1982
DOI: 10.1017/s0079497x0000846x
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Cemeteries and Settlement Patterns of the Iron Age on the Yorkshire Wolds

Abstract: The Yorkshire Wolds hold an air of mystery for students of the Iron Age. As is well known these chalk hills lie at the heart of the largest group of Early Iron Age burials in Britain, the ‘Arras Culture’, so-called after the first and richest cemetery to be excavated (fig. 1; Stead 1979). Although these burials are often quoted in general discussions and formed an important piece of evidence in the ‘invasion controversy’, it is only in the last few years that up to date illustrations of the material have begun… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 10 publications
(9 reference statements)
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“…The settlement at Wetwang Slack, however, has been excavated and is contemporary with the burials excavated (Dent 1982;. Such settlements and the structures they contain are broadly similar to those found in other parts of Britain (which do not share the same burial rite).…”
Section: 'Arras Culture'mentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…The settlement at Wetwang Slack, however, has been excavated and is contemporary with the burials excavated (Dent 1982;. Such settlements and the structures they contain are broadly similar to those found in other parts of Britain (which do not share the same burial rite).…”
Section: 'Arras Culture'mentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Stead argues that the Cowlam burial is the earliest of the 'Arras culture' (and the bracelet may be an import) while the Arras and Danes Graves cemeteries are probably late. Dent (1982) has proposed a sub-division of involuted bow brooches based on their size. Most of the larger involuted bow brooches from Wetwang/Garton Slack came from deeper graves.…”
Section: 'Arras Culture'mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…British archaeologists have long assumed that the Yorkshire chariot rite ultimately derived from the continent and that the ensuing 'Arras' burials spanned the later first millennium BC. Based largely on associated brooches, Dent (1982Dent ( , 1984 proposed a date from the fourth to first centuries BC for Wetwang, the largest 'Arras' cemetery yet excavated.…”
Section: Questioning the Timing And Utility Of Existing Chrono-typolomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…East Yorkshire is one area where bodies were not burned or exposed but were buried in a grave pit surrounded by a ditched enclosure. This particular style of burial, in a square-ditched earthen barrow, is almost exclusively restricted (within Britain) to East Yorkshire region (Brewster 1982;Dent 1982) and has been considered to represent a culture group, the Arras culture (Stead 1979). The small but distinct funerary features have shown up either as earthworks or, after destruction by ploughing, as cropmarks.…”
Section: Dividing the Living From The Deadmentioning
confidence: 99%