With contributions by Wendy Carruthers, Rowena Gale, Dai Morgan Evans, and Ross Whitehead. Foreword by Major General A. J. G. Pollard.
Ebook (PDF) published 2014.
The Wessex Linear Ditches Project focuses on the region forming the heart of the Wessex chalklands, preserved by its location within a modern military training area. The report comprises three parts: a description of the archaeology of the project, an innovative analysis of the finds and environmental data, and a summary of the linear ditches and their context in late prehistory, with management approaches to their present day preservation. Our understanding of such prominent, but enigmatic features as linear ditches has advanced little in recent years: the work of the Wessex Linear Ditches Project represents a fresh approach to their interpretation. The data from the specialist studies (both environmental and artefactual) are regarded not just as independent subjects, but integrated aspects of the material culture associated with the development of the linear ditches system. These integrated studies have led to the identification of a number of spatial and chronological themes. The linear ditches system was developed through different stages, its function changing through time. Likewise, the character and perception of the landscape changed with regard to demography, settlement, and cultural interaction. This in turn affected subsistence productivity, land ownership, and the scale of domestic production. Shifts in the balance of these elements were at the root of the changes identified. As the conservation debate on the military estate is delicately poised, the final examination of the management issues is especially important.
Author(s): Richard Bradley, Roy Entwistle, Frances Raymond
Series: English Heritage Archaeological Reports, 2
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 1994
Language: English
Commentary: page 180 is missing
Pages: X+182
City: London
Illustrations iv
List of tables v
Acknowledgements vi
Abbreviations vi
Foreword vii
Summaries viii
Preface 1
Part I. An Introduction to the Project
1. The background to the enquiry 3
2. The selection of a study area 17
3. The development and application of the field methodology 26
Part II. The Specialist Studies
4. The pottery 69
5. The analysis of five flint assemblages from the Upper Study Area 91
6. The environmental setting of the linear ditches system 101
7. Settlements, territories, and 'Celtic' fields: the changing role of boundary earthworks 122
Part III. The Evolution of the Linear Ditches System in the Upper Study Area and its Wider Implications
8. Discussion and conclusions 137
Appendices 153
Bibliography 170
Index 174