With contributions from Elisabeth Crowfoot, Richard Darrah, Brian Gilmour, Celia Honeycombe, Audrey Meaney, Catherine Mortimer, Chris Salter, George Speake and Jacqui Watson, and incorporating analyses by Debbie Banham, Tania Dickinson, Heinrich Härke, Sue Hirst, Karen Høilund Nielsen, Ian Riddler and Morag Woudhuysen. Illustrations by Caroline Malim, Joanna Richards and Twigs Way; with contributions by Nadeshda Knudsen, Jon Cane, Elizabeth Stone and Melodie Paice.
Barrington has been a familiar name in Anglo-Saxon archaeology since the discovery of its cemeteries in the 19th century. In 1987 the site of Barrington A (Edix Hill) was rediscovered by a metal-detector user. Approximately 50% of the cemetery was investigated as part of the ensuing excavations which recovered skeletal remains of 149 individuals buried in 115 graves from a burial ground which had been used over 150 years during the 6th and 7th centuries. The community appears to have been neither especially rich nor poor, and it is this apparent normality that makes the cemetery population a particularly interesting one to study. Costume groups suggest a community of mixed cultural affinities. In the 7th century a few high status individuals were more evident, including the occupants of two rare 'bed-burials. The human bone was exceptionally well preserved and has allowed a detailed study of the population buried at Edix Hill to be undertaken.
Standard analysis of sex, age and stature has revealed equal numbers of women and men, some living to more than 45 years of age, with children and adolescents also represented. They were a relatively healthy and robust community, but cases of cancer and leprosy can be identified, as well as battle wounds. The combination of several sets of data suggests that links can be drawn between related individuals within the cemetery.
Author(s): Tim Malim, John Hines, Corinne Duhig
Series: Council for British Archaeology. CBA Research Reports, 112
Publisher: Council for British Archaeology
Year: 1998
Language: English
Pages: 370
City: York
List of tables x
List of figures xi
Acknowledgements xvii
Summary xviii
I. INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1. Background to the excavations 3
Chapter 2. The excavations 13
II. MATERIAL EVIDENCE
Chapter 3. The graves 23
Chapter 4. The human skeletal material 154
Chapter 5. The finds 200
Chapter 6. Technical analyses and reconstructions 229
III. ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION
Chapter 7. Chronology of the burials 279
Chapter 8. Social analysis 292
Chapter 9. The Edix Hill cemetery in its regional context 319
Bibliography 328
Index 338