England was never as isolated as many history books once suggested. New research shows that people moved into and across England steadily for centuries, arriving from places as distant as the ...
Migration into England was continuous from the Romans through to the Normans and men and women moved from different places ...
A major bioarcheological study of ancient teeth revealed groundbreaking information about early medieval migrants ...
It always amazes me how much history is still being uncovered today, despite the time that has been dedicated to looking and ...
A groundbreaking bioarchaeological study from the Universities of Edinburgh and Cambridge has shattered long-held assumptions about medieval migration patterns into England. Rather than arriving in ...
The cemetery found in Suffolk consists of at least 11 Anglo-Saxon burial mounds (barrows) dating to the 6th–7th centuries AD. While acidic sandy soils have dissolved the bones, the excavators have ...
In this fresh and accessible slice of medieval history, Morris (The Norman Conquest) uses the architectural history of castles in Great Britain from the time of Edward the Confessor in 1051 until the ...
Come learn about an opportunity to study the Middle Ages in England for three weeks this coming summer! There will be an information meeting on Thursday, Jan. 15, starting at 4 p.m. in Kimpel Hall ...
The first study to use x-rays and CT scans to detect evidence of cancer among the skeletal remains of a pre-industrial population suggests that between 9-14% of adults in medieval Britain had the ...
The earliest description of cancer is from an ancient Egyptian papyrus, and going back further, even dinosaurs suffered a form of the disease. But cancer long has been thought to have become a common ...