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September October 2011 Number 120 Published August 12
Archaeology British
THE VOICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY IN BRITAIN AND BEYOND
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News
Letters
My archaeology
Greg Bailey / Phase 2
The Roman road that was
Science
Archaeology: win or lose
Sacred waters
Manga at the museum
Pictish power
7 societies
Stones and names
Mick’s travels
Books
Briefing
CBA correspondent
Spoilheap
Gold in Scotland and swords in England
Detectorists are not all bad
Norman Hammond, archaeologist and journalist
Planet of the Apemen searches for a voice
Prehistoric Britain had metalled roads – the evidence
Sebastian Payne says archaeologists should copy Pitt Rivers
The future looks bleak, but the best may be yet to come
Jim Leary and David Field consider neolithic religion
Japanese professor in British Museum mystery
Rhynie: the Aberdeenshire dig that found a lost kingdom
A review of our regional archaeological societies
The search for the archaeology of Anglo-Saxon assemblies
Mick Aston celebrates the life and work of Philip Rahtz
Great digs, Roman mosaics and Anglo-Saxon metalwork
Fieldwork, courses, local CBA contacts and exhibitions
Mike Heyworth plans for the future
Getting into the papers (for the right reasons)
FIRST SIGHT This hare (62mm long) would have been held from its ankles by a hunter in a ceramic figure group. It is of unglazed Parian body developed by Copeland & Garret and Minton in the 1830s and 40s for popular small-scale copies of statues. It was excavated at Brill Place, Camden, by Museum of London Archaeology in a drain belonging to houses cleared as slums in the mid 19th century. Photo Andy Chopping
As a boy I understood perfectly that history is not something apart from us, sealed off. It is in our blood, our music, our language, the buildings we pass on the way to work. Novelist Andrew Miller introducing his list of top historical fiction, which begins with Rosemary Sutcliff’s Eagle of the Ninth, on guardian.co.uk, June 29
British Archaeology|September October 2011|5

