After last month’s column on Westminster Cathedral, I will continue my ecclesiastical theme this month by exploring three of the great religious…
On 8th March 2007, a government White Paper was launched on Heritage Protection for the 21st century to foreshadow a new Heritage…
How frequently were amphitheatres used in the Roman World? At the recent Amphitheatre conference at Chester on the 16th-18th February 2007, held…
The London Archaeologist has been relaunched with a new format, a new design and colour throughout.…
Congratulations to David Breeze on having the nomination of the Antonine Wall accepted by UNESCO as a valid application for World Heritage…
The Society of Antiquaries celebrated its tercentenary in fine style on 25th April 2007 with a contested election for president.…
‘Flames were in their eyes, and in their teeth whiteness, and in their whole body a noisome blackness appeared…’…
In a gravel pit at Boxgrove, just outside Chichester, the remains of a man have been discovered, half a million years old.…
Burial chambers of the Neolithic In the Neolithic – the New Stone Age – the older you were, the more important you…
A large Bronze Age boat has recently been discovered at Dover. Keith Parfitt, of the Canterbury Archaeological Trust, reports.…
The Celts were warriors, and the most prominent remains of the Iron Age are the great hillforts, surrounded by banks and ditches…