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Artefacts in Roman Britain

Artefacts in Roman Britain

Artefacts in Roman Britain

Their Purpose and Use
Lindsay Allason-Jones, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
February 2011
Available
Paperback
9780521677523
£30.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    Roman Britain has given us an enormous number of artefacts. Yet few books available today deal with its whole material culture as represented by these artefacts. This introduction, aimed primarily at students and general readers, begins by explaining the process of identifying objects of any period or material. A series of themed chapters, written by experts in their particular area of interest, then discusses artefacts from the point of view of their use. The contributors' premise is that every object was designed for a particular purpose, which may have been to satisfy a general need or the specific need of an individual. If the latter, the maker, the owner and the end user may have been one and the same person; if the former, the manufacturer had to provide objects that others would wish to purchase or exchange. Understanding this reveals a fascinating picture of life in Roman Britain.

    • Presents the finds from Roman Britain according to their purpose and uses them to illuminate our understanding of everyday life
    • Explains the theory and practice of identifying finds
    • Designed to be accessible and appealing to the undergraduate and the general reader who wishes to know more about the numerous objects recovered from the archaeological sites and landscapes of Roman Britain

    Product details

    February 2011
    Paperback
    9780521677523
    376 pages
    246 × 174 × 17 mm
    0.73kg
    80 b/w illus. 3 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Lindsay Allason-Jones
    • 1. Commerce Richard Brickstock
    • 2. Transport Nina Crummy
    • 3. Industry W. H. Manning
    • 4. Agriculture Sîan Rees
    • 5. Military life M. C. Bishop
    • 6. Writing and communication R. S. O. Tomlin
    • 7. Domestic life Quita Mould
    • 8. Lighting and heating Hella Eckhardt
    • 9. Personal ornament Ellen Swift
    • 10. Recreation Lindsay Allason-Jones
    • 11. Medicine and hygiene Ralph Jackson
    • 12. Religion Joanna Bird
    • 13. Funerary rites Hilary Cool.
      Contributors
    • Lindsay Allason-Jones, Richard Brickstock, Nina Crummy, W. H. Manning, Sîan Rees, M. C. Bishop, R. S. O. Tomlin, Quita Mould, Hella Eckhardt, Ellen Swift, Ralph Jackson, Joanna Bird, Hilary Cool

    • Editor
    • Lindsay Allason-Jones , University of Newcastle upon Tyne

      Lindsay Allason-Jones is Director of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Artefact Studies and Reader in Roman Material Culture at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, and has published eight books and over a hundred academic papers on themes related to the archaeology of the Roman Empire. She is the author of two previous textbooks, Women in Roman Britain and Daily Life in Roman Britain.