Migrations and Invasions in Archaeological ExplanationJohn Chapman, Helena Hamerow The contributors to this volume seek to understand migrations and invasion on their own terms, the strengths and weaknesses of migration and invasion models as explanatory models of cultural change. Papers are written by David Anthony, John Chapman, Sally Crawford, Helena Hamerow, James Milroy and Lesley Milroy. |
Common terms and phrases
Anglo Anglo-Saxon burial Anglo-Saxon cemeteries Anglo-Saxon England Anthony archaeological cultures archaeological explanation archaeological theory argued artefacts Baluch beads belt Berinsfield Britain British Britons brooches burial rite burial ritual buried Cambridge chain migration Chapman communities context Continental cemeteries cremation cultural change demographic Dolukhanov Early Medieval economic elite dominance English ethnic Europe European evidence example excavated factors fifth Frénouville Großkuchen Hamerow Härke Higham Hjemsted immigrants important indigenous inhumations internal invasions and migrations knife labor language change language shift Late Roman linguistic change London material culture migration models Migration Period migrationism migrationist migrations and invasions Milroy Milroy and Milroy mobility Moch movements norms orientation Oxford patterns political population density prehistoric processes processual archaeology refugees regions Renfrew retreat from migrationism Roman Britain Romano-British Saxon settlement Sewerby sixth century skeletal social network society sociolinguistic solidary speakers Spong Hill suggest University Press Wageningen Wasperton weapon burials Yeavering