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Object and economy in medieval Winchester / Martin Biddle ; with contributions by Ian H. Goodall, David A. Hinton, and 81 other authors ; and by the staff and volunteers of the Winchester Research Unit.

Archaeopress Digital Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Biddle, Martin, author.
Goodall, Ian H., author.
Hinton, David Alban, author.
Series:
Winchester studies ; 7.
Artefacts from medieval Winchester. Part II, Object and economy in medieval Winchester
Winchester studies ; 7
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Excavations (Archaeology)--England--Winchester.
Excavations (Archaeology).
Material culture--England--Winchester--History--To 1500.
Material culture.
Winchester (England)--History--To 1500.
Winchester (England).
Winchester (England)--Economic conditions.
Winchester (England)--Antiquities.
England.
England--Winchester.
Genre:
History
Physical Description:
1 online resource (cx, 1271 pages, lxv pages of plates) : illustrations (some color), maps.
Place of Publication:
Bicester : Archaeopress Publishing LTD, 2025.
Summary:
"Over six thousand objects were recovered during the Winchester excavations of 1961 to 1971 – by far the most extensive corpus of stratified and datable medieval objects yet presented from a single city. Martin Biddle and the team of eighty-three contributors assembled by the Winchester Research Unit have used this material to investigate not only the industries and arts, but the economic, cultural, and social life of medieval Winchester. Their findings are being published in two parts: the first part, by Katherine Barclay, will deal with the pottery remains; and this second part in two volumes by Martin Biddle covers all the objects from the finest products of the Anglo-Saxon goldsmith’s skill to the iron tenter-hooks of the cloth industry. Martin Biddle’s study of the objects identifies change through time, and traces variation across the broad social scale – from cottage to palace – represented in the excavated sites. Using the objects as evidence for the economy of the medieval city, it also throws new light on some of the great questions of medieval industry and artistic production: amongst them the development of the textile industry, the origins of wire-drawing and the manufacture of pins, the beginnings of window-glass production, and the earliest glass painting. These objects are an essential part of the evidence for the development and changing character of the excavated sites to be published in forthcoming volumes of Winchester Studies on the Minsters. To ensure complete integration between the objects and the sites, every object in this volume is related to the context in which it was found and a concordance provides a detailed conspectus phase by phase of each of the twenty sites excavated between 1961-71, and of the objects found in each phase"-- Provided by publisher.
Notes:
Previously issued in print: Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed on April 28, 2025).
Other Format:
Print version: Biddle, Martin. Object and economy in medieval Winchester
ISBN:
1803270233
9781803270234
OCLC:
1521234777
Access Restriction:
Some versions: Open access versions available from some providers open access

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