Doctoral Research in Portable Antiquities Scheme data and
Roman Britain
Project leader: Tom
Brindle
Department: Portable
Antiquities and Treasure
Project start: October 2006
End date: October 2009
Other British Museum staff: Roger Bland,
Dan Pett
External partners:
Dr John Pearce, Deptartment of Classics, Kings College,
London, www.kcl.ac.uk/classics
Sally Worrell, Portable Antiquities Scheme/Institute of Archaeology
www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology
Project funded by:
Arts and Humanities Research Council
The British Museum
Description:
The Portable Antiquities Scheme records archaeological artefacts
found by members of the public, many of which are discovered by
metal detector users. This information is held on an online
database, viewable at www.finds.org.uk, and represents an
exciting new archaeological resource with the potential to
significantly add to our understanding of the past.
Using the data held on the Portable
Antiquities Scheme database, this doctoral study is investigating
just how much this new set of archaeological information can tell
us about the Roman period in Britain.
Comparing the metal detected data with other
forms of archaeological information, this research seeks to
determine whether the information gathered by the Portable
Antiquities Scheme can be used to tell us about previously unknown
Roman sites, and whether it can add to our knowledge of those Roman
sites that are already known.
The research focuses on a number of sample
regions within Britain, in order to examine the relationship
between metal detected data and other archaeological methods in
different areas. The areas for which this data is being
investigated are provisionally Northamptonshire, Worcestershire and
Warwickshire, Wiltshire and Kent.
The reason for looking at data from different
areas is that the archaeological evidence for Roman activity varies
from region to region. By examining several areas it will be easier
to make an assessment of the potential that the Portable
Antiquities Scheme data has to tell us about Roman Britain as a
whole.
Objectives:
The chief objective of this research is to
assess the extent to which the use of Portable Antiquities Scheme
data can contribute to the study of the past.
The study seeks to answer several broad
questions: Can the traditional methods used to study archaeological
artefacts found from archaeological excavations be used to study
metal detector finds? Can this new archaeological database be used
to inform us about previously unknown Roman sites? Can metal
detector data tell us new information about Roman sites that we
already know a lot about? How reliable is metal detector data for
telling us about the past? The answers to all of these questions
will contribute to answering the much more general question; how is
our knowledge of the Roman period enhanced by the study of Portable
Antiquities Scheme data?
Although this study focuses on the Roman
period, it is intended that the outcomes will have wider
implications for those interested in using similar data for the
study of other periods, and will provide an example for how such
work may be undertaken in the future.
More information:
www.finds.org.uk - Portable
Antiquities Scheme home page
www.findsdatabase.org.uk
-Portable Antiquities Scheme database
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