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A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet Improvements
A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet improvements TR010044 Volume 6 6.12 Archaeological Mitigation Strategy Planning Act 2008 Regulation 5(2)(a) Infrastructure Planning (Applications: Prescribed Forms and Procedure) Regulations 2009 26 February 2021 PCF XXX PRODUCT NAME | VERSION 1.0 | 25 SEPTEMBER 2013 | 5124654 A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet improvements Archaeological Mitigation Strategy Infrastructure Planning Planning Act 2008 The Infrastructure Planning (Applications: Prescribed Forms and Procedure) Regulations 2009 A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet Improvement Scheme Development Consent Order 202[ ] Archaeological Mitigation Strategy Regulation Number Regulation 5(2)(a) Planning Inspectorate Scheme TR010044 Reference Application Document Reference TR010044/APP/6.12 Author A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet improvements Project Team, Highways England Version Date Status of Version Rev 1 26 February 2021 DCO Application Planning Inspectorate Scheme Ref: TR010044 Application Document Ref: TR010044/APP/6.12 A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet improvements Archaeological Mitigation Strategy Table of contents Chapter Pages 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Project background 1 1.2 Overview of the document 1 1.3 Status of this document 2 1.4 The strategy of the document 2 1.5 Roles and responsibilities 2 1.6 Policy and guidance 3 1.7 Structure of document 4 2 Purpose and objectives 6 2.1 Purpose of document 6 2.2 Objectives 6 2.3 Aims of specific intervention types 7 3 Archaeological background 9 3.1 Introduction 9 3.2 Aerial photography and LiDAR 9 3.3 Geophysical -
Eastern Region
Eastern region Initial proposals Contents Initial proposals summary .............................................................................. 3 1. What is the Boundary Commission for England? ........... 5 2. Background to the 2013 Review ...................................................... 6 3. Initial proposals for the Eastern region .................................... 9 Initial proposals for the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire sub-region ............................ 10 Initial proposals for the Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk sub-region ................ 12 Initial proposals for the Essex sub-region ............................................................................... 13 4. How to have your say ................................................................................. 16 Annex: Initial proposals for constituencies, including wards and electorates ........................................................................................ 19 Glossary ............................................................................................................................ 3 9 Initial proposals summary Who we are and what we do region is determined by the electorate of the combined local authorities. The Boundary Commission for England is an independent and impartial non-departmental public body which is responsible for reviewing Sub-region Existing Proposed Parliamentary constituency boundaries in allocation allocation England. Bedfordshire and 17 16 Hertfordshire 2013 Review Cambridgeshire, 23 23 We have the -
Work and the Adolescent in Medieval England (AD 900-1550): the Osteological Evidence
Work and the adolescent in medieval England (AD 900-1550): the osteological evidence Article Accepted Version Lewis, M. (2016) Work and the adolescent in medieval England (AD 900-1550): the osteological evidence. Medieval Archaeology, 60 (1). pp. 138-171. ISSN 0076-6097 doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/00766097.2016.1147787 Available at http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/50828/ It is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from the work. See Guidance on citing . To link to this article DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00766097.2016.1147787 Publisher: Taylor & Francis All outputs in CentAUR are protected by Intellectual Property Rights law, including copyright law. Copyright and IPR is retained by the creators or other copyright holders. Terms and conditions for use of this material are defined in the End User Agreement . www.reading.ac.uk/centaur CentAUR Central Archive at the University of Reading Reading’s research outputs online Work and the Adolescent in Medieval England (AD 900-1550). The osteological evidence. By Mary Lewis, University of Reading1 ABSTRACT WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO BE A TEENAGER IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND? Despite the fact that medieval society often singled young apprentices and workers out for comment, their study has been largely neglected in medieval archaeology. The skeletal remains of 4940 adolescents (6.6-25 years) from 151 sites in medieval England was compiled from a combination of primary data collection and secondary data from published and unpublished skeletal reports and on-line databases. The aim was to explore whether apprentices could be identified in the archaeological record and if so, at what age they started work and what impact occupation had on their health. -
Local Election Results 2006
Local Election Results May 2006 Andrew Teale July 29, 2013 2 LOCAL ELECTION RESULTS 2006 Typeset by LATEX Compilation and design © Andrew Teale, 2011. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”. This file is available for download from http://www.andrewteale.me.uk/ The LATEX source code is available for download at http://www.andrewteale.me.uk/pdf/2006/2006-source.zip Please advise the author of any corrections which need to be made by email: [email protected] Change Log 29 July 2013: Corrected gain information for Derby. Chaddesden ward was a Labour hold; Chellaston ward was a Labour gain from Conservative. 23 June 2013: Corrected result for Plymouth, Southway. The result previously shown was for a June 2006 by-election. Contents I London Boroughs 11 1 North London 12 1.1 Barking and Dagenham....................... 12 1.2 Barnet.................................. 14 1.3 Brent.................................. 17 1.4 Camden................................ 20 1.5 Ealing.................................. 23 1.6 Enfield................................. 26 1.7 Hackney................................ 28 1.8 Hammersmith and Fulham...................... 31 1.9 Haringey................................ 33 1.10 Harrow................................. 36 1.11 Havering................................ 39 1.12 Hillingdon............................... 42 1.13 Hounslow............................... 45 1.14 Islington................................ 47 1.15 Kensington and Chelsea....................... 50 1.16 Newham................................ 52 1.17 Redbridge............................... 56 1.18 Tower Hamlets........................... -
Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume LXX, 1980 a Handlist of the Publications of W
Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume LXX, 1980 A Handlist of the Publications of W. M. Palmer, M.D., F.S.A., Part I J. D. Pickles Prehistoric Finds from the Central Fenland Gillian Watson Excavations at Dry Drayton, Cambridgeshire M.F. Sekulla A Re-interpretation of Chippenham Barrow 5, with a discussion of the Baker-Associated Pottery A. M. Gibson An Iron Age Sword and Scabbard from Isleham I. M. Stead, A. P. Hartwell, J. R. S. Lang , S. C. La Niece and N. D. Meeks A Romano-British Village at Grandford, March T. W. Potter and C. F. Potter Cambridgeshire Earthworks Surveys: IV A. E. Brown and C. C. Taylor A Register of Schools and Schoolmasters in the County of Cambridge. 1574-1700 Elizabeth Key Adventures of a Screen: Inigo Jones in Winchester and Cambridge J. M. G. Blakiston The Inheritors of Barnwell Priory P. V. Danckwerts Notes: A Barbed Spearhead from Barway, Cambridge David Coombs A Seventeenth-century Bell at Guyhirn C. M. G. Ockelton Review: The Cartularies and Registers of Peterborough Abbey, by Janet D. Martin Marjorie Chibnall Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society Volume LXXI, 1981 The Cambridge Antiquarian Society’s Collections, 2 John Pickles The Ml I Western By-pass: Three Sites near Cambridge 1. Obelisk Kims, Harston Joyce Pullinger and C. J. Young 2. Lingey Fen, Haslingfield Joyce Pullinger, Veryan Heal and A. J. Legge 3. Edmundsoles, Haslingfield T. F. and M. Miller Two Radio-carbon Dates from the Cremation Pit at Pusgate, near Barnack Francis Pryor A Buried Peat Band at Manea, Cambs David Hall and Roy Switsur 1 Romano-British Salt Production on the Western Fen-edge: a Re-assessment David Gurney A Saxon Glass Beaker from Dry Drayton, Cambs D. -
Huntingdonshire Annual Demographic and Socio-Economic Report
Huntingdonshire Annual demographic and socio-economic report April 2011 Executive summary This report presents the latest available information on the demographic and socio-economic make-up of Huntingdonshire. It investigates Huntingdonshire’s population structure and composition; presents information on housing and the economic background; and discusses crime, health, education, and environment information pertaining to the area. Links are provided to other relevant reports and data sources. Data used in this report has been collected from local and national level sources, and is presented at ward, district or county level for comparative purposes where relevant. Main highlights of the report are: • The Cambridgeshire County Council Research Group (CCCRG) mid-2009 population estimate for Huntingdonshire is 164,600. The population has increased by 5% since 2001 and it is forecast to increase by a further 7% by 2031. • Huntingdonshire has the highest proportion of its residents aged 40-64 of all the districts. In future, its age structure is forecast to age, with all age groups younger than 64 decreasing as proportions of total population and all older age groups increasing. • CCCRG estimates the number of households in 2009 as 69,300. This represents 10% growth since 2001 and is forecast to increase by a further 18% by 2031. • Huntingdonshire has the second lowest average house price in the county. Between Jun-Nov 2002 and Jun-Nov 2010 house prices increased by 84%. • 80% of Huntingdonshire’s working age is economically active. In December 2010 the Jobseekers’ Allowance claimant count unemployment rate was 2% compared to a national level of 3.5%. -
A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon Improvement Scheme Environmental Statement Appendices Appendix
A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme Environmental Statement Appendices Appendix 9.1: A14 cultural heritage gazetteer Date: December 2014 6.3 Page left intentionally blank. A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon improvement scheme Environmental Statement Appendices Table 9.1: A14 gazetteer Note: Information in the gazetteer includes data provided by the Cambridgeshire Historic Environment Record and taken from the National Heritage List. This has been collated from a number of sources, including antiquarian references and personal communications; as a result the gazetteer includes a number of items where there are questions in the notes, or measurements are presented in Imperial units. The data is presented as provided and has not been edited. Asset number 3 Asset name Bronze Age beaker fragments, Milton Grid reference TL 47000 62000 Subtopic Archaeological remains EH reference HER reference 05532 Designation None Value Low Description Fragments of a finger-pinched rusticated Bronze Age beaker were discovered at Milton. Now in the CAAM. [1] References [1] Local Historic Environment Record (HER) Asset number 5 Asset name Prehistoric and Roman features, Cambridge Science Park Grid reference TL 46600 62100 Subtopic Archaeological remains EH reference HER reference MCB17525 Designation None Value Low Description An evaluation recorded a range of features spanning the Late Bronze Age to post medieval periods. The earliest features were located in the north east part of the site, and consisted of a pit containing a single, and perhaps residual, Neolithic flake, and a further pit containing small quantities of Late Bronze Age/early Iron Age pottery. A small Romano-British ditch was also recorded in this area. -
Boundary Commission Vol 2
Boundary Commission for England The 2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries Volume two: Constituency names, designations and composition September 2018 Boundary Commission for England The 2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries Presented to Parliament pursuant to section 3(5) of the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 © Crown copyright 2018 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3 Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at www.gov.uk/government/publications Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to us at [email protected] ISBN 978-1-5286-0679-0 CCS0418486376 09/18 Printed on paper containing 75% recycled fibre content minimum Printed in the UK by the APS Group on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office The 2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries: Volume two Contents Eastern 5 East Midlands 37 London 63 North East 83 North West 93 South East 121 South West 163 West Midlands 193 Yorkshire and the Humber 217 1 The 2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries: Volume Two The 2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituencies Volume two: Constituency names, designations and composition About the 2018 Review The Boundary Commission for England is an independent and impartial non-departmental public body responsible for reviewing Parliamentary constituency boundaries in England. In 2016 we began a review of all the Parliamentary constituencies in England on the basis of rules set in the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 (as amended). -
THE ARCHIVE of BERMONDSEY ABBEY Readers of the Monastic Research Bulletin Will Be Familiar with the English Monastic Archives Pr
THE ARCHIVE OF BERMONDSEY ABBEY Readers of the Monastic Research Bulletin will be familiar with the English Monastic Archives Project, on which a progress report was published in the last issue. It is my purpose here to provide readers with a concrete demonstration of how a well-scattered archive can be reconstructed using our database, for which I have chosen the example of Bermondsey Abbey in Surrey. The abbey of Bermondsey was founded as a dependent priory of the Cluniac monastery of La Charité-sur-Loire (in Nevers) in the late eleventh century, allegedly by King William Rufus. It asserted its independence of its mother house in 1381, when it secured a charter of denization from King Richard II, who was also responsible for its elevation to the status of abbey in 1399. Patronised by several English kings, the abbey housed a relic of the Holy Rood, which attracted many pilgrims to its magnificent church. Its substantial buildings made it a suitable venue for large assemblies and councils of state, particularly in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and in the fifteenth century two dowager queens retired to the royal lodgings within its precinct to spend their last months.1 Bermondsey could thus justly claim to have been an important urban monastery. There is, however, little evidence of its former splendour today, its church and monastic buildings having been pulled down soon after its dissolution in 1538. Its archive suffered a similar fate; it was broken up with its estates and dispersed at that same time, and much of it was believed to have been lost. -
Local Election Results 2008
Local Election Results May 2008 Andrew Teale August 15, 2016 2 LOCAL ELECTION RESULTS 2008 Typeset by LATEX Compilation and design © Andrew Teale, 2012. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”. This file, together with its LATEX source code, is available for download from http://www.andrewteale.me.uk/leap/ Please advise the author of any corrections which need to be made by email: [email protected] Contents Introduction and Abbreviations9 I Greater London Authority 11 1 Mayor of London 12 2 Greater London Assembly Constituency Results 13 3 Greater London Assembly List Results 16 II Metropolitan Boroughs 19 4 Greater Manchester 20 4.1 Bolton.................................. 20 4.2 Bury.................................... 21 4.3 Manchester............................... 23 4.4 Oldham................................. 25 4.5 Rochdale................................ 27 4.6 Salford................................. 28 4.7 Stockport................................ 29 4.8 Tameside................................. 31 4.9 Trafford................................. 32 4.10 Wigan.................................. 34 5 Merseyside 36 5.1 Knowsley................................ 36 5.2 Liverpool................................ 37 5.3 Sefton.................................. 39 5.4 St Helens................................. 41 5.5 Wirral.................................. 43 6 South Yorkshire 45 6.1 Barnsley................................ 45 6.2 Doncaster............................... 47 6.3 Rotherham............................... 48 6.4 Sheffield................................ 50 3 4 LOCAL ELECTION RESULTS 2008 7 Tyne and Wear 53 7.1 Gateshead............................... 53 7.2 Newcastle upon Tyne........................ -
The Monastic Research Bulletin, Consolidated Bibliography (PDF
MONASTIC RESEARCH BULLETIN: BIBLIOGRAPHY 2003-2008 A. Abram Norton Priory: An Augustinian Community and its Benefactors, Trivium, Occasional Papers, No. 2 (2007) ‘The Augustinian Priory of Wombridge and its Benefactors in the Later Middle Ages’, in Monasteries and Society in the British Isles in the Later Middle Ages, ed. J. Burton and K. Stöber (Woodbridge, 2008), pp. 83-94 K. Addison ‘Changing Places: The Cistercian Settlement and Rapid Climate Change in Britain’, in A Place to Believe In: Locating Medieval Landscapes, ed. C. Lees & G. Overing (Pennsylvania, 2006), pp. 211-38 M. Alexander ‘Excavation of Medieval Burials associated with St Neots Priory’, Proceedings & E. Popescu of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, 94 (2005), pp. 117-26 J. Allan ‘The Excavation of a Brewhouse at Buckland Abbey in 2005’, Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Society, 64 (2006), pp. 241-65 J. Allan & G. Young ‘The Refectory Range of Kerswell Priory’, Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Society, 64 (2006), pp. 149-92 D. Allen ‘A Newly-Discovered Survival from the Muniments of Maud of Lancaster’s Chantry College at Bruisyard’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology, 41 (2006), pp. 151-74 F. Andrews, The Other Friars: the Carmelite, Augustinian, Sack and Pied Friars in the Middle Ages (Woodbridge, 2006) G. Astill, S. Hirst ‘The Bordesley Abbey Project Reviewed’, Archaeological Journal, 161 & S. M. Wright (2005 for 2004), pp. 106-58 M. Aston ‘An Archipelago in Central Somerset: the origins of Muchelney Abbey’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 150 (2007), pp. 63-71 T. Ayers & T. Medieval Art, Architecture and Archaeology at Rochester, British Tatton Brown (eds) Archaeological Association Conference Transaction Series, 28 (2006) D. -
T ESTATES OP TE GLARE FAMILY, 1066-1317 Jennifer Clare W&Rd
T ESTATES OP TE GLARE FAMILY, 1066-1317 Jennifer Clare W&rd. Q7 17DEC1962 .2 THE ESTATP OP THE CURE FANILY, 1066 - 1317. ABSTRACT Throughout the early Middle Ages, the Clare earls of Hertford and. Gloucester were prominent figures on the political scene. Their position as baronial leaders was derived from their landed wealth, and was built up gradually over two hundred and fifty years. Richard I de Clare arrived in England in 1066 as a Norman adventurer, and was granted the honours of Tonbridge and Clare. The family more than doubled its laths during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, mainly by inheritance, the greatest acquisition being the honour of Gloucester in 1217. Only in the first half of the twelfth century was the honour an autonomous unit. In the honour of Clare, the earls relied on their own tenants as officials in the twelfth century, but in the thirteenth the administration was professional and bureaucratic. The earl's relations with his sub-tenants are unknown before the early fourteenth century; then, in contrast to other estates, the Clare honour-court was busy, strong and fairly efficient. In contrast to the honours of Clare and Gloucester, held of the king in chief, Tonbridge was held of the archbishop of Canterbury, and the relationship between archbishop and earl was the subject of several disputes. As to franchises, the earl exercised the highest which he possessed in England at Tonbridge; elsewhere he appropriated franchises on a large scale during the Barons' Wars of 1258-1265, but most of these were surrendered as a result of Edward I's quo warranto proceedings.