Afleveringen

  • In this episode, our own Dr. Enda O Flaherty talks about heritage infrastructure preservation in Ireland, with a particular focus on the fascinating development of 'greenways', which can be defined as linear active-travel paths, parks, or areas of cultural interest that often incorporate historic (linear) infrastructure like defunct railway lines. We explore the challenges of balancing the needs of new and rejuvenated infrastructure with the heritage value of existing environments and delve into the impacts of infrastructure projects on rural Ireland and the potential of greenways to provide alternatives to car reliance. Importantly, Enda discusses the importance of the distinction of creating a culturally and historically resonant 'place' versus a mere 'space'.

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  • In this episode, we talk to Dr. Rebecca Boyd about the fascinating topic of Viking-Age towns in Ireland, from how Vikings helped create the first urban settlements, to discovering the smells, sights and sounds of daily life within a home. For the big picture, we chat about Scandinavian-influenced urbanism across Viking-Age Ireland and Europe, but balance this with a focus on the microscopic patterns and cadences of life and work in Viking-Age town houses in towns like Dublin. The vital role of developer-led archaeology in the study of Viking-Age towns in Ireland is key to much of Rebecca's research and Rebecca's new book, Exploring Ireland's Viking-Age Towns: Houses and Homes, which is a brilliant exploration of towns and urban life and one we heartily recommend to all of our listeners!

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  • In this episode, Dr. Tom talks with Kenneth and Kirsty from the Caithness Broch Project, a pioneering scheme to build a ‘broch’ – massive Iron-Age drystone towers concentrated in Caithness, northern Scotland – for the first time in 2,000 years.


    Brochs are the tallest prehistoric structures found in Britain or Ireland, with these ‘pinnacles of prehistoric Scottish architecture’ potentially reaching over 15m in height! Their use is not certain – community-centred domestic use seems most likely – but the monumental scale suggests they were built to impress and act as highly-visible centres of their farming communities.


    The challenge of building a broch in the modern day is huge, but the Project has now selected the perfect site for the Big Broch Build and its mission to ensure heritage-based regeneration of Caithness, a region facing massive depopulation and job losses, can now continue apace!


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  • The Devil's Dollar: In this US Civil War episode, Dr. Ryan K. McNutt talks about the Union's attempted naval blockade of Confederate ports. More than this, however, Ryan discusses the dark secret at the heart of official British neutrality: Clyde-built 'blockade runners', fast and agile shallow-drafted paddle steamers that could evade Union patrols on their short dashes to and from the Caribbean, were key to the Confederate war economy, bringing in European arms and luxury goods to Southern ports in exchange for the slave-harvested cotton that kept the British economy growing. Shocking and fascinating in equal measure, Ryan talks about his research into the dark dealings of the Glasgow and Clyde shipbuilders and discusses the remarkable range of British, Irish and Continental industries kept afloat by the devil's dollar.

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  • We enter the world of the 7th-century Anglo-Saxon Trumpington Cross burial, from the vanishingly rare - and stunning - gold and garnet pectoral cross found on the teenager's chest and the bed on which she was buried, to this young woman's distant origins in central Europe. Drs. Leggett, Rose and Brownlee talk about a fascinating range of topics, including potential cultural links between early medieval England and Southern Germany, the significance of pectoral crosses found in high-status female burials, the role of women in the Christianization of England, isotopic and aDNA analysis in archaeology, diet and mobility in the past, and the bed burial phenomenon in 7th-century Germany and England. We also talk about the ongoing exhibition, Beneath Our Feet: Archaeology of the Cambridge Region, 'a new exhibition at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology explores the traces of where people have lived, worked and died for thousands of years in Cambridgeshire', which features the Trumpington Cross burial.


    Read the University of Cambridge web story about the burial and the exhibition here: https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/trumpington-cross-burial-facial-reconstruction-new-evidence-revealed


    The Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology - MAA: https://maa.cam.ac.uk/ | https://www.museums.cam.ac.uk/events/beneath-our-feet-archaeology-cambridge-region


    Our thanks to Tom Almeroth-Williams, Communications Manager (Research) of the University of Cambridge Office of External Affairs for use of copyright images and all other help with this episode.


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  • We chat with the Red River Archaeology Group's Graphics & IT Manager Hannah Sims about her life in archaeology and the fascinating and intricate world of archaeological illustration!

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  • The Bone Chests of Winchester Cathedral: We talk with Dr. Cat Jarman about her best-selling book, The Bone Chests, which tells the remarkable archaeological and historical detective story of the Winchester Cathedral chests that purport to hold the remains of some of the most famous kings, queens and bishops in the history of England and Wessex! It's an amazing true story of cutting-edge science and ancient bones, and the tumultuous centuries the skeletal remains have seen and - despite the best efforts of Roundhead iconoclast soldiers - survived.

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  • We marvel at the beauty of the prehistoric phenomenon of 'Atlantic Rock Art', most known for its distinctive yet enigmatic cup-and-ring marks, that swept Atlantic Europe from the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, but did you know about the race to record and protect it? In this episode, Clare Busher O'Sullivan talks with Tom about her fascinating work on Atlantic Rock Art in south-west Ireland, and the high-tech drive to record and help preserve the open-air examples of these beautiful and ancient stone carvings before they are damaged or even destroyed by a combination of natural and human-led processes.

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  • An almost incredible discovery has been made in Scotland’s stunning Western Isles: human-made islets in lochs, known in Scotland and Ireland as crannogs, were being constructed by Neolithic communities. Previously, these remarkable sites, phenomena both of waterside habitation and ritual activity, had been thought to be a development of the Late Bronze Age or early Iron Age, but new archaeological research is showing far earlier origins, in a revelation with major ramifications for how we view not only the Scottish but also the European Neolithic periods.


    Join us for this Dig It! special as we chat with Professor Duncan Garrow of the Islands of Stone project and the University of Reading to hear about the amazing survivals of Neolithic pottery and organic artefacts that are changing the way we look at these wonderful feats of house engineering and ritual practice.


    Islands of Stone: https://crannogs.soton.ac.uk/


    A note from our wonderful Dig It! partners:


    Dig It! is coordinated by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and primarily funded by Historic Environment Scotland.


    Dig It! is a hub for Scottish archaeology coordinated by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Our mission is to increase understanding of and engagement with archaeology for Scotland-based audiences by providing promotion and support to the heritage sector and enabling other sectors and excluded communities to connect with archaeology. One example of this is our annual Scotland Digs summer fieldwork campaigns and for 2023, we’re excited to be working with the Red River Archaeology Group to produce special episodes of The Shindig podcast to showcase a few of the fantastic archaeological projects taking place across the country.


    Dig It! website: https://www.digitscotland.com/

    Dig It! Digest: https://www.digitscotland.com/contact-us/newsletter/


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  • A Viking Cemetery in northern England: Adam Parsons of Oxford Archaeology tells us about the spectacular Cumwhitton Viking cemetery in Cumbria, subject of the brilliant ‘Shadows in the Sand: Excavation of a Viking-age Cemetery at Cumwhitton’, which Adam co-authored.


    Initially discovered by metal detectorists Peter Adams and George when they found two Viking-style oval brooches, Oxford Archaeology excavated what turned out to be one of the most spectacular and important Viking cemeteries ever found in Britain. The seven furnished graves contained a truly remarkable selection of grave goods, including the remains of a wooden box containing shears, needles and a glass slickstone for smoothing fabric, with other graves containing items like amber beads, pins, silver rings, swords, axes, spears, spurs/buckles, and rare evidence for rugs and textiles. While few bones remained in the sandy soil, the burial items at Cumwhitton tell us of a society rich both in material culture but also in the cross-cultural contacts and borrowings that made Viking-Age Cumbria such a remarkable place.


    From Cumwhitton, we move across Cumbria to Workington and the discovery of a huge early medieval cemetery under the burnt-out remains of St. Michael’s church. Excavated by Carlisle Archaeology, Adam and his colleagues completed the post-excavation work and wrote up the report on the amazing early medieval carved stones, inclusive of fragments of a newly-discovered ‘hogback’ stone, and multiple cemeteries, which include a mid-to-late 9th century grave with strong parallels to the Viking burials at Cumwhitton, underneath St. Michael’s.


    With a focus on the northern Britons, we end with a fascinating discussion on the new multicultural world that was carved out in Cumbria and its surrounding regions in the Viking Age.


    Adam Parsons is a brilliant archaeological illustrator, writer and editor with Oxford Archaeology who has worked in archaeology for over 20 years. What's more, he has devoted his spare time to being brilliant at early medieval public outreach, making exact reproductions of historical artefacts for museums, universities, and individuals and being part of Cumbraland, a living history group dedicated to portraying the 9th-11th century Brittonic Kingdom of Strathclyde. Adam is no stranger to online outreach, having large followings across his Blueaxe Reproductions social media channels on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and more!


    Prof. Fiona Edmonds


    Gaelic Influence in the Northumbrian Kingdom: The Golden Age and the Viking Age

    Edmonds, F. 15/12/2019 Woodbridge : Boydell & Brewer. 322 p. ISBN: 9781783273362. Electronic ISBN: 9781787445864.


    The expansion of the Kingdom of Strathclyde

    Edmonds, F. 1/02/2015 In: Early Medieval Europe. 23, 1, p. 43-88. 46 p.


    Prof. Stephen Driscoll


    Driscoll, S.T. (2014) The Govan Stones. History Scotland, 14(1), pp. 36-37.


    Dalglish, C., Driscoll, S.T. , Maver, I., Shead, N.F. and Shearer, I. (2009) Historic Govan: Archaeology and Development. Series: The Scottish burgh survey. Historic Scotland: Edinburgh, UK. ISBN 9781902771625


    Driscoll, S.T. (1998) Church archaeology in Glasgow and the kingdom of Strathclyde. Innes Review, 49(2), pp. 95-114.


    Cynthia Thickpenny


    Thickpenny, Cynthia Rose (2019) Making key pattern in Insular art: AD 600-1100. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow. https://theses.gla.ac.uk/41009/


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  • From an industrial revolution led my medieval monks to the Industrial Revolution of coal, salt and railways - via Bonnie Prince Charlie and the 1745 Battle of Prestonpans that was fought on the site! - this Dig It! Special podcast hops on board the 1722 Waggonway Project with Chairman, Ed Bethune.


    In a compelling chat about a Scottish site of international importance, Ed talks to us about 'The 1722 Waggonway Project, [which] is a community heritage project run by the 1722 Waggonway Heritage Group - created to interpret, preserve and enhance the route and associated industries & environments of Scotland's first railway, the Tranent - Cockenzie Waggonway' (https://www.1722waggonway.co.uk/).


    What's more, if you are listening to this before the 7-10th of September, 2023, you can take part in the project! Details below and on the 1722 Waggonway website and social media:


    * 7th - 10th Sept excavation of salt pans and waggonway at Cockenzie Harbour.

    * Supported by CFA Archaeology

    * Drop-in activities available 8th-10th - spoil sieving, finds cleaning.

    * Museum open 10am-4pm every day

    * Geophysics survey drop-in 9th & 10th with Wessex Archaeology (this is on the fields to the south, through which the waggonway passes)


    A note from the brilliant 1722 Waggonway Heritage Group:


    The Tranent - Cockenzie Waggonway was built by the York Buildings Company in 1722. Construction started in May of that year, with local timber-wright William Dickson employed to make wooden rails, wagons and wheels [...]. The Cadell family bought the line in 1779 and upgraded it to an iron railway in 1815, before employing Robert Stevenson to make further modifications at Cockenzie Harbour in 1833. The history of the Waggonway and the coal & salt industries it served can be learned in full by visiting the Waggonway Museum.


    A note from our wonderful Dig It! partners:


    Dig It! is coordinated by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and primarily funded by Historic Environment Scotland.


    Dig It! is a hub for Scottish archaeology coordinated by the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Our mission is to increase understanding of and engagement with archaeology for Scotland-based audiences by providing promotion and support to the heritage sector and enabling other sectors and excluded communities to connect with archaeology. One example of this is our annual Scotland Digs summer fieldwork campaigns and for 2023, we’re excited to be working with the Red River Archaeology Group to produce special episodes of The Shindig podcast to showcase a few of the fantastic archaeological projects taking place across the country.


    Dig It! website: https://www.digitscotland.com/

    Dig It! Digest: https://www.digitscotland.com/contact-us/newsletter/


    _______


    #ScotlandDigs2023 #archaeology #history #Scotland


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  • If you are fascinated by the Viking Age and love dogs, wolves or horses, then this is the archaeology and history podcast for you! In this episode, Dr. Tom Horne chats with Drs. Ruth Carden, Mary Valante and Rena Maguire of the Viking Dublin Dogs research team about their fascinating work on understanding the characteristics of dogs, wolves and horses, and what made them so important to the peoples of early medieval Europe. What's more, you can help them raise money for more vital radiocarbon dating of bones that will help give us enormous insight into these hugely important animals, their trade and breeding, and the vast range of vital human-animal interactions that were central to the daily lives of people in early medieval Ireland, Britain and Scandinavia. Find our about the Crowdfunder Campaign on the Viking Dublin Dogs website! https://www.vikingdublindogs.ie/category/all-products


    Producer, Editor and Co-host: Luke Barry


    Find out more about the project from the Viking Dublin Dogs social media channels https://www.twitter.com/VikingDublinDog | https://www.facebook.com/VikingDublinDogs


    And discover even more from their brilliant website (https://www.vikingdublindogs.ie/), from which we learn the following:


    This pioneering project will run from 2022 to 2028, studying bones from across several sites in Ireland and Britain. The Researcher Pack will investigate the origins, diet, sizes and gender of dogs and wolves, their roles, and the roles of horses in human societies in Viking-Age and Medieval times.

    Not much is known about dogs from Viking-Age and Medieval periods, apart from their body sizes: small, medium and large types. There were no dog breeds as we know them today.

    Perhaps some were 'pet' wolves or dogs interbred with wolves?Were some dogs associated with status of their owner?Were there special working or functional relationships between horses and dogs?Did different dog types have different roles in Medieval societies?Did Vikings bring their own dogs with them from their far-reaching travels?

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  • Adam Parsons is a brilliant archaeological illustrator, writer and editor with Oxford Archaeology who has worked in archaeology for over 20 years. What's more, he has devoted his spare time to being brilliant at early medieval public outreach, making exact reproductions of historical artefacts for museums, universities, and individuals and being part of Cumbraland, a living history group dedicated to portraying the 9th-11th century Brittonic Kingdom of Strathclyde. Adam is no stranger to online outreach, having large followings across his Blueaxe Reproductions social media channels on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and more! Join Adam and Tom as they talk about a most remarkable Life in Archaeology!

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • A celebration of creativity and storytelling in archaeology outreach: join Luke and Tom as they talk about creating archaeological media that communicates a love and enthusiasm for archaeology, history and heritage, and how this helps interest as many people and communities as possible in a diverse local and global audience in our shared past.

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  • We chat with Rubicon Heritage's Jennifer McCarthy about her life in archaeology and her advice to archaeologists starting their careers in the fascinating world of commercial archaeology. Rubicon Heritage is part of the Red River Archaeology Group.

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  • The Galloway Hoard is one of the most spectacular Viking-Age hoards ever discovered, its multiple packages and layers containing not only a huge volume of remarkable silver and gold jewellery and a stunning lidded silver vessel, but also an astonishingly rare collection of the organic materials - in this case, silk, leather, wool, animal gut, wood, and some very special dirt - that almost never survive from the early medieval world.


    In this episode, join National Museum of Scotland Galloway Hoard Researcher Dr. Adrián Maldonado as he interweaves the archaeology and history of a magnificent treasure trove deposited in c. AD 900 by unknown hands in a turbulent and vivid area of south-west Scotland.


    The Galloway region in which the hoard was deposited was a blurry mix of cultures and languages, ranging from Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon to Irish, Scottish and British. Reflecting this multicultural environment, the hoard's contents, which seem to come from as far apart as Central Asia and Ireland, raise more fascinating questions than they answer about who was living, fighting and dying in this most dramatic and mutable part of the Viking world. As we learn, the project to unwrap the Galloway Hoard is only just beginning, with multiple agencies and experts called to Scotland to delve deeper and deeper into both the hoard and its secrets!


    Who, then, buried this most eclectic and remarkable of hoards? It was once presumed that it was a band of Vikings, but the answer, as Adrián tells presenter Dr. Tom Horne and Producer Luke Barry, may very well surprise you...


    #viking #vikings #archaeology #history #britain #ireland #scandinavia #vikingage


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  • Rubicon Heritage's Trish Long, Transport Infrastructure Ireland's Ken Hanley and Cork County Council's Ed Lyne chat about the M28 Cork to Ringaskiddy Project that's revealing so much about millennia of local archaeology and heritage!


    The M28 Cork to Ringaskiddy Project is being progressed by Cork County Council on behalf of Transport Infrastructure Ireland.


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  • The story of a hidden Seven Years' War ('French and Indian War') time-capsule building in Pennsylvania and what it tells us about this vicious 18th-century North American conflict and the exact whereabouts of a young George Washington and his commander, General John Forbes. Join Dr. Terence Christian as he describes the war, George Washington's key role and the discovery of a lost building that Washington may have frequented during the Forbes Campaign.


    01:54 - The Seven Years War: was it effectively the first world war? What happened in North America?

    03:20 - French and British conflict over the strategic Ohio River Valley

    05:05 - How a young British colonial militia officer, THE George Washington, started the conflict

    07:45 - George Washington the battles of Jumonville Glen and Fort Necessity

    08:14 - Jumonville & Fort Necessity - How Washington 'didn't really mean to start a world war'

    10:19 - Washington and the Braddock Campaign and 'the start of a world war'

    11:20 - Dr. Terence Christian's commercial archaeology project of a 1750s mystery building survival

    12:45 - Washington the Surveyor and Braddock's Road to the French frontier

    14:43 - 'A confluence of stupidity' Britain and the disastrous Battle of Fort Duquesne

    17:03 - Return to Fort Duquesne - The Forbes Expedition, 1758

    17:30 - Terence's Site: a building connected to Braddock's Road and Forbes of the Forbes Campaign

    18:30 - 'When [the building owners] pulled the walls down, they realized they had something far older'

    19:08 - The Project: a mysterious 3-sided log-built structure buried within later walls

    19:22 - Was this General Forbes' lost guns and gunpowder store from the lost Fort Bedford?

    19:58 - The commercial archaeology project begins - desk-based map regressions and site visits

    37:23 - Found! The last remnant of the Rising Sun tavern, central to Forbes' officers like Washington

    38:50 - Huge importance of this last structure relating to Forbes, Fort Bedford & the 'First World War'


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  • By Mapping the Vikings, archaeology PhD student Tenaya Jorgensen has developed a fascinating new narrative about what was happening in the 9th-century North Sea and Atlantic Viking world: two distinct Viking groups - one centered on the Irish Sea and Scottish region(s), and the other in England, Frankia and the Channel Area - were raiding, trading and settling in the early Viking Age, with the former dominated by groups from western Norway and the latter from southern Scandinavia.


    Tenaya asks us to move away from Anglo-centric ideas of the 'Great Army', reimagining it as a 'Channel Army' influential not only in England, but also in its apparent area of origin in that coastal area between the Danish territories in southern Scandinavia and western France. While there are (later) political connections between Dublin and York, this is more a 10th-century development.


    Ultimately, it is - as Tenaya states - 'all politics', with the biggest developments relating to the massive 'ripples of power' set off by a Frankish (Carolingian) state with designs on Danish possessions, that then included large parts of southern Norway and south-west Sweden.


    Click the link to see Tenaya's Open Access interactive map: https://www.tenayajorgensen.com/vikingagemap


    #Vikings #archaeology #history #Viking


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  • Burial in Your Bed, Early Medieval Style: Join Cambridge graves and cemetery expert Dr. Emma Brownlee as she talks about the archaeology and history of the fascinating phenomenon of early medieval bed burials from their Coptic Egyptian or Byzantine origins to the stunning 'Harpole Treasure' grave in 7th-century Anglo-Saxon England.


    01:43 - What is a bed burial? The where and when in early medieval Europe

    03:19 - Why bury your loved ones on a bed? Status and Emotion - providing comfort for eternal rest

    05:10 - Scandinavian bed burials were VERY comfortable, even having mattresses!

    06:15 - Bed burials: a huge investment of time and resources - often under monumental mounds

    07:40 - Beds are high-status - who is being buried in them? The boy buried in a cot in Cologne

    10:20 - Types of beds, from simple 'crate' beds to 'baluster' beds, and the differences in England

    13:00 - Were the beds heirlooms, or made bespoke for the burial?

    15:00 - Not Dead, Only Sleeping: bed burials providing comfort until the Resurrection

    16:50 - Origins: where and when do bed burials originate? Coptic Egypt? Eastern Roman Empire?

    18:55 - The grave goods in bed burials: the Cologne boy with weapons, helmet, and food offerings

    20:15 - Christian grave goods (burial artefacts) - beautiful high-status crosses in (English) bed burials

    22:14 - Why are Christians buried with grave goods?

    22:54 - England is different: *all* 7th century, *all* women, and had a distinct style of beds

    25:48 - English beds: how they are special - it's all about the eyelets

    28:00 - Beautiful grave goods: bed burials have 'much richer' artefacts than other burial types

    28:57 - Less is More: the wonderful Trumpington bed burial, including a cloisonné cross

    32:55 - Isotopic analysis - where were the 'English' bed burial women coming from - NOT England!

    35:10 - Amazing mobility of bed burial women: Christian rite imported from Continent by women

    34:45 - The Christianization of Anglo-Saxon England: women, conversion, and import of bed burials

    38:10 - The Famous Harpole Treasure (Bed?) Burial: *that* necklace, the silver cross, and a bed (?)

    42:30 - Emma's Favourite Finds: the Trumpington bed burial


    Interviewer: Dr. Tom Horne

    Producer and Editor: Luke Barry


    #archaeology #history #podcast #medieval #earlymedieval #graves #cemetery


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