Table Of ContentARCHAEOLOGY  IN
BRI TAI N
♦SINCE  1945-
EDITED BY IAN  LONGWORTH AND JOHN CHERRY
ARCHAEOLOGY  IN
BRITAIN
SINCE 1945
ARCHAEOLOGY IN
BRITAIN
SINCE  1945
NEW DIRECTIONS
EDITED BY IAN LONGWORTH AND JOHN CHERRY 
with contributions by
NICK ASHTON, JOHN CHERRY, JOHN HURST,
IAN LONGWORTH, TIMOTHY POTTER,
VALERY RIGBY, LESLIE WEBSTER
with line illustrations by 
SIMON JAMES
Published for the Trustees of the British Museum by 
British Museum Publications
(  i 986 The Trustees of the British Museum Frontispiece
Lindow Man. found in 1984 in a Cheshire 
Published by British Museum Publications 
bog by a peat-cutting machine, which 
46 Bloomsbury Street. London wcib
sliced him through the waist and destroyed 
much of the lower half of his body. Naked 
Designed by Harry Green
but for a fur arm-band, he had been felled 
Set in Monophoto Photina and printed in Great Britain  by blows on the head, garrotted and had 
by Jolly & Barber Ltd. Rugby had his throat cut before being dumped in 
a shallow pool in the bog. This was no 
ordinary death, and the bog was not a 
normal burial ground: it seems likely that 
Lindow Man was the victim of a ritual 
sacrifice, c. 300 bc.
Contents
Photographic acknowledgements  6 
Foreword  7
by the Director of the British Museum,
Sir David Wilson
The Contributors  9
Acknowledgements  9
Introduction  10
1  Prehistoric Britain  13
Ian Long worth, Nick Ashton, Valerie Rigby
2  A Roman Province: Britain ad 43-410 
by Timothy Potter
3  Anglo-Saxon England ad 400-1100 
by Leslie Webster
4  Technology, Towns, Castles and
Churches ad i 100  1600  1 61
by John Cherry
5  The Medieval Countryside  197 
by John Hurst
Glossary  237
Bibliography  239
Index  24b
Photographic acknowledgements
The photographs were acquired from the individuals and  Hunterian Museum. University of Glasgow 51 
institutions listed below. The authors and publishers  Medieval Village Research Group 118. 119. 122. 129 
would like to thank the copyright holders for permission to  R.G. Mercer 6
reproduce them. John Mills Photography Ltd 102 
National Monuments Record 70 
Ashmolean Museum. Oxford 107  Norfolk Archaeological Unit 66 (photo D. Wicks). 97 
Grenville Astill 85  (photo D.A. Edwards)
H. Atkinson FRPS 88  Pilkington Bros Ltd 81 
R.N.E. Barton 3 Dr F. Pryor 12. 13 
British Library. London 105 (Cotton MS Augustus 1.20.21)  P.A. Rahtz 68 
British Museum 4 (courtesy of R.N.E. Barton, who provided  Dr A. Ritchie 20
the material). 1 1. 15-17. 2 3. 24. 34. 37- 39. 42. 4 3.  Royal Archaeological Institute 71-3 (drawings by Simon 
45.48. 5<>. 58. 59-6.3  James)
Buckinghamshire Record Office 126  Society of Antiquaries of London 109 
Cambridge University Collection of Air Photographs  Sutton Hoo Research Trust 69 (photo Nigel Macbeth) 
(Copyright reserved) 46. 54, 9 3. 11 7. 1 30. 1 3 3  University of Southampton. Department of Archaeology 
Carlisle Archaeological Unit 47  114
Professor J.M. Coles 7 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council 99a 
Crown copyright reserved 70 (photo J.K. St Joseph). 100. York Archaeological Trust 76
1 1 1
The front cover illustration is reproduced by courtesy of 
Professor Barry Cunliffe 62
Colin and Janet Bord.
Durham University. Department of Archaeology 82 
English Heritage 40  The line drawings are by Simon James, with the exception 
A. Fleming 26 of 87. 1 1 2a and b (by Jim Farrant) and 79 (by Karen 
Giraudon 96 (by permission of the town of Bayeux) Hughes).
6
Foreword
Towards the end of the Second World War an ad hoc meeting of some 
280 archaeologists held at the Institute of Archaeology drew up a plan 
for the future of the subject in Britain. Many of the scholars were young, 
all were enthusiastic and in many ways far-seeing, but their greatest 
aspirations have been far exceeded by the energy and opportunities 
which have transformed our knowledge of Britain’s past since the end 
of the War. Technical innovations, particularly in co-operation with 
natural scientists, have introduced methods of dating and analysis - of 
which the most dramatic is undoubtedly the radiocarbon technique. 
These methods allow the dating of prehistoric periods within narrow 
margins and have revolutionised, not only our knowledge, but also our 
understanding of the past. Improved techniques of prospecting and 
excavation have enabled scholars to reveal the past with greater con
fidence and greater clarity. Town excavation, the examination of vast 
areas by total excavation, a willingness to use archaeological techniques 
on historical sites, a responsible attitude to publication and a greater 
public awareness of the potential of the past have widened and illuminated 
our vision of this country’s history.
Resources - although never enough - have been made more freely 
available, particularly as the result of the crusading zeal of the founders 
of the Rescue movement. There has been an explosion in the number of 
students and in the production of trained archaeologists. There were 
three - perhaps four  university departments concerned with British 
archaeology in 1950. Only two (Cambridge and Edinburgh) produced 
first degree graduates in the subject; now there are over twenty depart
ments. Government money for rescue archaeology has increased by 
leaps and bounds from  £400,000  in  1970 to  15.7m  in  1986-7. 
Research excavation is more selective and better funded and co-operation 
with natural scientists is now a sine qua non of any archaeological 
project, from initial survey to final analysis of finds and of soils.
This book portrays some of the developments of the last forty years. It 
is based on the work of scholars throughout the country and. although 
published by the British Museum, is a celebration of a national achieve
ment in the understanding of the past. Its contents draw on the work, 
knowledge and expertise of a large number of scholars from universities 
and museums, from the private sector and official bodies. The Museum
/
FOREWORD
is grateful for their co-operation, not least that of John Hurst, who has 
contributed to the text itself. In 1932 two members of the staff of the 
British  Museum wrote a similar survey, Archaeology in England and 
Wales 1914- 1931; to measure the achievement of archaeologists over 
the last half century compare Tom Kendrick’s and Christopher Hawkes’s 
work of 1932 with that presented here.
We show here only a segment of British archaeological endeavour. 
British archaeologists are active throughout the world, from Thailand 
to Belize. Archaeologists trained in Britain are to be met with in many 
countries at all levels of seniority. There influence is, however, based 
almost in its entirety on training in excavation and museum activity at 
home.  This book  is  not then  merely  a chauvinistic celebration  of 
past achievements, it is a portrait of one aspect of the work of the 
archaeological community of this country.
D.M. Wii son 
April 1986
S
Description:Archaeology has made exciting progress in Britain in the past forty years. Aerial photography, large-scale excavations, analytical techniques and new forms of dating have produced a wealth of fresh information and inspired radical interpretations. This book explores the ways in which archaeology sin