The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery

The primary aim of this thesis is to contextualise the 19th century excavation of the Anglian cemetery at Uncleby, East Yorkshire by Canon William Greenwell. The site is important for our understanding of Anglo-Saxon England; it dates to the transition to Christianity, and it contains a number of un...

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Main Author: Hansen, Abigail
Other Authors: Richards, Julian
Published: University of York 2017
Subjects:
930
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745768
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7457682019-03-05T15:29:19ZThe revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemeteryHansen, AbigailRichards, Julian2017The primary aim of this thesis is to contextualise the 19th century excavation of the Anglian cemetery at Uncleby, East Yorkshire by Canon William Greenwell. The site is important for our understanding of Anglo-Saxon England; it dates to the transition to Christianity, and it contains a number of unusual burial forms and grave goods, most famously a whetstone which has been compared to the example from Sutton Hoo. However, information about the discoveries was not made available until 1912, when R.A. Smith presented a paper to the Society of Antiquaries of London. To date this remains the most detailed account of the site, and the excavations have never been properly published. The remaining archive and the recovered objects from the excavation, most of which can be found in the Yorkshire Museum, have provided the basis of this research. By using the objects and contemporary sources, the findings of the excavation and relevant material are presented in detail for the first time, and a full artefact and grave catalogue has been produced, and a major new geophysical survey of the site has been conducted. The object catalogue and the survey have informed a new discussion of the site and its significance. Furthermore, this thesis highlights a neglected source of information in the archaeological record: antiquarian excavations. In the 19th century countless sites were excavated by amateur archaeologists and antiquarians, many of which have become lost in museum collections. By utilizing these sites and making the data available, researchers have access to new datasets that have the potential to provide new knowledge.930University of Yorkhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745768http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20518/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 930
spellingShingle 930
Hansen, Abigail
The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
description The primary aim of this thesis is to contextualise the 19th century excavation of the Anglian cemetery at Uncleby, East Yorkshire by Canon William Greenwell. The site is important for our understanding of Anglo-Saxon England; it dates to the transition to Christianity, and it contains a number of unusual burial forms and grave goods, most famously a whetstone which has been compared to the example from Sutton Hoo. However, information about the discoveries was not made available until 1912, when R.A. Smith presented a paper to the Society of Antiquaries of London. To date this remains the most detailed account of the site, and the excavations have never been properly published. The remaining archive and the recovered objects from the excavation, most of which can be found in the Yorkshire Museum, have provided the basis of this research. By using the objects and contemporary sources, the findings of the excavation and relevant material are presented in detail for the first time, and a full artefact and grave catalogue has been produced, and a major new geophysical survey of the site has been conducted. The object catalogue and the survey have informed a new discussion of the site and its significance. Furthermore, this thesis highlights a neglected source of information in the archaeological record: antiquarian excavations. In the 19th century countless sites were excavated by amateur archaeologists and antiquarians, many of which have become lost in museum collections. By utilizing these sites and making the data available, researchers have access to new datasets that have the potential to provide new knowledge.
author2 Richards, Julian
author_facet Richards, Julian
Hansen, Abigail
author Hansen, Abigail
author_sort Hansen, Abigail
title The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
title_short The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
title_full The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
title_fullStr The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
title_full_unstemmed The revival of Uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an Anglian cemetery
title_sort revival of uncleby : an antiquarian excavation of an anglian cemetery
publisher University of York
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745768
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