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  • New
  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2590652
Flowing through time: a longue durée perspective on riverine deposition in the Middle Thames Valley
  • Feb 1, 2026
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Miles Clifford

ABSTRACT This paper presents the first long-term, multi-period analysis of riverine deposition within the Middle Thames, focusing on the period c. 2200 BC to 1100 AD. Utilizing a comprehensive dataset of 2,337 river finds, it investigates patterning in the selection and distribution of deposited objects, with particular emphasis on weapons, tools, and martial objects. This study identifies significant regional and chronological variation, as well as patterns of long-term behavioural continuity, including the dominance of spearheads across the Bronze Age and Early Medieval periods, and a restructuring of depositional practices, avoiding martial associations, in the Roman period. In addition to compositional changes, this paper highlights the variable physical and mental geography of the Middle Thames Valley, identifying an evolving relationship between key crossing points, socio-political authority and emerging religious ideas. Methodologically, the study applies a novel raster-based approach within GIS to integrate both high and low-resolution spatial data, offering a new framework for interpreting riverine assemblages recovered without precise provenance. In doing so, it demonstrates that while the underlying logic dictating riverine deposition in the past may remain elusive, patterns of change and continuity are clearly discernible, revealing the Middle Thames as a dynamic and enduring ritual landscape shaped by sustained, structured deposition.

  • New
  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2589604
The Burnswark Hill controversy: the artillery evidence
  • Jan 29, 2026
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Alan Wilkins

ABSTRACT Contrary to several recent publications, this paper will argue that the case against Burnswark being a genuine siege is strongly supported by detailed analysis of the Roman use of artillery, specifically the position and interpretation of the Three Brethren as artillery mounds, the close position of the South Camp in relation to the Iron Age hillfort, the numbers and different types of missiles striking the collapsed/slighted stone face of the hillfort’s rampart, and the non-use of a Vespasian-style catapult blitzkrieg.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2602374
The Vikings in the Hebrides
  • Jan 6, 2026
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Tom Horne

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2602373
The landscapes of common Land: history and ecology in Norfolk and beyond
  • Dec 13, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Paul Stamper

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2562635
Mapping the urbanization of Medieval England
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Ben Jervis + 1 more

ABSTRACT Regional and chronological patterning in the establishment of towns across Medieval England is investigated in relation to the rural settlement provinces defined by Wrathmell and Roberts. It is proposed that this approach is advantageous to considering urbanization relative to arbitrary county divisions, as settlement provinces allow analysis of the relationship between town and country and between urbanization and physical geography. Following a review of historical and archaeological approaches to understanding urbanization, an analysis of urbanization in each province is presented, considering the chronology of urbanization, the relationship between boroughs, market towns and non-urban markets and variability in strategies employed by landowners to develop commercial places on their manors and estates. We identify marked regional patterning in the pace, intensity and character of urbanization at multiple scales and conclude that it is as a form of nucleation that urbanization can be best understood as a catalyst of commercialization in the Middle Ages.

  • Back Matter
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2589687
Titles received Volume 182
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2580763
Glassmaking in east Cheshire: an early seventeenth-century glass furnace at Mobberley
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Rowan Patel

ABSTRACT Fieldwork in Mobberley, Cheshire, where field-name evidence suggested the forest glass industry, resulted in the significant discovery of an unknown glass furnace site, revealed by an unprecedented surface assemblage of material including glassmaking waste and crucible sherds. This is the fifth wood-fuelled glasshouse site known in northern England. Surface collection resulted in hundreds of artefacts which are described for the first time, revealing much about glassmaking at this location. A gradiometer survey has revealed the likely furnace location. Scientific analysis shows the glass to be of the type produced by French glassmakers, who were active in England from 1567, but were unknown in Cheshire. The glass produced was made to a regional recipe, unknown outside north-west England, where it has been found at two other manufacturing sites. This furnace is unlikely to post-date 1615, when glassmaking was banned using wood fuel. A more specific operational period is indicated by parish register entries, showing glassmaking entrepreneur Francis Bristow was at Mobberley in 1613. This very late forest glass furnace was probably operated by the same French glassmakers who, from 1615, worked a coal-fired glasshouse 18 km away at Haughton Green, to which they probably moved after abandoning the Mobberley furnace.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2567135
Stone Circles. A Field Guide
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Katy Whitaker

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2577583
Archaeology, Economy, and Society: England from the fifth to the fifteenth century
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • David Petts

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/00665983.2025.2563414
The Origins of Hilltop Enclosures. Late Bronze Age hilltop sites in Atlantic western Britain
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • Archaeological Journal
  • Andy Valdez-Tullett