 1500
Description/Summary
- Table of Contents:
- Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; List of Figures; List of Plates; List of Contributors to the Flixborough Volumes; Summary; Zusammenfassung; Résumé; Acknowledgements; Preface and Introduction; Chapter 1: Dress and Personal Items; 1.1 Brooches; 1.2 Strap-ends; 1.3 The hooked tags; 1.4 Buckles:; Non-ferrous buckles and other belt fittings; Iron buckles and belt fittings; 1.5 Jewellery; 1.6 Toilet implements; 1.7 Medical items; 1.8 The pins; 1.9 Tool-marks and finishing details on non-ferrous, surface-coated and inlaid objects, including dress items; 1.10 Combs
Chapter 2: Consumption of Luxuries : The Glas and Copper Alloy Vesels2.1 Glass vessels; 2.2 Analysis of chemical compositions of the glass; 2.3 Copper alloy vessels and container mounts; Chapter 3: Artefacts Relating to Specialist Activities; 3.1 Horse equipment; 3.2 Weapons and armour; 3.3 Writing and literacy-related items:; The styli; A decorated silver plaque, possibly from a book cover; The inscribed objects; 3.4 Possible liturgical objects: Iron bells and bell clappers; Chapter 4: Building Materials and Fittings; 4.1 Structural ironwork and fittings; 4.2 Structural fired clay or daub
4.3 Window glass and lead cames4.4 Other building materials; Chapter 5: Domestic Fittings and Implements; 5.1 Iron domestic fixtures, fittings and implements; 5.2 Iron locks and keys; 5.3 Copper alloy keys; 5.4 Miscellaneous copper-alloy fixtures and fittings; 5.5 Miscellaneous lead and lead alloy objects; 5.6 Miscellaneous iron fixtures and fittings:; Knives; Appendix 1. Metallographic examination of knife blades; 5.7 Bone and antler implements and utensils; 5.8 Hones and sharpening stones; A note on the geology of the hones; 5.9 Stone lamps; 5.10 A possible carved chalk vessel
Chapter 6: Cultivation, Crop Processing and Food Procurement6.1 Agricultural tools; 6.2 Querns; A note on the geology of the sandstone querns; A note on the lava querns from Flixborough; 6.3 Evidence for fishing and netting birds; Iron fish hooks; Chapter 7: Woodworking, the tool hoard and its lead containers; 7.1 Woodworking tools; 7.2 The Flixborough tool hoard; 7.3 The lead vessels housing the Flixborough tool hoard; Chapter 8: Leatherworking; 8.1 Leatherworking tools; Chapter 9: Textile Production; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 Fibre processing; 9.3 Spinning
A note on the geology of the stone spindle whorls9.4 Weaving; 9.5 Cutting and stitching; Shears; Needles; Rubbing stones; 9.6 Summary Selective catalogue; Chapter 10: Ironworking; 10.1 Artefacts and objects relating to ironworking; 10.2 Ironworking debris and manufacturing processes; Visual examination of the slags and metalworking debris; Distribution of metalworking debris by period within the occupation sequence; Physico-chemical analysis of debris; Chapter 11: Non-Ferrous Metalworking; 11.1 The crucible and mould fragments; 11.2 Other fired clay objects
11.3 Surface analysis of crucible and mould fragments - Summary:
- Between 1989 and 1991, excavations in the parish of Flixborough, North Lincolnshire, unearthed remains of an Anglo-Saxon settlement associated with one of the largest collections of artefacts and animal bones yet found on such a site. In an unprecedented occupation sequence from an Anglo-Saxon rural settlement, six main periods of occupation have been identified, dating from the seventh to the early eleventh centuries; with a further period of activity, between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries AD. The remains of approximately forty buildings and other structures were uncovered; and due to t
- Language:
- English
- Language Note:
- English
- Physical Type/Description:
- 1 online resource (1934 p.)
- General Note:
- Description based upon print version of record.
Additional Identifiers
- Catalog ID (MMSID):
- 9936949616502486
- ISBN:
- 1-78297-285-4
1-78297-283-8
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