Society for Medieval Archaeology - News
Winter Symposium and AGM 2019: Registration Open
Society of Medieval Archaeology AGM and Winter Symposium The 2019 AGM will be held on Monday, December 2, 2019, 18:00 in the Sorby Room, Wager Building (attached to the Department of Archaeology), University of Reading, RG6 6AX. This is Building 5 on the campus map at https://www.reading.ac.uk/web/files/maps/whiteknights-campus-map.pdf The AGM will be followed by the Society
Medieval Archaeology Volume 63/1 now out!
Medieval Archaeology **Volume 63/1 now out and available at Taylor and Francis Online** I’m delighted to announce that issue 63/1 of Medieval Archaeology has now been published online, and the print copy is arriving with members now. The content in this new issue is wide-ranging both in chronology and in location, demonstrating the impressive breadth of the journal’s
Registration open for SMA Annual Conference 2019
Society for Medieval Archaeology 2019 Annual Conference “The Long Black Death”: New Perspectives King’s Manor, University of York (UK), 5-6 July 2019 A recent upsurge in scholarly interest in the Black Death has been driven in major part by methodological advances and new discoveries across a range of disciplines: archaeology is central to this as analysis
Annual Conference 2019: Preliminary Programme online
Society for Medieval Archaeology 2019 Annual Conference “The Long Black Death”: New Perspectives King’s Manor, University of York (UK), 5-6 July 2019 A recent upsurge in scholarly interest in the Black Death has been driven in major part by methodological advances and new discoveries across a range of disciplines: archaeology is central to this as analysis
Vol 62/2 Online now
Volume 62/2 of Medieval Archaeology is available online now via Taylor and Francis here.
SMA Annual Conference 2019: Call for Papers
Society for Medieval Archaeology 2019 Annual Conference The “Long” Black Death: New perspectives King’s Manor, University of York (UK), 5-6 July 2019 A recent upsurge in scholarly interest in the Black Death – its origins, spread and impact on medieval society – has been driven by methodological advances across a range of disciplines. New techniques have allowed