Gender and Religion in a Shifting Social Landscape: Anglo-Saxon Mortuary Practices, AD 600-700 (original ) (raw )The Material Expression of Social Change: The Mortuary Correlates of Gender and Age in Late Pre-Roman Iron Age and Roman Dorset. Vol. 1.
Christine Hamlin
2007
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The Material Expression of Social Change: The Mortuary Correlates of Gender and Age in Late Pre-Roman Iron Age and Roman Dorset. Vol. 2.
Christine Hamlin
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On sacred ground: social identity and churchyard burial in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire, c.700-1100 AD
Jo Buckberry
Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 14, 2007
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Sayer, D. (2013) Christian Burial Practice in the Early Middle Ages: rethinking the Anglo-Saxon funerary sphere. History Compass. 11(2): 133-146 DOI: 10.1111/hic3.12028
Duncan Sayer
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Gender representation in early medieval burials: Past reality or ritual display?
Heinrich Härke
Problemy vseobshchej istorii (Problems of World History) 8. Armavir, 2003
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Constructing Gender in Early Medieval Northern Britain, the Seventh through Tenth Centuries CE
Wendy Vencel
Masters Dissertation, 2019
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Gender in British Prehistory
Rachel Pope
In D. Bolger (ed.) A Companion to Gender Prehistory (Blackwell Companions to History). Oxford: Blackwell, 2012
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Challenging Gender: a reconsideration of gender in the Viking Age using the mortuary landscape
Marianne Moen
2019
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Anglo-Saxon Chronology II - the female graves: A commentary on Chapter 7 of 'Anglo-Saxon Graves and Grave Goods of the 6th and 7th centuries AD: A Chronological Framework'
Mike Baxter
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7. Multiple Liminalitites in Early Anglo-Saxon England: Age, Gender and Religion
Christine Cave
AmS-Skrifter
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Engendering Mortuary Practices of Roman Britain: Applications and Implications of Artefactual and Ecofactual Field Data
Hing Yuen Chan
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Mortuary practices in early Anglo-Saxon England
Howard Williams
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Bodily Dimensions in Medieval Burials. On Age- and Gender-Structures in Socially Stratified Churchyards
Kristina Jonsson
From Ephesos to Dalecarlia. Reflections on Body, Space and Time in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (eds. Elisabet Regner, Cecilia von Heijne, Laila Kitzler Åhfeldt & Anna Kjellström), 2009
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Sayer D (2009) Laws, Funerals and Cemetery Organisation: the seventh-century Kentish family. In D Sayer & H Williams (eds) Mortuary Practice and Social Identities in the Middle Ages. Exeter, the Exeter University Press: 141-166.
Duncan Sayer
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Burying the socially and physically distinctive in and beyond the Anglo-Saxon Churchyard. In J. Buckberry and A. Cherryson (eds) Burial in later Anglo-Saxon England, 101-13. Oxford: Oxbow (2010)
Dawn Hadley
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Sayer, D. (2013) The Social Aspects of Early Medieval Mortuary Practice. History Compass. 11(2): 147-162 DOI: 10.1111/hic3.12030
Duncan Sayer
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Body and Society in Pre-Norman England
Maria Eliferova
Body and Society in Pre-Norman England, 2010
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The Intimacy of Death: Interpreting Gender and the Life Course in Medieval and Early Modern Burials
Roberta Gilchrist
Interpreting the Early Modern World, eds M C Beaudry and J Symonds (2011), Springer, 159-73., 2011
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Anglo-Saxon Chronology I – the male graves: A commentary on Chapter 6 of 'Anglo-Saxon Graves and Grave Goods of the 6th and 7th Centuries AD: A Chronological Framework'
Mike Baxter
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Caring for the dead in late Anglo-Saxon England
Dawn Hadley , Jo Buckberry
World Archaeology, 1975
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Sex and the elderly: Attitudes to long-lived women and men in early Anglo-Saxon England
Christine Cave
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 2017
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Reassessing Bioarchaeological Sex Determination and Research into Gender at the Early Anglo-Saxon Worthy Park Burial Ground in Hampshire, England
Abigail Górkiewicz Downer
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A well-urned rest: cremation and inhumation in early Anglo-Saxon England
Howard Williams
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Duncan Sayer and Howard Williams, eds, Mortuary Practices and Social Identities in the Middle Ages
Kristina Jonsson
European Journal of Archaeology, 2011
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‘Squabbling siblings: gender and monastic life in late Anglo-Saxon Winchester’, Gender & History 23:3 (2011), 653-684
Helen Foxhall Forbes
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Combs, Burial Spaces and the Body: how the spatiality of bone and antler combs constructs Anglo-Saxon identities in 5th to 7th century England. [EMASS 2015]
Claire F Ratican
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Austin, M. 2013. ‘Conflict or Coexistence? An Examination of the Evidence for Native Burial in Early Anglo-Saxon England, AD 400-700′. Trowel, 14. pp.10-18.
Matthew H Austin
2013
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Death Warmed up: The Agency of Bodies and Bones in Early Anglo-Saxon Cremation Rites
Howard Williams
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Tradition and Transformation in Anglo-Saxon England. ByOosthuizen Susan. 222mm. Pp xii + 251, 12 b&w maps and figs.Bloomsbury,London,2013.isbn9781472507273. £55 (hbk)
Nick Higham
The Antiquaries Journal, 2014
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Mui, S., 2015, ‘Life after death: Shrouded burials in later Anglo-Saxon England’, in: Archaeological Review from Cambridge, 30 (1), 150–156.
Sian Mui
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Voices from the Cemetery: the Social Archaeology of Late-Medieval Burial
Roberta Gilchrist
Medieval Archaeology 66:1, 120-150, 2022
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Review article: What’s new in early medieval burial archaeology
Tania Dickinson
Early Medieval Europe, 2003
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A sexual division of labour at the start of agriculture? A multi-proxy comparison through grave good stone tool technological and use-wear analysis
Hamon Caroline , Alba Masclans , Christian Jeunesse
PLOS ONE, 2021
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Transforming Body and Soul: Toilet Implements in Early Anglo-Saxon Graves
Howard Williams
Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 14
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Memories of migration? The ‘Anglo-Saxon’ burial costume of the fifth century AD
James Harland
Antiquity, 2019
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