Description
In this issue:
– INGLEBOROUGH: Anglo-Saxons in the Dales
– THE IRISH NEOLITHIC: A boom in ancient housing
– OBJECTS OF WAR: Exploring the Imperial War Museum
– UNDERGROUND EXETER: Water for the City
– THE TEMPLE OF MITHRAS: Recollecting the excavation
– THE LACOCK CUP: From fine dining to divine ritual
– RICHARD III’S DNA: Tracing the lost king’s living relatives
Plus: News, Reviews, Comment, Sherds, Odd Socs, and more!
From the Editor:
What lies beneath the ground at Stonehenge? A major initiative to map the geophysics of some 12 square kilometres of surrounding landscape is now all but complete. This has revealed a startling amount of archaeology, including the footprints of hundreds of previously unknown features that range from henge-like monuments to ditches and pits. Turn to p.10 for the inside story.
Next we go in search of Anglo-Saxons in the western Yorkshire Dales. Though the area is rich with place-names that attest to their presence, no conclusively dated sites from the Anglo-Saxon era had ever been found ‚ until David Johnson began looking.
We then tackle the question of where our Neolithic ancestors lived. Until recently, we had relatively little evidence for their houses. David Miles surveys the data, and then looks to new research in Ireland that is substantially fleshing-out the picture.
From there, we visit the new First World War galleries at the Imperial War Museum in London. How can a museum tell the many-sided story of a war, particularly one so large in scale? Military History Monthly editor Neil Faulkner investigates.
Other highlights include journeying underground with Chris Catling to discover the Medieval aqueducts of Exeter, and a look back at the excavations of London’s Temple of Mithras. This work, which took place 60 years ago this year, attracted massive crowds. Did you or one of your relatives visit the site? If so, MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) would like to hear from you.
Cover Date: Nov-2014, Volume 25 Issue 8
