Happy new year!
2016 was a very busy year for Urban Archaeology, with lots of new projects and a very varied workload which included survey and recording
work on Gloucester Cathedral's 15th century Lady Chapel, post-excavation and
development work on LP-Archaeology's 100 Minories site and their ARK post-excavation systems, and finishing the analysis and publication text and drawings for the medieval farm
buildings excavated at Horse and Groom Inn.
Masons' marks from Gloucester Cathedral Lady Chapel |
Excavation work included working on a wonderfully preserved
Roman iron smelting site near Ross on Wye -urban stratigraphy in a very rural setting-
and a final bit of excavation at 100 Minories where there was excellent
survival of the medieval and post-medieval sequence. Smaller scale work has
included evaluations and watching briefs and several projects on
Gloucestershire churches.
Ornate medieval fan tracery, possibly from a vaulted canopy tomb from a watching brief in Oxford |
2016 also saw the publication of two MOLA monographs that I
co-authored: the Roman volume of the Plantation Place excavations, including the post-Boudiccan Roman fort, and the Upper Walbrook Roman Cemetery of Roman London. Both
books have been in the pipeline a long while, and it is great to see them out
and getting excellent reviews. I also had a paper published on archaeological training in the Historic Environment: Policy and Practice Journal, and an article with Nigel Jeffries on post-medieval Spitalfields in Current Archaeology.
Spitalfields Market: Secrets of one of Britain's biggest digs |
The early months of 2017 look like they will be full of fascinating
projects, with more work on the Gloucester Lady Chapel and several other church
projects, some interesting watching briefs lined up, a good bit of finds illustration
work to do, and the 100 Minories post-excavation work will restart shortly.
There'll be posts on this blog and the Urban Archaeology Facebook page as and when I find time to update it!
So thank you to everyone who has followed us over the
last year, I hope you have found all the posts interesting, and I'd like to
wish you all a peaceful 2017,
Chiz Harward
Urban Archaeology
Chiz Harward
Urban Archaeology
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