Just Skin and Bones?: New Perspectives on Human-animal Relations in the Historical PastAleksander Pluskowski Archaeopress, 2005 - 112 pages This volume of nine papers is derived from two sessions focusing on current research in British zooarchaeology; the first of which took place on Wednesday 17th October 2003, at the meeting of the Theoretical Archaeology Group in Lampeter, entitled 'Just Skin and Bones? New Perspectives on Human-Animal Relations in the Historical Past'; and the second of which took place on Thursday the 9th September 2004, at the annual meeting of the Association of European Archaeologists in Lyon, entitled 'Advancing Zooarchaeology - Beyond Socio-Economics in Faunal Research'. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 13
Page 69
... royal residence of the 7th to 10th centuries AD ' , Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy , 53 , 1-247 . Hines , J. ( 1997 ) . A New Corpus of Anglo - Saxon Great Square - Headed Brooches , Woodbridge , Reports of the Research ...
... royal residence of the 7th to 10th centuries AD ' , Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy , 53 , 1-247 . Hines , J. ( 1997 ) . A New Corpus of Anglo - Saxon Great Square - Headed Brooches , Woodbridge , Reports of the Research ...
Page 82
... royal forests ( see below ) . Since these traps represented a hazard to both human and animal health , it was useful to know their whereabouts in the landscape . Sometimes this was a legal obligation ; the mid - fourteenth century ...
... royal forests ( see below ) . Since these traps represented a hazard to both human and animal health , it was useful to know their whereabouts in the landscape . Sometimes this was a legal obligation ; the mid - fourteenth century ...
Page 86
... royal attempts to control them are sparse . The forest documentation is interesting , not least because it provides some details on wolf hunting and depredations , but also because it offers an insight into medieval wolf biogeography ...
... royal attempts to control them are sparse . The forest documentation is interesting , not least because it provides some details on wolf hunting and depredations , but also because it offers an insight into medieval wolf biogeography ...
Contents
Red Deers Role in Social Expression on the Isles of Scotland | 9 |
The Analysis of Bone and Antler Combs | 41 |
Zooarchaeological Evidence for Medieval Identity | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Albarella Anglo Anglo-Saxon Cemetery animal accessory vessels animal bones animal remains animal sacrifice animal stamps Antiquaries of Scotland antler Archaeological artefacts assemblages associated bridle Britain Broughton Lodge butchery Cambridge Castle cats cattle bones century chambered cairns cheek-bar bit Chesterford cinerary urns contexts cremation cultural decoration deposits domestic early Anglo-Saxon early medieval England Eriswell evidence example Excavations exploitation fallow deer faunal Figure fish vertebrae Forest forthcoming Gilded copper-alloy grave harness horse burial human hunting identified identity Inner Hebrides Iron Age Kent landscape Linton Heath Little Wilbraham London Maltby meat medieval and post-medieval medieval period mount scale 1/1 Myres Neolithic Noddle Norman Oexle Orkney Outer Hebrides Oxford patterns pets Pluskowski post-Conquest red deer rituals Roman Romano-British rosaries saddle Saltwood Sancton Saxon Scandinavia settlement sheep/goat social Society of Antiquaries Spong Hill Suffolk suggest Sutton Hoo Sutton Hoo 17 symbolic University Press Valsgärde vertebrae whilst wolf wolves zooarchaeological zooarchaeology