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Dorchester on thames dorchester excavation season 2016 england
England
About the Project Discovering Dorchester-on-Thames Dorchester-on-Thames is a key site in British history. It is the only site in the country that has seen towns dating from the late Iron Age (100 BC – AD 43), the Roman, and the Anglo-Saxon periods which have not been obscured by later development. Since 2007 a partnership of the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford, Oxford Archaeology, and members of the local community, have been investigating these sites, forming the long-term ‘Discovering Dorchester’ research project. Investigations at Dorchester will allow us to gain a better understanding of four of the key transition points in English history: the origins of agricultural societies in the Neolithic; the growth of urbanisation and movement away from a tribal society in the late Iron Age; subsequent incorporation into the Roman Empire; and the rise of an early Medieval centre from the confused situation which followed the severance of Britain from western Roman administration in the first decade of the 5th century AD. Our Dorchester excavations thus far have been conducted at Minchin Recreation Ground, a later Roman enclosure and Bronze Age ring ditch (in 2007), Burcot Brook Car Boot field, recovering the vestiges of a Neolithic cursus and Bronze Age ring ditch (in 2010 to 2012) and the Dorchester Allotments, formerly the Hempcroft (2008 to present) which represents the south-western corner of the walled Roman town. The village of Dorchester lies just off the A4074 between Berinsfield and Shillingford; the Allotments excavation site is in the southwest, off Watling Lane (grid reference SU577941). This site has been chosen in large part because it has never seen post-medieval development and because Professor Sheppard Frere’s investigations in 1962-4 revealed tantalising clues to what might have been occurring in this part of the town. Whilst Frere was limited to small trenches between cultivated plots, the Dorchester project has been given a 30m x 20m space for open-area excavation. Project Directors The Directors of the project are: Mr Paul Booth (Oxford Archaeology) Professor Chris Gosden (Institute of Archaeology, Oxford) Professor Helena Hamerow (Institute of Archaeology, Oxford) Dr Gill Hey (Oxford Archaeology) The Assistant Director of the project is: Mr Edward Peveler (Institute of Archaeology, Oxford)
Copyright: Ian.R.Cartwright: Institute Of Archaeology Oxford University
Art: Spherical
Resolution: 18188x9094
Taken: 21/07/2017
Hochgeladen: 07/09/2017
Published: 07/09/2017
Angesehen:

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Tags: archaeology; oxfordshire; dorchester; excavation; roman; oxford; university
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