Journal of Roman Pottery Studies Volume 20 -

Journal of Roman Pottery Studies Volume 20

Eniko Hudak, Jane Evans (Herausgeber)

Buch | Softcover
160 Seiten
2023
Casemate Publishers (Verlag)
979-8-88857-034-0 (ISBN)
56,10 inkl. MwSt
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Volume 20 focuses on recent advances in methodological approaches and new initiatives and their applications and implications and presents new studies on pottery production sites.
The new volume of the long-running Journal of Roman Pottery Studies will include conference proceedings of the 2019 conference held at Atherstone, Warwickshire, and the 50th anniversary conference of the Study Group for Roman Pottery held online with Newcastle University. Papers reflect on recent advances in methodological approaches and their applications, the past and future role of the society and new initiatives in archiving policies and their implications. It will also contain a number of papers outside these conferences that focus on pottery production, notably of colour-coated wares in Lincoln and in the province of Noricum, as well as a report on the glass working furnace discovered alongside the pottery production kilns at Mancetter-Hartshill. Book reviews and obituaries are also included.

Eniko Hudak is an Archaeology PhD candidate at Newcastle University researching the nature of the Romano-British economy through the distribution of Roman pottery. He also worked as a Roman pottery specialist in the commercial sector for nearly a decade and has expertise in the ceramics of London and research interests in mortaria and amphorae. Jane Evans works for Worcester Archaeology and specialises in Roman pottery.

Editorial Board
Contributors to this Journal
Editorial
Obituaries
Margaret Jane Darling, MPhil FSA MIfA (1939–2021) by Ian M. Rowlandson
Roberta Sylvia Tomber (1954–2022) by Jane Timby
Paul Bidwell, OBE LLB MA FSA MIfA (19 June 1949–5 November 2022) by Alexandra Croom and William Griffiths
1. Glass-working at Mancetter-Hartshill
Caroline M. Jackson
2. Fifty years (or perhaps 49) of the Study Group for Roman Pottery
Christopher Young
3. Article 3: Reflections on the past and considerations for the future on the objectives of the SGRP
Fiona Seeley
4. Why study Roman pottery? Surely the men have done it already!
Kayt Hawkins
5. National initiatives in archaeological archiving
Duncan H. Brown
6. Pure and sample: An assessment of the impacts of sampling on the interpretation of a Roman pottery assemblage from the A14C2H excavations
Lanah Hewson
7. Means to an end: The use of average sherd weights and rim percentages to better understand ceramic fragmentation and deposition patterns
Edward Biddulph
8. Communities of practice in 2nd–5th century AD pottery production: A case study from south-western Noricum, Austria
Barbara Borgers and Martin Auer
9. A late Roman ‘Nene Valley colour-coated ware’ kiln site beside the River Witham at Lincoln in 2009
Hugh G. Fiske and Ian M. Rowlandson
10. Reviews
Life in Roman and Medieval Leicester: Excavations in the town’s north-east quarter, 1958–2006 (2021) by Richard Buckley, Nicholas J. Cooper and Mathew Morris
Reviewed by Steven Willis
Late Roman Dorset Black-Burnished Ware (BB1): a corpus of forms and their distribution in southern Britain, on the Continent and in the Channel Islands (2022) by Malcolm Lyne
Reviewed by James Gerrard and Eniko Hudak
Résumés (Abstracts in French) translated by Sophie Chavarria
Zusammenfassungen (Abstracts in German) translated by Franziska Dövener

Erscheinungsdatum
Sprache englisch
Maße 210 x 297 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Archäologie
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Vor- und Frühgeschichte
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Altertum / Antike
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
ISBN-13 979-8-88857-034-0 / 9798888570340
Zustand Neuware
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von Harald Haarmann

Buch | Hardcover (2023)
C.H.Beck (Verlag)
20,00