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International Medieval Congress 2009

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Session: 626
Title: Theatres of Power: The Appropriation of Ancient Landscapes by the Church
Date / Time: July 14, 2009 11.15-12.45
 
Sponsor: Society for Medieval Archaeology
 
Organiser: Dawn Hadley, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
 
Moderator: Richard Morris, Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds
 
Paper
626-a:
The Circle and the Cross:The Adoption and Use of Prehistoric Monuments by the Early Christian Church in Anglo-Saxon England
(Language: English)
Sarah Semple, Department of Archaeology, Durham University
Paper
626-b:
Stranger in a Strange Land?: The Church of West Halton in its Bronze Age Setting
(Language: English)
Dawn Hadley, Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield
Paper
626-c:
Custodians of Continuity: The Barlings Abbey Landscape Project
(Language: English)
David Stocker, English Heritage, London
 
Abstract: Churches juxtaposed with prehistoric monuments are a scarce but persistent feature of the English landscape. The first paper in this session explores the wide-ranging and diverse evidence for the siting of early Christian foundations within, adjacent and on top of ancient prehistoric remains. The second paper discusses the significance of the recent discoveries at West Halton (Lincolnshire) of a complex of Bronze Age barrows and a square enclosure adjacent to the parish church. The site has also produced evidence of early Anglo-Saxon occupation, and the paper discusses the relationship between the appropriation of the prehistoric landscape for both settlement and ecclesiastical activity. The final paper outlines the long-standing investigation of the landscape setting of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Barlings (Lincolnshire), focussing on the relationship between the ritual and the mundane in the landscape, asking whether the label 'ritual landscape' is meaningful, and investigating the late Roman and Middle Saxon background to what became the Abbey estate.
 

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