Www.WorldHistory.Biz
Login *:
Password *:
     Register

 

5-06-2015, 03:53

REFERENCES

Ambrose, S. and Norr, L. (1993). Experimental evidence for the relationship of the carbon isotope ratios of whole diet and dietary protein to those of bone collagen and carbonate. In Prehistoric Human Bone, Archaeology at the Molecular Level, Lambert, J. B. and Grupe, J., Eds. Berlin, Springer, pp. 1-37.

Arnold, T., Ed. (1882). Symeonis Monachi Opera Omnia, Historia Regum. Volume 1. London.

Arnold, T., Ed. (1885). Symeonis Monachi Opera Omnia, Historia Regum. Volume 2. London.

Bailey, R. N. (1980). Viking Age Sculpture. London, Collins.

Bailey, R. N. (1985). Aspects of Viking Age sculpture in Cumbria. In The Scandinavians in Cumbria, Baldwin, J. R. and Whyte, I. D., Eds. Edinburgh, School of Scottish Studies, pp. 53-64.

Bailey, R. N. and Cramp, R. J. (1988). The British Academy Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Sculpture, II. Cumberland, Westmorland and Lancashire North-of-the-Sands. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Barrett, J. H., Beukens R. P., and Nicholson, R. A. (2001). Diet and ethnicity during the Viking colonization of northern Scotland: evidence from fish bones and stable carbon isotopes. Antiquity, 75, 145-154.

Barrett, J. H. and Richards, M. P. (2004). Identity, gender, religion, and economy: new isotope and radiocarbon evidence for marine resource intensification in early historic Orkney, Scotland. European Journal of Archaeology, 7, 249-271.

Batt, C. M. (2014). Radiocarbon dates. In A Post-Roman Sequence at Carlisle Cathedral, McCarthy, M. R., Ed. Archaeological Journal, 171, pp. 187-259.

Beaumont, J., Geber, J., Powers, N. et al. (2013). Victims and survivors: stable isotopes used to identify migrants from the Great Irish Famine to 19th century London. American Journal Physical Anthropology, 150, 87-98.

Brennand, M. (2006). Finding the Viking dead. Current Archaeology, 204, 623-629.

Chenery, C., Evans, J. A., Score, D. et al. (2014). A boat load of Vikings? Journal of the North Atlantic (in press).

Colgrave, B. (1969). Two Lives of St. Cuthbert: Text Translation and Notes. New York, Greenwood Press and Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Colgrave, B. (1985). The Life of Bishop Wilfrid by Eddius Stephanus: Text Translation and Notes. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Cowen, J. D. (1934). A catalogue of objects of the Viking period in the Tullie House Museum, Carlisle. Trans-Cumberland Westmorland Antiquarian Archaeological Society, 2, 166-187.

Cowen, J. D. (1948). Viking burials in Cumbria. Trans-Cumberland Westmorland Antiquarian Archaeological Society, 48, 73-76.

Cowen, J. D. (1967). Viking burials in Cumbria: a supplement. Trans-Cumberland Westmorland Antiquarian Archaeological Society, 67, 31-34.

Craster, E. (1954). The patrimony of St. Cuthbert. English Historical Review 271, 177-199.

Edwards, B. J.N. (1998). Vikings in North-West England: The Artifacts. Lancaster, Centre for North-West Regional Studies.

Evans, J., Montgomery, J., Wildman, G. et al. (2010). Spatial variations in biosphere 87Sr/86Sr in Britain. Journal of the Geological Society, 167, 1-4.

Evans, J., Chenery, C. A., and Montgomery, J. (2012). A summary of strontium and oxygen isotope variation in human tooth enamel excavated from Britain. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectroscopy, 27, 754-764.

Fellows-Jensen, G. (1985a). Scandinavian Settlement Names in the North-West. Copenhagen, C. A. Reitzels Forlag.

Fellows-Jensen, G. (1985b). Scandinavian settlement in Cumbria and Dumfriesshire: place-name evidence. In The Scandinavians in Cumbria, Baldwin, J. R. and Whyte, I. D., Eds. Edinburgh, School of Scottish Studies, pp. 65-82.

Fricke, H. C., O’ Neil J. R., and Lynnerup, N. (1995). Oxygen isotope composition of human tooth enamel from medieval Greenland: linking climate and society. Geology, 23, 869-872.

Griffiths, D. (2004). Settlement and acculturation in the Irish Sea Region. In Land, Sea, and Home, Hines, J., Lane, A., and Redknap, M., Eds. Society of Medieval Archaeology Monograph 20, pp. 125-138.

Hart, C. R. (1975). The Early Charters of Northern England and the North Midlands. Leicester, Leicester University Press.

Higham, N. J. (2004). Viking Age settlement in the north-western countryside: lifting the veil. In Land, Sea, and Home, Hines, J., Lane, A., and Redknap, M., Eds. Society of Medieval Archaeology Monograph 20, pp. 297-311.

Jay, M. and Richards, M. P. (2007). British Iron Age diet: stable isotopes and other evidence. Proceedings of Prehistoric Society, 73, 169-190.

Jim, S., Ambrose, S. H., and Evershed, R. P. (2004). Stable carbon isotopic evidence for differences in the biosynthetic origin of bone cholesterol, collagen, and apatite: implications for their use in palaeodietary reconstruction. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 68, 61-74.

Leech, R. and Newman, R. (1985). Excavations at Dacre, 1982-1984: interim report. Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeology Society, 85, 87-93.

Lerwick, C. and Buckberry, J. 2013. The human remains at Carlisle Cathedral. In Ed. M. R. McCarthy Excavations at Carlisle Cathedral in 1988: Roman, Medieval and Post Medieval Data. [data set] York Archaeology Data Service [distributor] doi: 10.5284/1019911.

Lerwick, C. and Buckberry, J. (2014). The human remains. In A post-Roman Sequence at Carlisle Cathedral, McCarthy, M. R., Ed. Archaeological Journal, 171, 187-259.

Mays, S. (2000). Biodistance studies using craniometric variation in British archaeological skeletal material. In Human Osteology in Archaeology and Forensic Science, Cox, M. and Mays, S., Eds. London, Greenwich Medical Media, pp. 277-288.

McCarthy, M. R. (2010). Carlisle: the making of a medieval town on the Anglo-Scottish frontier. In Making A Medieval Town: Patterns of Early Medieval Urbanization, Buko, A. and McCarthy, M. R., Eds. Warsaw, Institute of Archaeology and Polish Academy of Sciences, pp. 105-129.

McCarthy, M. R. (2014). A post-Roman sequence at Carlisle Cathedral. Archaeological Journal, 171 187-259.

McGurk, P. (1998). The Chronicle of John of Worcester, Volume III: The Annals for 1067-1140. Oxford, Clarendon Press.

Metcalf, D. M. (1987). A topographical commentary on the coin finds from 9th century Northumbria (ca. 780-870). In Coinage in Ninth-Century Northumbria. Tenth Oxford Symposium on Coinage and Monetary History, Metcalf, D. M. Ed. Oxford, British Archaeological Series 180, pp. 361-382.

Montgomery, J., Muldner, G., Cook et al. (2009). Isotope analysis of bone collagen and tooth enamel. In Clothing for the Soul Divine: Burials at the Tomb of St. Ninian. Excavations at Whithorn Priory, 19571967, Lowe, C., Ed. Edinburgh, Historic Scotland, pp. 63-80.

Montgomery, J., Grimes, V., Buckberry, J. et al. (2014). Finding Vikings with isotope analysis: the view from wet and windy islands. Journal of the North Atlantic (in press).

Montgomery, J. and Towers, J. (2014). The isotopes. In A Post-Roman Sequence at Carlisle Cathedral, McCarthy, M., Ed. Archaeological Journal, 171, 187-259.

Muldner, G. and Richards, M. P. (2007). Stable isotope evidence for 1500 years of human diet at the City of York, U. K. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 133, 682-697.

Muldner, G., Chenery, C., and Eckardt, H. (2011). The ‘headless Romans’: multi-isotope investigations of an unusual burial ground from Roman Britain. Journal of Archaeological Science, 38, 280-290.

Newman, R. (2006). The early medieval period resource assessment. In The Archaeology of North-West England: An Archaeological Research Framework for the North-West Region, Brennand, M., Ed. London, Association of Local Government Archaeological Officers, English Heritage, and Council for British Archaeology, pp. 91-114.

Ottaway, P. (2014). The Ironwork. In A Post-Roman Sequence at Carlisle Cathedral, McCarthy, M., Ed. Archaeological Journal, 171 (in press).

Paterson, C. and D. Tweddle (2014). Gold, silver, copper alloy. In A Post-Roman Sequence at Carlisle Cathedral, McCarthy, M., Ed. Archaeological Journal, 171 (in press).

Paterson, C., Parsons, A. J., Newman, R., Johnson, N., and Howard Davis, C. (2014). Shadows in the Sand: The Excavation of a Viking-Age Cemetery at Cumwhitton, Cumbria. Lancaster, Oxford Archaeology North.

Pollard, A. M., Pellegrini, M. and Lee-Thorp, J. A. (2011). Technical note: observations on the conversion of dental enamel 5'8Op values to 5'8Ow to determine human mobility. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 145, 499-504.

Pollard, A. M., Ditchfield, P., Piva, E. et al. (2012). Sprouting like cockle amongst the wheat: the St. Brice’s Day massacre and the isotopic analysis of human bones from St. John’s College, Oxford. Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 31, 83-102.

Price, T. D. and Gestsdottir, H. (2006). The first settlers of Iceland: an isotopic approach to colonisation. Antiquity, 80, 130-144.

Price, T. D., Frei, K. M., Dobat, A. S. et al. (2011). Who was in Harold Bluetooth’s army? Strontium isotope investigation of the cemetery at the Viking Age fortress at Trelleborg, Denmark. Antiquity, 85, 476-489.

Rollason, D. (1998). Symeon’s contribution to historical writing in northern England. In Symeon of Durham, Historian of Durham and the North, Rollason, D., Ed. Stamford, Shaun Tyas, pp. 1-13.

Sharpe, R. (1998). Symeon as pmphleteer. In Symeon of Durham, Historian of Durham and the North, Rollason, D., Ed. Stamford, Shaun Tyas, pp. 214-229.

Smyth, A. (1977). Scandinavian Kings in the British Isles, 850-880. Oxford, Oxford University Press.

Whitelock, D. (1979). English Historical Documents Volume 1, ca. 500-1042. London, Eyre Methuen.



 

html-Link
BB-Link