June 2007 Issue
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Features Index

Oxbow Home Page

FEATURES

Prehistoric Britain and Ireland: new evidence, new approach, new book

A new work by Richard Bradley seems set to become the first port of call for anyone studying the prehistory of Britain and Ireland.


Oxbow on the Move

From July 9th Oxbow will be installed in plush new offices. Here's advance notification of the change of address.


Of all the new books that have passed over the desks of the Oxbow staff this month, these, for whatever reason, are the ones that grabbed their attention.

Clean: A History of Personal Hygiene and Purity
by Virginia Smith

Rash Adventurer: A Life of John Pendlebury
by Imogen Grundon

Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica
Pool, Christopher A


Ray , John
Hardback. GB £15.99, GB £4.95


Rome, the Greek World, the Jews and the East
by Fergus Millar, edited by Hannah M. Cotton and Guy M. Rogers
Hardback. GB £68.50, GB £19.95

St Margaret's Gospel-Book : The Favourite Book of an Eleventh Century Queen of Scots
by Rebecca Rushforth
Hardback. GB £25.00, GB £9.95

Sutton Companion to Cathedrals and Abbeys
Friar, Stephen

 
NEWS AND HAPPENINGS

New Releases

St Peter's, Barton-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire - A Parish Church and its Community: Volume 2 The Human Remains
by Tony Waldron with contributions by Warwick Rodwell
Hardback. GB £30.00, GB £9.95

The excavations at St Peter's church, Barton-upon-Humber, between 1978 and 1984 have yielded the largest collection of human remains in the UK, dating from the late tenth century to the mid-nineteenth. The twin aims of the project were to understand the architectural history and setting of this complex, multi-period building (Volume 1), and to recover a substantial sample of the population for palaeopathological study (Volume 2). An extensive programme of historical and topographical research also took place in order to set the archaeological evidence firmly in context. The parish registers, which extend back to the mid-sixteenth century, were transcribed, and these provide an important demographic overview of the population. The cemetery evidence revealed that the population is entirely secular, representing a cross-section of all levels of society living in the town and its hinterland. In total, 2,750 inhumations were examined, but there were also thousands of disarticulated bones - approximately three tons in weight - which could only be given the briefest examination. Those who were buried at St Peter's were subject not only to the normal visitations of disease and trauma but suffered an outbreak of the plague in 1593, when about a fifth of the population was lost. Taking the long view over the entire period, however, it is striking how many of the marks of health and vigour, popularly supposed to have changed substantially between the middle ages and the Victorian era, have remained relatively constant. Together, the two volumes provide fascinating insights into that mainstay of settlement - the small English market town.


Conferences we will be attending

EES 125th Anniversary Conference
SOAS London (Saturdy 23 June - Sunday 24 June)
This conference will look at Egypt’s position in the ancient world - her rise to become an Empire and her relations in times of peace and war with the other great civilisations of the Near East and Africa. Speakers will include Dr Paul Collins, Dr Aidan Dodson, Dr Alison Gascoigne, Professor K A Kitchen, Professor Alan Lloyd, Dr Robert Morkot and Dr Toby Wilkinson.
http://www.ees.ac.uk/membership/Provisional%20June%20conference%20programme.htm