Welcome to the Urban Archaeology blog. Chiz Harward provides a range of archaeological services including desk-based assessments, evaluations, excavations, watching briefs and post-excavation services, training and development work, and archaeological illustration. This weblog will carry news of projects as and when they happen as well as wider thoughts on archaeological issues, especially recording, stratigraphy and training.



Chiz Harward appointed Cathedral Archaeologist at Winchester

Following the retirement of Dr John Crook, Urban Archaeology’s Chiz Harward has been appointed Cathedral Archaeologist at Winchester Cathedral

Building on the excavation and publication of major monastic sites such as the priory, hospital and cemetery of St Mary Spital (MOLA) Chiz has found himself increasingly working on ecclesiastical and monastic sites, digging at numerous Cotswold churches (as well as the occasional Cotswold pub) over the last decade. Extensive work at Gloucester cathedral has involved both excavation and standing building recording and last year Urban Archaeology spent Lockdown v1.0 combining excavation and ‘buildings archaeology’ in a very 3-D project at the former Infirmarer’s Lodging of St Peter’s, Gloucester.

Winchester is an inspiring and daunting setting for any urban archaeologist, the site of so many important events in archaeology from the game-changing work of the Biddles and the Winchester Excavations Committee, to the birth of Harris’ matrix and Single Context Recording. Chiz hopes to bring his experience of urban excavation, building recording and project planning to the role and to build on the work of John Crook and the cathedral team.

Working with the wider cathedral team Chiz will seek to ensure that the cathedral and its close continues to be conserved, understood and enhanced, that where necessary it is excavated and recorded to the highest standards, and that the archaeology, history and heritage of this extraordinary site is brought to the widest audience possible.

A Field Guide to Larking - pen and ink illustrations

Lara Maiklem's new book 'A Field Guide to Larking: Beachcombing, Mudlarking, Fieldwalking and More' is out now from Bloomsbury. It's a really beautifully produced volume, packed full of facts and information, illustrated by Johnny Mudlark's outstanding artefact paintings, and exquisitely designed by Clare Baggaley. I was lucky enough to be asked to contribute pen and ink illustrations.

 
"A Field Guide to Larking is a practical, interactive and inspiring guide to 'larking' from the bestselling author of Mudlarking.

To lark is to get out and about, to explore the world around us and to discover the little treasures hiding in plain sight. We think, of course, of mudlarking but there is also beachlarking, fieldlarking or even simply exploring your own home with fresh eyes.

In this beautiful field guide, Lara teaches us how to lark for ourselves. There are maps and charts, tips and lists, and colour illustrations throughout to help identify finds. From tide tables for mudlarkers to a flint guide for fieldlarkers, this book is richly informative and yet small enough to pop in a pocket. Like a journal it invites you to interact - to make notes and record finds along the way.

If Lara Maiklem's first book was a glimpse into a hidden world, with this field guide she shows us how we can discover it for ourselves" 
 

My usual illustration work is super-accurate technical artefact drawings, but for this job I had to develop a looser style that fitted with Johnny Mudlarks' beautifully intricate paintings, whilst still being accurate and informative. It was a real pleasure to have to sit down and draw such a wide range of objects, from buttons and buckles to seaweed and skulls. 
 
The book is absolutely gorgeous, and I feel works on every level: engaging and informative text, lush illustrations, fabulous design, and all in all just a lovely thing to hold in your hands. 

Larking is available to buy from your local bookshop or from Bookshop.org.

A serendipitous finding in a book

Urban Archaeology often works at Gloucester Cathedral, and although we have a small library of books and reports on the priory and cathedral, we didn’t have a physical copy of ‘The Cathedral Church of Gloucester, a description of its fabric and a brief history of the episcopal see’ by HJLJ Massé, so when we spotted a cheap copy online we snapped it up.

The Tower, by EJ Burrow, 1894

Originally published in 1899, we got the 1908 third edition: it is a small book of 136 pages, with 49 illustrations, many taken from stunning pen and ink drawings by EJ Burrow, a Cheltenham artist and archaeologist. The author Massé was a metalworker who also wrote the Bell’s guide to Tewkesbury and Deerhurst, as well as guides to several French churches. The book is a pocket sized hardback, the 1905 General Preface set out the series’ aims which it meets handsomely:


‘This series of monographs has been planned to supply visitors to the great English Cathedrals with accurate and well illustrated guide-books at a popular price. The aim of each writer has been to produce a work compiled with sufficient knowledge and scholarship to be of value to the student of Archæology and History, and yet not too technical in language for the use of an ordinary visitor or tourist.’

On opening the front cover there was a bit of a surprise: pasted in the inside cover was a trade label for AH Pitcher of Gloucester, who had shops near the cathedral in College Court and College Street, but facing that was the handwritten name of David Verey with  the date January 1981, when he presumably bought (or was given) this copy. Verey is a major figure in Gloucestershire architectural history, writing the original Buildings of England ‘Pevsner’ volumes for the Cotswolds and the Vale and Forest of Dean in 1970, passing away in 1984, so to have his copy of Massé fall into our hands seems serendipitous given that we refer to his books on most of our jobs in the city and shire. 

A web version of the 1905 edition, and many others in the series, can be found here.