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Exploring the past, one skeleton at a time.
www.oldbones.co.uk
www.oldbones.co.uk
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29 FEB 2024 · In this episode, we discuss the evidence for Anglo-Saxon smiths, the people who created the artefacts at Sutton Hoo and other princely burials. To do this we analyse the Neolithic tomb called Wayland's Smithy and the legend associated with its namesake.
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Transcribed
26 SEP 2023 · Sutton Hoo is the most spectacular archaeology discovery in British history. We explore what this tells us about the Anglo-Saxons' relationship to themselves, their neighbours and their past.
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18 APR 2022 · What was it like to be pagan and Christain the next?
In this episode, we visit the site of Yeavering and its many strange burials to try and understand what the conversion of England must have felt like. We go beyond the historical story and explore the actual day to day "experience" of conversion.
Next episode: Sutton Hoo and the Performance of Kingship
Support the show at:
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/bonesandstuff
Paypal: https://paypal.me/bonesandstuff?country.x=GB&locale.x=en_GB
KoFi: ko-fi.com/oldbones
***
Sources:
Taylor, Brian Hope. "Yeavering—an Anglo-British Centre of Early Northumbria." (1977).
An Ecclesiastical History of the English People, Bede
Women in Bede:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ZqWvPiCS1iGY6UJWEd21fhj5HM54IEoKb5NAGkf1Lac/edit?usp=sharing
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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oldbones.co.uk
29 OCT 2021 · How do we go from the society we met last time, one that is primarily equal and poor to the medieval image of kings, men with wealth and power near unimaginable to the ordinary peasant.
In this episode, we visit the site of Yeavering and its many strange burials to try and understand the social dynamics that resulted in kingliness.
Sources below.
Next episode: Yeavering & The Rise of Christianity
***
Sources:
Taylor, Brian Hope. "Yeavering—an Anglo-British Centre of Early Northumbria." (1977).
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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Support me at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/bonesandstuff
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Join the community on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oldbonespodcast
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Keep up to date on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oldbones_podcast/
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Andy's personal Twitter: https://twitter.com/EarnshawAJD
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oldbones.co.uk
7 AUG 2021 · What was life like in the 400s and 500s CE? That question is not an easy one.
In this episode, we look at the funerary evidence for each stage of life during this period. We understand what identity was developed and how that was closely connected to what individuals did during life as well as the important cultural concerns at the time.
Sources below.
Next episode: Yeavering & Early Anglo-Saxon Elites
***
Sources:
Stoodley, N. (2000). From the cradle to the grave: age organization and the early Anglo-Saxon burial rite. World Archaeology, 38(3), 456-472.
Gowland, R. (2006). Ageing the past: examining age identity from funerary evidence. In R. Gowland & C. Knüsel (Eds.), Social archaeology of funerary remains (pp. 143-155). Oxford: Oxbow Books.
Lucy, S. (2020). Gender and gender roles. In H. Hamerow, D. A. Hinton, & S. Crawford (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Squires, K. E. (2013). Piecing together identity: a social investigation of early Anglo-Saxon cremation practices. Archaeological Journal, 170, 154-200.
Martin, T. F. (2020). "Casting the Net Wider: Network Approaches to Artefact Variation in Post-Roman Europe." Journal of archaeological method and theory 27(4): 861-886.
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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oldbones.co.uk
12 JUL 2021 · All across the East of England, there are small cemeteries with completely new material culture. it looks like it's from North-West Europe and represents the arrival, so well documented, of the Anglo-Saxon people.
In this episode, we introduce the main debates about how and why the Anglo-Saxons started coming to England. It's a bit of a throwback to our Birdoswald episode, but with more theory, more detail and some new ideas from me!
Plus, there's a promise of bonus episodes for those that sign up to Patreon!
Sources below.
Next episode: The Life of an Anglo-Saxon
***
Sources:
Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People
Gildas' On The Ruin of Britain
Squires, K. E. (2016). Neighbours and networks: funerary trends among cremation practicing groups in early medieval England and north-western Europe. In I. Riddler, J. Soulat, & L. Keys (Eds.), The evidence of material culture: studies in honour of Professor Vera Evison (pp. 119-138). Autun: Editions Mergoil.
Hills, C., & Lucy, S. (2019). Spong Hill and the Anglo-Saxon migration to England. Neue Studien zur Sachsenforschung, 9, 239-248.
Hills, C. (1998). Did the people of Spong Hill come from Schleswig-Holstein? In (Vol. 11, pp. 145-154).
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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oldbones.co.uk
16 MAY 2021 · All around the Irish sea, small stone chapels still remain. Some are amongst the sand dunes, some are now part of larger monasteries and some of them are on golf courses. All of them share an origin story: the beginnings of the Celtic church.
In this episode, we explore the origins of Celtic Christianity, how it remained vibrant and developing while being cut off from other Christian communities in Europe. We explore the nature of ritual and religion and lay the groundwork for much later in our season when we discuss the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons. Oh, and the episode is inspired by a Time Team episode.
Sources below.
Next episode: The Germans are coming!
***
Time Team Reports: https://www.wessexarch.co.uk/our-work/time-team
This episodes report: https://www.wessexarch.co.uk/our-work/speke-keeill-mount-murray-hotel-isle-man
Magic & Memory: Gilchrist, R. (2008). Magic for the dead? The archaeology of magic in later medieval burials. Medieval Archaeology, 52(1), 119-159.
***
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13 MAR 2021 · A king who lies beneath a mountain waiting to return when his land needs him most... which apparently wasn't World War 2, the Great Recession or Coronavirus - how much worse could things become?
Anyway, King Arthur. The Once and Future King, husband to Guinevere, best friend of Lancelot, student of Merlin has his origins in the 400s CE and what with his close ties to Tintagel, it felt right that we take a bit of time to dwell on King Arthur's early medieval origins. More than that though, we ask, why do we keep telling stories of this Dark Age warlord?
Sources below.
Next episode: Celtic Holy Men
***
Gildas - De Excidio - http://www.vortigernstudies.org.uk/arthist/vortigernquotesgil.htm
Nennius - Historia Brittonum - https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1972/1972-h/1972-h.htm
Concepts of Arthur - http://www.arthuriana.co.uk/concepts/
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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8 FEB 2021 · Join me on the waves around Tintagel as we discuss the kingdom that arose in Cornwall in the 5th century and, rather than becoming German or British decided to adopt a distinctly continental identity.
We also uncover the nature of trade in pre-capitalist societies and try and acknowledge some of the biases we bring to our interpretations of the past.
Next episode: Who Was King Arthur?
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
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Support me at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/bonesandstuff
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Join the community on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oldbonespodcast
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Keep up to date on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oldbones_podcast/
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Andy's personal Twitter: https://twitter.com/EarnshawAJD
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oldbones.co.uk
25 DEC 2020 · In this one-off Christmas special, a fellow archaeology student - Grace - and I chat about a few things from the history of Christmas, including the medieval and pagan origins, as well as how it would have felt at a Medieval Christmas.
Next episode: The Kings of Tintagel
***
Other content mentioned in the show:
Modern History TV: https://modernhistory.tv/
British History Podcast: https://www.thebritishhistorypodcast.com/
History of Rome: https://thehistoryofrome.typepad.com/the_history_of_rome/
***
Talk to me: oldbonespodcast@gmail.com
---
Support me at Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/bonesandstuff
---
Join the community on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oldbonespodcast
---
Keep up to date on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oldbones_podcast/
---
Andy's personal Twitter: https://twitter.com/EarnshawAJD
---
oldbones.co.uk
Exploring the past, one skeleton at a time.
www.oldbones.co.uk
www.oldbones.co.uk
Information
Author | Bones and Stuff |
Organization | Bones and Stuff |
Categories | History , Society & Culture , Education |
Website | oldbones.co.uk |
oldbonespodcast@gmail.com |
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