Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 17Department of Archaeology, 2000 - Archaeology |
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Page 47
... Pagan religion , on the other hand , was outlawed and seen as a threat to the new order and it seems the Christians were more ' heavy handeď in their efforts to show their distaste of this institution . Judicial meetings may have taken ...
... Pagan religion , on the other hand , was outlawed and seen as a threat to the new order and it seems the Christians were more ' heavy handeď in their efforts to show their distaste of this institution . Judicial meetings may have taken ...
Page 89
... pagan cemeteries , sometimes directly on a mound or in a stone - setting , judging by the records left by runologists from the 17th , 18th and 19th centuries ( Gräslund 1987 ) . In many cases the graves have completely disappeared due ...
... pagan cemeteries , sometimes directly on a mound or in a stone - setting , judging by the records left by runologists from the 17th , 18th and 19th centuries ( Gräslund 1987 ) . In many cases the graves have completely disappeared due ...
Page 171
... pagan practices throughout the carly Middle Ages ( including incantations , sacrifice to pagan deities , mamking offerings to or vows at trees , keeping Thursdays in honour of Thor , and so on : Thacker 1992 : 156-7 ) , which implies that ...
... pagan practices throughout the carly Middle Ages ( including incantations , sacrifice to pagan deities , mamking offerings to or vows at trees , keeping Thursdays in honour of Thor , and so on : Thacker 1992 : 156-7 ) , which implies that ...
Contents
All is not Well Down | 81 |
8198 | |
Shaw and Jameson 1999 A Dictionary of Archaeology reviewed | 151 |
Copyright | |
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activity Anglo-Saxon appear approach Archaeology areas artefacts associated belief body Bog Bodies bone British burial butchery Cambridge cemeteries century changes Christian Church communities complex concept concerned considerable considered context continuity Contributions conversion cross culture dating death deposition discussion early England environment ethnic Europe evidence example excavation execution function grave groups hanging History human human sacrifice ideas important increase indicate individual interpretation issues landscape Late later London material material culture means Medieval Mesolithic nature northern objects origins Oxford pagan Palaeolithic particular past patterns perhaps period perspective political population possible potential practices Prehistoric present problem production recent record reference region relations religion religious Review ritual runestones Scandinavian seems seen settlement similar social society sources specific stone structure studies style suggested symbols tool tradition types understanding University Press Viking warfare