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Burial and Commemoration in the Roman province

Carroll, P.M. 2011, "Memoria and Damnatio Memoriae. Preserving and erasing identities in Roman funerary commemoration," in P.M. Carroll & J. Rempel (eds), Living through the dead: burial and commemoration in the Classical world, 65-90.

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Graham, E-J. 2011. From fragments to ancestors: re-defining os resectum and its role in rituals of purification and commemoration in Republican Rome. In M. Carroll and J. Rempel (eds.) Living through the dead: burial and commemoration in the classical world. Oxford, Oxbow, pp. 91–109.

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2019

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Synthesis, Chronology, and “Late Roman” Cemeteries in Britain

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Death and Memorial in an Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Landscape in North-West England: An

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2015. A ‘civilised’ death? The interpretation of provincial Roman grave good assemblages’, in J. Rasmus Brandt, M. Prusac and H. Roland (eds) Death and Changing Rituals. Function and Meaning in Ancient Funerary Practices, Oxford: Oxbow, 223-248

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Evidence of Memorials for Roman Civic Heroes

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The Marginalisation and Misunderstandings of Late-medieval English Transi Memorials

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Visibility Matters. Notes on Archaic Monuments and Collective Memory in Mid-Republican Rome

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"Limitless Empire: The Public Commemoration of Soldiers' Origins." In Limes XXII. Proceedings of the 22nd Interantional Congress of Roman Frontier Studies, Ruse, Bulgaria, Stembert 2012, edited by L. Vagalinski and N. Sharankov. National Archaeological Institute with Museum: Sofia, 2015, 387-390.

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Graham, E-J 2006. Discarding the destitute: Ancient and modern attitudes towards burial practices and memory preservation amongst the lower classes of Rome. In B. Croxford et al. (eds). 2006 TRAC 2005. Proceedings of the 15th Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference. Oxford, Oxbow, pp. 57–71.

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