Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent

Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent

09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent Anglo-Saxon England View Online 1. Campbell, James, John, Eric, Wormald, Patrick: The Anglo-Saxons. Phaidon, Oxford (1982). 2. Blair, John: The Anglo-Saxon age: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press, New York (2000). 3. Yorke, Barbara: The Anglo-Saxons. Sutton, Stroud (1999). 4. Whitelock, Dorothy: The beginnings of English society. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1965). 5. A companion to the early Middle Ages: Britain and Ireland c.500-1100. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2009). 6. Blair, Peter Hunter: An introduction to Anglo-Saxon England. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1977). 1/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 7. Campbell, James, John, Eric, Wormald, Patrick: The Anglo-Saxons. Phaidon, Oxford (1982). 8. Hill, D.: An atlas of Anglo-Saxon England. Blackwell, [Place of publication not identified] (1981). 9. International medieval bibliography. 10. S. Keynes: Anglo-Saxon England: A Bibliographical Handbook for Students of Anglo-Saxon History. resources. 11. Lapidge, Michael, Blair, John, Keynes, Simon, Scragg, Donald: The Blackwell encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Blackwelll Publishers, Oxford (1999). 12. Stenton, F M.: Anglo-Saxon England. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1971). 13. Whitelock, Dorothy, Douglas, David C.: English historical documents: Vol.1: c.500-1042 / edited by Dorothy Whitelock. O.U.P., London (1979). 14. Campbell, James, John, Eric, Wormald, Patrick: chapter 1 and 2. In: The Anglo-Saxons. 2/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent Phaidon, Oxford (1982). 15. Collins, Roger: Early medieval Europe, 300-1000. St. Martin’s Press, Basingstoke (1999). 16. Hill, C.: Roman Britain to Anglo-Saxon England. History Today. 40, (1990). 17. James, Edward: Britain in the first millennium. Hodder Arnold, London (2001). 18. Gildas: The ruin of Britain and other works. Phillimore, London (1978). 19. Nennius: British history, and, The Welsh annals; ed J Morris. Phillimore, [Place of publication not identified] (1980). 20. Bede, McClure, Judith, Collins, Roger, Bede, Bede: I.11-22. In: The ecclesiastical history of the English people: The greater chronicle. Bede’s letter to Egbert. Oxford University Press, New York (1994). 21. Whitelock, Dorothy: Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the years 380-495. In: The beginnings of English society. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1965). 22. 3/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent Esmonde Cleary, A. S.: The ending of Roman Britain. Batsford, London (1989). 23. Dark, S. P.: ’Palaeoecological Evidence for Landscape Continuity and Change in Britain c. AD 400-800. In: External contacts and the economy of late Roman and post-Roman Britain. Boydell Press, Woodbridge, Suffolk (1996). 24. Higham, Nicholas J.: Rome, Britain, and the Anglo-Saxons. Seaby, London (1992). 25. Arnold, C. J.: An archaeology of the early Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Routledge, London (1997). 26. Frazer, William O., Tyrrell, Andrew: Social identity in early medieval Britain. Leicester University Press, London (2000). 27. Geake, Helen, British Archaeological reports: The use of grave-goods in conversion-period England, c.600-c.850. John and Erica Hedges, Oxford (1997). 28. Gelling, Margaret: Signposts to the past. Phillimore, Chichester, England (1997). 29. Hamerow, H.: Migration Theory and the Anglo-Saxon Identity Crisis. In: Migrations and invasions in archaeological explanation. Archaeopress, Oxford (1997). 4/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 30. Harke, H.: Warrior Graves? The Background of the Anglo-Saxon Weapon Burial Rite. Past and present. 126, (1990). 31. Hrke, H.: Archaeologists and Migrations: a problem of attitude? Current archaeology. 39, (1998). 32. Heather, P. J.: Empires and barbarians: migration, development and the birth of Europe. Pan, London (2010). 33. Higham, N.: Britons in Northern England in the early Middle Ages: Through a Thick Glass Darkly. Northern history. 38, (2001). 34. Hill, C.: The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England in the Pagan Period: a Review. Anglo-Saxon England. 8, (1979). 35. Hines, John, Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Social Stress: The Anglo-Saxons from the Migration period to the eighth century: an ethnographic perspective. Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Social Stress, San Marino, R.S.M. (1997). 36. Hines, J.: The Becoming of the English: identity, material culture and language in early Anglo-Saxon England. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 7: edited by William Filmer-Sankey and David Griffiths. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Oxford (1994). 5/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 37. James, Edward: Europe’s barbarians, AD 200-600. Pearson Longman, New York (2009). 38. Lucy, Sam: Chapter 3. In: The Anglo-Saxon way of death: burial rites in early England. Sutton, Stroud (2000). 39. Lucy, Sam, Reynolds, Andrew: Burial in early medieval England and Wales. Society for Medieval Archaeology, London (2002). 40. Reynolds, S.: ’What do we mean by ‘Anglo-Saxon’ and ‘Anglo-Saxons’. Journal of British studies. 24, (1985). 41. Sims-Williams, P.: The Settlement of England in Bede and the Chronicle. Anglo-Saxon England. 12, (1983). 42. Ward-Perkins, B.: Why did the Anglo-Saxons not become more British? English historical review. (2000). 43. Yorke, B.: Fact or Fiction? The Written Evidence for the Fifth and Sixth Centuries AD. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 6: edited by William Filmer-Sankey. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1993. 44. Yorke, B.: Anglo-Saxon Origin Legends. In: Myth, rulership, church and charters: essays in 6/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent honour of Nicholas Brooks. Ashgate, Aldershot (2008). 45. Budd, P., et al.: Investigating population movement by stable isotope analysis: a report from Britain. Antiquity: a quarterly review of archaeology. 78, (2004). 46. Evison, M. P.: All in the genes? Evaluating Biological Evidence of Contact and Migration. In: Cultures in contact: Scandinavian settlement in England in the ninth and tenth centuries. Brepols, Turnhout, Belgium (2000). 47. Halsall, G.: The (Ab)use of DNA in the Study of Early Medieval Cemeteries. Historian on the Edge: The (Ab)Use of DNA in the Study of Early Medieval Cemeteries. 48. Heaney, Seamus: Beowulf. Faber, London (1999). 49. Bassett, Steven: Introduction. In: The Origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Leicester University Press, London (1989). 50. Campbell, James, John, Eric, Wormald, Patrick: Chapter 2. In: The Anglo-Saxons. Phaidon, Oxford (1982). 51. Jack G., and Carver, M.: Beowulf/ Sutton Hoo. In: The Blackwell encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Blackwelll Publishers, Oxford (1999). 7/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 52. Ellis Davidson, H.: Royal Graves as Religious Symbols. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 5: edited by William Filmer-Sankey and Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, James Campbell, David Brown. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1992. 53. Bruce-Mitford, Rupert Leo Scott: The Sutton Hoo ship-burial. British Museum Pub, [Place of publication not identified] (1975). 54. Evans, Angela Care: The Sutton Hoo ship burial. Published for the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Press, London (1994). 55. Carver, M. O. H.: The age of Sutton Hoo: the seventh century in north-western Europe. Boydell Press, Rochester, NY (1992). 56. Carver, M. O. H.: Sutton Hoo: burial ground of kings? British Museum Press, London (1998). 57. Carver, M. O. H., Evans, Angela, Society of Antiquaries of London: Sutton Hoo: a seventh-century princely burial ground and its context. British Museum Press, London (2005). 58. Cramp, R.: The Hall in Beowulf and Archaeology. In: Heroic poetry in the Anglo-Saxon period: studies in honor of Jess B. Bessinger, Jr. Medieval Institute Publications, Kalamazoo, Mich (1993). 8/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 59. Farrell, Robert, Newman de Vegvar, Carol L., University of Miami, Conference on Medieval Studies: Sutton Hoo: fifty years after. American Early Medieval Studies, Miami University, Dept. of Art, Oxford, Ohio (1992). 60. Williamson, Tom: Sutton Hoo and its landscape: the context of monuments. Windgather Press, Oxford (2008). 61. East, K.: The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial: the Case Against the Coffin. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 3: edited by Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, James Campbell and David Brown. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1984. 62. Enright, M.: The Sutton Hoo Whetstone Sceptre. Anglo-Saxon England. 11, (1983). 63. Envison, V. I.: The Body in the Ship at Sutton Hoo. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 1-2. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford (1979). 64. Filmer-Sankey, W.: The Roman Emperor in the Sutton Hoo Ship Burial. Journal of the British Archaeological Association. 149, (1996). 65. Fletcher, E.: Sutton Hoo Volume 3: A Comment on the Silver Spoons. Journal of the British Archaeological Association. 138, (1985). 66. 9/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent Hicks, C.: The Birds on the Sutton Hoo Purse. Anglo-Saxon England. 15, (1986). 67. Marzinzik, Sonja, British Museum: The Sutton Hoo helmet. British Museum, London (2007). 68. Meeks, N. D., and Holmes, R.: The Sutton Hoo Garnet Jewellery. In: Anglo-Saxon studies in archaeology and history: 4: edited by Sonia Chadwick Hawkes, James Campbell and David Brown. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 1985. 69. Pearson, M., et al.: Three Men and a Boat: Sutton Hoo and the East Saxon Kingdom. Anglo-Saxon England. 22, (1993). 70. Wood, I.: The Franks at Sutton Hoo. In: People and places in northern Europe, 500-1600: essays in honour of Peter Hayes Sawyer. Boydell Press, Rochester, NY, USA (1991). 71. Blair, John: The church in Anglo-Saxon society. Oxford University Press, New York (2005). 72. Carver, M.: Ideology and Allegiance in East Anglia. In: Sutton Hoo: fifty years after. American Early Medieval Studies, Miami University, Dept. of Art, Oxford, Ohio (1992). 73. Campbell, James: The Anglo-Saxon state. Hambledon and London, London, New York (2000). 10/56 09/26/21 Anglo-Saxon England | University of Kent 74.

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