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Map, Manuscript, and Memory: The Emergence of an Anglo-Saxon Identity Between Origins and ApocalypseChapman, Juliana Marie 07 August 2009 (has links) (PDF)
As the only extant detailed world map of the Anglo-Saxon period, the Anglo-Saxon map, c. 1025, presents a unique opportunity to explore a sense of Anglo-Saxon social identity as evidenced in this graphic worldview. The Anglo-Saxon map has most often been dismissed as an ill-fitting illustration when viewed solely in its manuscript context or an equally poor navigational tool when considered in the context of modern cartography. The purpose of this thesis is to present the argument that the Anglo-Saxon world map is neither simply a bad illustration nor a poorly rendered map intended for travel, but is rather a richly articulated graphic and linguistic representation of a particularly Anglo-Saxon sense of social identity as it is explored in the midst of a belief in a divine creation, secular origin, and inevitable social apocalypse. This reading of the map is supported by a comparative study of these same three foundational themes as they occur in Old English elegiac literature. The goal of this study is to read the Anglo-Saxon world map in the context of the theoretical framework of social identity demonstrated in Old English elegiac literature. In so doing, a concept of Anglo-Saxon social identity, a cultural expectation of the pull of history and the future, will be presented as it is expressed across artistic genres in Anglo-Saxon England. When viewed in the context of this greater elegiac artistic tradition, the Anglo-Saxon map can be seen as a participatory exploration of Anglo-Saxon identity in the context of the themes of creation, origin, and apocalypse. As such, the map can rightly be viewed as an artifact which was created to be, and remains even now, a carrier of the memory of Anglo-Saxon identity for future generations.
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Death, disability, and diversity: An investigation of physical impairment and differential mortuary treatment in Anglo-Saxon EnglandBohling, Solange N. January 2020 (has links)
Until recently, individuals with physical impairment have been overlooked
within the field of archaeology due to the controversy surrounding the topics of
disability and care in the past. The current research adds to the growing body of
archaeological disability studies with an exploration of physical impairment and
the possibility of disability-related care in Anglo-Saxon England (5th-11th centuries
AD), utilising palaeopathological, funerary, and documentary analyses.
Palaeopathological analysis of 86 individuals with physical impairment
from 19 Anglo-Saxon cemetery populations (nine early, five middle, and five later)
was performed, and the possibility of disability-related care was explored for
several individuals. The mortuary treatment data (e.g. grave orientation, body
position, grave good inclusion) was gathered for the entire burial population at
each site (N=3,646), and the funerary treatment of the individuals with and
without physical impairment was compared statistically and qualitatively, both
within and between the Anglo-Saxon periods.
No obvious mortuary differentiation of individuals with physical impairment
was observed, although several patterns were noted. In three early Anglo-Saxon
cemeteries, spatial association between individuals with physical impairment,
non-adults, and females was observed. Early Anglo-Saxon individuals with
physical impairment were more frequently buried in marginal locations, and two
such individuals were buried in isolation. In the middle and later Anglo-Saxon
periods, the funerary treatment of individuals with physical impairment became
less variable, they were less frequently buried in marginal locations, and at three
middle Anglo-Saxon cemeteries, they were buried in association with socially
significant features in the cemetery landscape. The provision of care to ensure
survival was not necessary for a majority of the individuals with physical impairment, but several individuals (lower limb paralysis, mental impairment) may have received regular, long-term care.
This research proposes that the decreasing variability of mortuary treatment of individuals with physical impairment observed throughout the Anglo-Saxon period suggests that more variable attitudes about disability existed both within and between early Anglo-Saxon communities, while the political, social,
and religious unification starting in the middle Anglo-Saxon period may have led to the development of more standardised perceptions of disability in later Anglo-Saxon England.
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The Early Medieval Cutting Edge of Technology: An archaeometallurgical, technological and social study of the manufacture and use of Anglo-Saxon and Viking iron knives, and their contribution to the early medieval iron economy.Blakelock, Eleanor S. January 2012 (has links)
A review of archaeometallurgical studies carried out in the 1980s and 1990s of early medieval (c. AD410-1100) iron knives revealed several patterns, with clear differences in knife manufacturing techniques present in rural cemeteries and later urban settlements. The main aim of this research is to investigate these patterns and to gain an overall understanding of the early medieval iron industry. This study has increased the number of knives analysed from a wide spectrum of sites across England, Scotland and Ireland. Knives were selected for analysis based on x-radiographs and contextual details. Sections were removed for more detailed archaeometallurgical analysis.
The analysis revealed a clear change through time, with a standardisation in manufacturing techniques in the 7th century and differences between the quality of urban and rural knives. Analysis of cemetery knives revealed that there was some correlation between the knife and the deceased. Comparison of knives from England, Dublin and Europe revealed that the Vikings had little direct impact on England¿s knife manufacturing industry, although there was a change in manufacturing methods in the 10th century towards the mass produced sandwich welded knife. This study also suggests that Irish blacksmiths in Dublin continued their ¿native¿ blacksmithing techniques after the Vikings arrived. Using the data gathered a chaîne opértoire of the iron knife was re-constructed, this revealed that there was a specific order to the manufacture process and decisions were not only influenced by the cost of raw materials, the skill of the blacksmith and the consumer status, but also by cultural stimulus.
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Towards A Theory of ProseBrelsford, Joanne 10 1900 (has links)
<p> A critical analysis of several approaches to prose, and an attempt to construct a theory of prose as art, on which a language of prose criticism might be based. </p> / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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Animals, Identity and Cosmology: Mortuary Practice in Early Medieval Eastern EnglandRainsford, Clare E. January 2017 (has links)
The inclusion of animal remains in funerary contexts was a routine feature of Anglo-Saxon cremation ritual, and less frequently of inhumations, until the introduction of Christianity during the 7th century. Most interpretation has focused either on the animal as symbolic of identity or as an indication of pagan belief, with little consideration given to the interaction between these two aspects. Animals were a fundamental and ubiquitous part of early medieval society, and their contribution to mortuary practices is considered to be multifaceted, reflecting their multiple roles in everyday life.
This project considers the roles of animals in mortuary practice between the 5th-7th centuries across five counties in eastern England – Norfolk, Suffolk, Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and Essex – in both cremation and inhumation rites. Animal remains have been recognised in 5th to 7th century burials in eastern England from an early date, and the quality of the existing archives (both material and written) is investigated and discussed as an integral part of designing a methodology to effectively summarise data across a wide area. From the eastern England dataset, four aspects of identity in mortuary practice are considered in terms of their influence on the role of animals: choice of rite (cremation/inhumation); human biological identity (age & gender); regionality; and changing expressions of belief and status in the 7th century. The funerary role of animals is argued to be based around broadly consistent cosmologies which are locally contingent in their expression and practice. / Arts & Humanities Research Council Studentship under the Collaborative Doctoral Award scheme with Norwich Castle Museum as the partner organisation.
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Defining Destinations: Tourism's Relation to East German Identity Before and After ReunificationAnderson, Kerry F. 09 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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The Synthesis of Anglo-Saxon and Christian Traditions in the Old English <I>JUDITH<I>Eakin, Sarah E. January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Wonder, derision and fear: the uses of doubt in Anglo-Saxon Saints’ livesAdams, Sarah Joy January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Employee relations in German multinationals in an Anglo-Saxon setting: Towards a Germanic version of the Anglo-Saxon approach?McDonald, Frank, Heise, A., Tüselmann, H-J. January 2003 (has links)
No / This study examines whether German multinationals operating in an Anglo-Saxon setting design their employee relations primarily on the German or the Anglo-Saxon model. The authors¿ cross-sectional comparison with UK-owned firms provides no evidence of a transfer of the current German approach but does point to a distinctive Germanic version of the `high-road¿ variant of the Anglo-Saxon approach. Intra-German analysis shows that this is most pronounced among the types of subsidiaries that are particularly significant for disseminating employment relations innovations across the multinational, but that these also have the highest incidence of collective arrangements and the lowest incidence of the `low-road¿ variant of the Anglo-Saxon approach. In the light of recent reforms in the German industrial relations system, the findings point to an emerging new flexible collective approach with a comprehensive direct employee involvement dimension.
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On sacred ground: social identity and churchyard burial in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire, C. 700-1100 ADBuckberry, Jo January 2007 (has links)
Yes
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