This volume presents the results of the zooarchaeological analysis of animal bones that were recovered from sixteen sites in Ipswich between 1974 and 1988. The focus of the study is on the animal bones from Middle Saxon (700-850/880), Early Late Saxon (850/880-920), Middle Late Saxon (920-1000) and Early Medieval (1000-1150) sites that were part of the Origins of Ipswich project.The faunal assemblages from all four periods were composed primarily of cattle, caprines (sheep and goats), pigs, and domestic chickens. Horses were few in number and do not seem to have formed part of the diet after the Middle Saxon period. In terms of NISP (Number of Identified Specimens Per taxon), cattle are always the most numerous animals, followed by pigs and then caprines, but the relative number of sheep and goats increases throughout the Middle Saxon, Late Saxon and Medieval periods. Domestic chickens greatly outnumber domestic geese in all periods. Wild birds and mammals are rare in all the Ipswich assemblages. The most common wild species are red deer (Cervus elaphus) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus). Biometrical data show that the Middle Saxon cattle are comparable in size to the cattle from other Middle Saxon emporia in England. These data also suggest that fewer oxen were sent to market in the later periods and that there was a slight overall decrease in the size of cattle by the Early Medieval period. The Middle Saxon sheep from Ipswich are small and comparable in size to the Middle Saxon sheep from rural East Anglian sites such as Brandon in Suffolk. All the Ipswich horses are the size of large ponies; most are between 130 and 140cm (about 13-14 hands) in withers height. The dog remains from the Late Saxon and Early Medieval contexts in Ipswich include dogs of a range of different sizes. The smallest are about 30cm at the withers; the largest are about 50cm in shoulder height. Ageing data indicate that Ipswich was supplied with market-aged and older adult cattle, sheep and pigs. Elderly animals and very young animals are rare. These data suggest that the inhabitants of Ipswich obtained their meat from markets throughout the Middle Saxon, Late Saxon and Early Medieval periods.
At the top of the settlement hierarchy is the royal palace at Yeavering in Northumberland (Hope-Taylor 1977). The site was discovered through aerial photography in 1949 and subsequently excavated by Brian Hope-Taylor between 1953 and ...
Both smithies at Hamwic, as I have noted, were located on the major north–south street. ... 29 As Hamwic shows, trade and industrial ironwork did not invariably go together. ... 25 Andrews, Excavations at Hamwic, p. 225.
... Ipswich. His crucial interest in the school is likely to have arisen from ... provision the king's ships; this led to Felaw serving (with the Archbishop of ... provisioning ships and supplying materials for his building projects, and ...
Professor Mark Bailey and David Dymond have been my guides and mentors through all these years. ... both at its Bury St Edmunds and Ipswich offices, and of the Suffolk Archaeology Service have invariably been courteous and helpful.
... Animals in Saxon and Scandinavian England: Backbones. Reports, British Series 242. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. Hodges, Richard. 1982. Dark Age Economics: The Origins of Towns and Trade, AD 600–1000. London: Duckworth. Hodges ...
In this regard, there survives an illuminating exchange between a Cambridgeshire justice of the peace, Robert Beaumont, and William Cecil in an earlier scarcity year, 1565, when there was an official prohibition on the export of grain.
Thus around 2,000 sacks of wool were exported annually from Ipswich in the early fourteenth century, but hardly any cloth, compared with only about 1,000 sacks two centuries later and about 2,000 broadcloths. The rapid growth of textile ...
... Ipswich, U.K., [email protected], http://www.labs.bt.com/projects/mware/ 8. Bob Briscoe, Mike Rizzo, JÈrÙme Tassel, Konstantinos Damianakis, Lightweight Policing and Charging for Packet Networks, IEEE Openarch 2000, Tel Aviv, March ...
An overview of a wide range of aspects of maritime social history in the Tudor and early Stuart period.
Hall 1971 : Edward Hall , La dimension cachée , 1971 . Hall 1984 : Edward Hall , Le langage silencieux , 1984 . Lebecq 1983 : Stéphane Lebecq , Marchands et navigateurs frisons dans les mers du nord au haut moyen âge , Lille 1983 .