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An in-depth analysis of the landscape history of the coast of Lincolnshire.
An expert exploration of the history of professional arboriculture in Britain from the Roman period to the present day.
A lavishly illustrated volume exploring the historic bridges of Buckinghamshire: their structure, history and chronology.
A revised and updated second-edition exploration of hillforts.
A highly illustrated synthesis of 500 years of occupation of the Iron Age to Roman town of Calleva (Silchester).
Recent archaeological and historical research into the 'lost' Anglo-Saxon Pecsaetna people.
Ancient Trees in the Landscape is the outcome of many years research into the history of trees in Norfolk, and represents the first detailed, published account of the ancient and traditionally managed trees of any English county. Yet it is far more than a regional survey. It is an exploration of how trees can be studied as part of the landscape. It discusses how accurately trees can be dated; explains why old trees are found in certain contexts and not in others; discusses traditional management practices and how these changed over time; and looks at the various ways in which trees have been used in parks and gardens. Above all, it considers how trees were regarded by people in the past, and how this has affected their survival to the present. Ancient Trees in the Landscape is a fascinating and original study which sets out a new agenda in landscape history. It will be essential reading for countryside managers and conservationists, and for all those interested in landscape history, arboriculture, and the history of the English countryside.
A new assessment of early Christianity in south-west Britain from the 4th-10th centuries.
A critical re-appraisal of the dolmen in Britain, Ireland, and Scandinavia.
Presents a lively description of the early history and archaeology of the picturesque Kentish market town of Faversham.
Caroline Wickham-Jones provides a highly readable and informative overview of Orkney's archaeological heritage, illustrated with beautiful photography.
Castle studies have been transformed in recent years with a movement away from the traditional interpretation of castles as static military structures towards a wider view of castles as aesthetic symbols of power, with a more complicated relationship with the landscape.
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