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Dr Pamela Graves' Outputs (29)

Lost Lives, New Voices. Unlocking the stories of the Scottish soldiers from the Battle of Dunbar 1650 (2018)
Book
Gerrard, C., Graves, C., Millard, A., Annis, R., & Caffell, A. (2018). Lost Lives, New Voices. Unlocking the stories of the Scottish soldiers from the Battle of Dunbar 1650. Oxbow Books

In November 2013 two mass burials were discovered unexpectedly on a construction site in the city of Durham in north-east England. Over the next 2 years, a complex jigsaw of evidence was pieced together by a team of archaeologists to establish the id... Read More about Lost Lives, New Voices. Unlocking the stories of the Scottish soldiers from the Battle of Dunbar 1650.

“Curst Dunbar” and Durham (2018)
Book Chapter
Graves, C. (2018). “Curst Dunbar” and Durham. In C. Gerrard, C. Graves, A. Millard, R. Annis, & A. Caffell (Eds.), Lost lives, new voices : unlocking the stories of the Scottish soldiers from the Battle of Dunbar. Oxbow Books

The ex-situ painted wall plaster. (2015)
Book Chapter
Graves, C., & Caple, C. (2015). The ex-situ painted wall plaster. In R. Gilchrist, & C. Green (Eds.), Glastonbury Abbey Excavations: archaeological investigations 1904-79 (337-340). Society of Antiquaries of London

Stained and painted window glass (2015)
Book Chapter
Graves, C. (2015). Stained and painted window glass. In R. Gilchrist, & C. Green (Eds.), Glastonbury Abbey Excavations: archaeological investigations 1904-79 (320-336). Society of Antiquaries of London

The assemblage of window glass from antiquarian excavations at Glastonbury Abbey comprises 2,085 fragments (not including items on display); this represents over 15,952cm2 in area. The condition of the glass varies: the post-medieval glass is general... Read More about Stained and painted window glass.

Medieval window glass. (2014)
Book Chapter
Graves, C., & Cramp, R. (2014). Medieval window glass. In R. Cramp (Ed.), The Hirsel Excavations (199-200). Society for Medieval Archaeology

North Sea Capital (2013)
Book
Graves, C. (2013). North Sea Capital. Durham University

Uses and recycling of brick in medieval and Tudor English buildings: insights from the application of luminescence dating and new avenues for further research. (2010)
Journal Article
Bailiff, I., Blain, S., Graves, C., Gurling, T., & Semple, S. (2010). Uses and recycling of brick in medieval and Tudor English buildings: insights from the application of luminescence dating and new avenues for further research. Archaeological Journal, 167(1), 165-196. https://doi.org/10.1080/00665983.2010.11020796

Luminescence dating has been applied to ceramic bricks sampled from a selection of English medieval ecclesiastical and secular buildings in Essex, Kent and Lincolnshire, ranging in age from the fourth to the late sixteenth centuries. The results obta... Read More about Uses and recycling of brick in medieval and Tudor English buildings: insights from the application of luminescence dating and new avenues for further research..

Architectural fragments (2008)
Book Chapter
Graves, C. (2008). Architectural fragments. In J. Mann (Ed.), Finds from the Well at St Paul-in-the-Bail, Lincoln (20-22). Lincoln Archaeological Studies, Oxbow Books

Identification and analysis of an assemblage of architectural fragments from the well; discussion of the possible origins and use of the well; discussion of the implications of the architectural fragments in terms of iconoclasm.

Discussion (2008)
Book Chapter
Mann, J., & Graves, C. (2008). Discussion. In J. Mann (Ed.), Finds from the Well at St Paul-in-the-Bail, Lincoln (79-92). Lincoln Archaeological Studies, Oxbow Books

From an Archaeology of Iconoclasm to an Anthropology of the Body : Images, Punishment and Personhood in England, 1500-1660 (2008)
Journal Article
Graves, C. (2008). From an Archaeology of Iconoclasm to an Anthropology of the Body : Images, Punishment and Personhood in England, 1500-1660. Current Anthropology, 49(1), 35-57. https://doi.org/10.1086/523674

This paper argues that the iconoclastic attack on images in England in the 16th and 17th century was not random destruction. Particular parts of the body, namely the head and hands, were the focus of attack. These were the same foci upon which capita... Read More about From an Archaeology of Iconoclasm to an Anthropology of the Body : Images, Punishment and Personhood in England, 1500-1660.