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Archaeologies & Antiquaries: Essays by Dai Morgan Evans - David Morgan Evans

Archaeologies & Antiquaries: Essays by Dai Morgan Evans

Buch | Softcover
304 Seiten
2022
Archaeopress Archaeology (Verlag)
978-1-80327-158-3 (ISBN)
CHF 83,80 inkl. MwSt
This book collects and republishes 14 key academic works by Dai Morgan Evans FSA (1944–2017). Spanning early medieval studies, the management and conservation of ancient monuments, histories of antiquarianism, and the Welsh church of Llangar, the chapters have been freshly edited and published together for the first time with new illustrations.
Archaeologies and Antiquaries collects and republishes 14 key academic works by the late Professor Dai Morgan Evans FSA (1944–2017), whose career spanned the civil service, learned societies, charitable organisations and the academy. His research focused on the archaeology of Wales and England. Spanning early medieval archaeology and history, the management and conservation of ancient monuments, histories of antiquarianism, and the Welsh church of Llangar, the chapters have been reformatted, freshly edited and published together for the first time with new illustrations. Together, the studies provide still-pertinent and insightful investigations, here contextualised by a multi-authored introduction surveying Dai’s career and contributions to archaeology and its public understanding.

David Morgan Evans (1944–2017) was a graduate of Cardiff University (1963–1966) before pursuing postgraduate research on the archaeology of early Welsh poetry. Evans was an assistant director of the South Cadbury excavations led by Professor Leslie Alcock. He joined the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments and Historic Buildings in Wales in 1969, transferred to the English Inspectorate in 1977 and became General Secretary of the Society of Antiquaries of London from 1992 until his retirement in 2004, after which he continued to lecture at UCL, Birkbeck and the University of Chester, and was appointed Visiting Professor at the latter from 2006. In retirement, Evans co-instigated fieldwork at the Pillar of Eliseg, at Llantysilio yn Iâl, Denbighshire. He was also known for his media activities which focused on two television shows involving the building of replica Roman buildings, the first at Buster: Rebuilding the Past, which resulted in his book Rebuilding the Past. A Roman Villa (Metheun, 2003); and a second at Wroxeter Roman City: Rome Wasn’t Built in a Day. Howard Williams BSc MA PhD FSA is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches the Early Middle Ages, death, burial and commemoration, public archaeology and the history of archaeology. Kara Critchell BA MA PhD is Lecturer in History at the University of Chester and specialises in genocide studies, sensory experience of incarceration and the memorialisation of conflict. Sheena Evans MA (Cantab) History joined the Ministry of Public Building and Works in 1968 and met Dai Morgan Evans when visiting the Welsh regional office of the Ministry in 1969. They married in 1973, by which time she was working for the Welsh Office. She moved to the English education department in 1979, and spent the rest of her career working for that department in London. In retirement, she is working on a biography of an eminent woman scientist and social reformer.

Dai Morgan Evans: A life in archaeology – Howard Williams, Chris Musson, Christopher Young, Rosemary Cramp, Adrian James and Sheena Evans ;



The origins of Powys – Christian, heretic or pagan? ;



Irish influence in post-Roman mid-Wales ;



An early Christian monument from Llanwyddelan, Montgomeryshire ;



Legacy hunting and Welsh identities ;



‘King Arthur’ and Cadbury Castle, Somerset ;



Eighteenth-century descriptions of the Cerne Abbas Giant ;



Et in Arcadia? The problem with ruins ;



The Society of Antiquaries, 1707–18: Meeting places and origin stories ;



‘Banks is the villain!’? Sir Joseph Banks and the governance of the Society of Antiquaries ;



Octavius Morgan: Journal of a tour through North Wales in 1821 ;



Llangar – Church and community in the early eighteenth century ;


Part I: The fabric of the church ;


Part II: The poor, vermin and other matters ;


Part III: christmas, holy communion, ale and the wardens ;


Part IV: Hierarchy, liturgy, fixtures and fittings

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 44 figures (colour throughout)
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 174 x 245 mm
Gewicht 782 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Archäologie
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Mittelalter
ISBN-10 1-80327-158-2 / 1803271582
ISBN-13 978-1-80327-158-3 / 9781803271583
Zustand Neuware
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