Cadbury Castle, Somerset: The Early Medieval Archaeology
By (Author) Leslie Alcock
Other adaptation by S. J. Stevenson
Other adaptation by C. R. Musson
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
26th May 1995
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Archaeology by period / region
942.38901
Hardback
198
Width 210mm, Height 297mm
It was already recognized before excavation began that Cadbury Castle ran from the neolithic to the early 11th century AD. This illustrated report is concerned with only part of the overall time-span - the early medieval period. From the 5th and 6th centuries, at a time of considerable political upheaval, with emergent Celtic kingdoms contending over the ruins of Roman Britain, and Anglo-Saxon settlers advancing into the Upper Thames valley, the derelict Cadbury hill-fort was reoccupied and refortified. In the 11th century, Cadbury was used to protect Ethelred and his son Edmund in the face of Viking ravaging and ultimate conquest. The book provides a descriptive account of the structural remains from this period uncovered in the excavations; a catalogue of the artefacts recovered; and an attempt to set the early medieval archaeology in wider historical contexts. Leslie Alcock has also written "Arthur's Britain".
" . . . the definitive report on a key site for the archaeology and history of Dark Age Britain and, to a lesser extent, of eleventh-century England." -English Historical Review
-- "English Historical Review"Leslie Alcock FRSE was Professor of Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, and one of the leading archaeologists of Early Mediaeval Britain.