Monthly Archive for August, 2006

3,300-2,600 BC From Linear to Circular: Changing the Use of Space

Looking towards the setting sun over the Stanwell cursus on the winter solstice. Film iconDownload an animation that shows people observing the winter solstice sunrise from the horseshoe enclosure, and the bank of the cursus (1.4MB, requires QuickTime).

The Antique Landscape

Explore the Antique Landscape

Following Britain’s exit from the contracting Roman Empire, the towns and cities, which had already been in decline during the later part of the Romano-British period, rapidly fall into disuse. Severed from the wider network of the Roman Empire the focus appears to return to the local scale and immediate landscape. However processes were at work which lead to the emergence of Saxon society.
The materials dating from periods represented in these landscapes are still under investigation. Our understanding of the these landscapes therefore remains incomplete.

This was a period when people were having to cope with a breakdown in all aspects of the complex society of the Romano British period and adapt to an influx of settlers of Northern European descent.

At Heathrow a dispersed pattern of settlement seems once again to emerge. For example just south of the present day medieval village of Longford is a settlement consisting of rectangular buildings dating to the 6th century AD. A stag broach found in a pit in the settlement may originate from the north western Mediterranean area. There is some evidence of arable cultivation in a generally open scrubby landscape. Heathland also seems to be present.

Out of this Saxon settlement developed the medieval village of Longford, elements of which remain today.

3,000-1,700 BC Developing Ways to Share the Landscape

A family buries a Grooved Ware pot during a ceremony in a woodland clearing, perhaps as an offering to the gods. A family buries a Grooved Ware pot during a ceremony in a woodland clearing, perhaps as an offering to the gods.

2,500BC Henge Animation

Film iconDownload an animation showing the henge (requires QuickTime).