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Papers by Juan van der Roest

Research paper thumbnail of W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 4 - The Settlement on the River bank Area. Nederlandse Oudheden 18. RCE - Amersfoort 2015.

On January 20th 2016 the Dutch archaeologist W.J.H. (Pim) Verwers died ... Pim was a great frien... more On January 20th 2016 the Dutch archaeologist W.J.H. (Pim) Verwers died ...
Pim was a great friend and colleague ...
In his honour I present to you the last volume in the Dorestad-series.
Because the pdf is too large for Academia, hereby a link to the website of the RCE.

Research paper thumbnail of W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 3 - Hoogstraat O, II-IV. Nederlandse Oudheden 16. RACM/RCE - Amersfoort 2009.

First publication: Van Es & Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 1 - The Harbour: Hoogstraat I. Neder... more First publication:
Van Es & Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 1 - The Harbour: Hoogstraat I. Nederlandse Oudheden 9. ROB/RCE - Amersfoort 1980.

Second publication:
Prummel. Excavations at Dorestad 2 - Early Medieval Dorestad: an archaeolozoological study. Nederlandse Oudheden 11. ROB/RCE - Amersfoort 1983.

http://www.dorestadonthuld.nl/index.html
(for the moment only in dutch, with much literature).

Research paper thumbnail of Early Medieval settlements along the Rhine: precursors and contemporaries of Dorestad - W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers

From the VI-th century AD onwards, the northernmost branch of the Rhine in the Netherlands regain... more From the VI-th century AD onwards, the northernmost branch of the Rhine in the Netherlands regained the transport-geographical importance that it had partially lost during the Migration Period. The high point of this development was the rise of Dorestad at the fork of the Rhine and the Lek in the mid-VII-th century. This article examines a number of Early Medieval settlements situated along the Rhine, some of which were the immediate precursors of Dorestad. They are settlements of differing character and ancestry. Some go back to the days when the Rhine formed the frontier of the Roman Empire. Others emerged in Merovingian times, when the Franks and the Frisians came to oppose each other in the Rhine delta. The frontier character of this zone persisted into the VIII-th century. In these days, all settlements along the Rhine were part of a vast, international exchange network, with Dorestad evolving into one of the principal ports of the Carolingian realm. For this period, pottery is an important source of archaeological evidence.

Research paper thumbnail of Die Römischen Fibeln von ‘De Horden’ – Fibeln aus einer Zivilsiedlung am niedergermanischen Limes

Roman brooches - Dutch River Aera - Civitas Batavorum - Limes

Research paper thumbnail of W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 4 - The Settlement on the River bank Area. Nederlandse Oudheden 18. RCE - Amersfoort 2015.

On January 20th 2016 the Dutch archaeologist W.J.H. (Pim) Verwers died ... Pim was a great frien... more On January 20th 2016 the Dutch archaeologist W.J.H. (Pim) Verwers died ...
Pim was a great friend and colleague ...
In his honour I present to you the last volume in the Dorestad-series.
Because the pdf is too large for Academia, hereby a link to the website of the RCE.

Research paper thumbnail of W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 3 - Hoogstraat O, II-IV. Nederlandse Oudheden 16. RACM/RCE - Amersfoort 2009.

First publication: Van Es & Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 1 - The Harbour: Hoogstraat I. Neder... more First publication:
Van Es & Verwers. Excavations at Dorestad 1 - The Harbour: Hoogstraat I. Nederlandse Oudheden 9. ROB/RCE - Amersfoort 1980.

Second publication:
Prummel. Excavations at Dorestad 2 - Early Medieval Dorestad: an archaeolozoological study. Nederlandse Oudheden 11. ROB/RCE - Amersfoort 1983.

http://www.dorestadonthuld.nl/index.html
(for the moment only in dutch, with much literature).

Research paper thumbnail of Early Medieval settlements along the Rhine: precursors and contemporaries of Dorestad - W.A. van Es & W.J.H. Verwers

From the VI-th century AD onwards, the northernmost branch of the Rhine in the Netherlands regain... more From the VI-th century AD onwards, the northernmost branch of the Rhine in the Netherlands regained the transport-geographical importance that it had partially lost during the Migration Period. The high point of this development was the rise of Dorestad at the fork of the Rhine and the Lek in the mid-VII-th century. This article examines a number of Early Medieval settlements situated along the Rhine, some of which were the immediate precursors of Dorestad. They are settlements of differing character and ancestry. Some go back to the days when the Rhine formed the frontier of the Roman Empire. Others emerged in Merovingian times, when the Franks and the Frisians came to oppose each other in the Rhine delta. The frontier character of this zone persisted into the VIII-th century. In these days, all settlements along the Rhine were part of a vast, international exchange network, with Dorestad evolving into one of the principal ports of the Carolingian realm. For this period, pottery is an important source of archaeological evidence.

Research paper thumbnail of Die Römischen Fibeln von ‘De Horden’ – Fibeln aus einer Zivilsiedlung am niedergermanischen Limes

Roman brooches - Dutch River Aera - Civitas Batavorum - Limes

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