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1. BBC - Wales History - Stone Age
I have learned here more than i ever did in welsh archaelogy. Although the infois bascially summarized, it is pretty concise.Capsulized.Great work!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/history/sites/rr/pages/rr-1.shtml
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27th September 2005
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Stone Age
1. Pontnewydd Cave: St Asaph - 1.8 million - 100,000 BC
Home to the first human beings in Wales, this cave provided shelter for a group of hunter-gatherer people a quarter of a million years ago. It was when the cave was being used as an ammunition dump during the war that archaeologists found the bones and teeth of Neanderthal men and children, as well as stone and flint axes, scrapers and arrow heads. These early axe heads would have been attached to straight pieces of wood, and sealed with pine resin and beeswax to make some of the earliest weapons in Wales. 2. Paviland Cave: Gower - c. 28,000 BC Now known to be a man, the person was buried with ornaments like shells, ivory and mammoth bones, and the skeleton packed with red ochre. This find provided invaluable evidence about ritual, the kinds of wild animals of the time, including reindeer, hyenas and the woolly rhinoceros and helped in our understanding of the spread of man through Europe. It is still a mystery as to why the man was buried here: did it hold some spiritual or mythical significance? 3. Severn Estuary - c. 6500 BC

2. Welsh Celtic Ethnicity Society English LoCuaL
? Celtic Dejavu http//celticdejavu.tripod.com (Celtic Welsh) Offers texts on Celtic archaelogy, as well as links to sites on culture
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

3. T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence Of Arabia) / 100 Welsh Heroes / 100 Arwyr
qualified him for a Welsh scholarship at Jesus College Oxford where his life took a decisive turn. At Oxford he studied Archaelogy and Lawrence
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. Georgetown The Jones-Donner Collection
Jones also discusses a wide variety of topics in the letters, including music, archaelogy, languages, linguistics, Welsh history, World War II
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

5. ISRAPUNDIT News Views On Israel
J Welsh. We are most grateful to Mr Welsh for taking out the time for the purpose of this interview. IsraPundit. Mr Welsh
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. Archaelogy Of The Voice - Mike Pearson Of Brith Gof Explores
pp.174199. This article is Mike Pearson 1997 and first appeared in New Welsh Review 37, Summer 1997
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. GENUKI Wales Topics - History
The Age of Saints in Wales Medieval Welsh Warriors and Warfare. Norman Castles in Wales Rees, D Morgan. Industrial Archaelogy of Wales.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. Directory Of British Archaeology National Bodies
LL54 6RT. Tel 01286 882709. F1988 Members 250 Formerly Past Finders Archaelogy and before that the Welsh Archaeological Institute, and
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Directory Of British Archaeology 1998/9
The 1998/9 Directory of British Archaeology.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. The Welsh School Of Architecture
The Welsh School of Architecture 'Stone Age Modernist', review of Le Corbusier, the Noble Savage Toward an Archaelogy of Modernism, by Max
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. Archaelogy The Brecon Beacons National Park
Brecon Gaer Roman Fort / Pen y Crug Hill fort Cadw Welsh Historic Monuments Executive Agency, is a part of the National Assembly for Wales.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

12. DACE - Text Only Version - Welsh Qualifications
To view archaelogy open courses, click the arrow below. Sorry, there are NOarchaelogy open courses currently available. Go Accredited Courses
http://www.swan.ac.uk/dace/dace2/tv/dacecourses.asp?cat=1&name=Archaelogy

13. Archaelogy & The Brecon Beacons National Park
Cadw welsh Historic Monuments Executive Agency, is a part of the National 01874611281Celtic crosses, a famous Dark Age Canoe, welsh Love Spoons,
http://www.brecon-beacons.com/archaelogy.htm
A Mountain Hut Production Brecon Beacons National Park Online Guide - Take nothing but photographs Kill nothing but time Leave nothing but footprints
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Archaeology: A Guide to the Brecon Beacons National Park
Prehistoric Hill Forts
The Cairns on Pen Y Fan and Corn Du Llyn Y Fan Fach and Fawr Mynydd Troed Long Cairn ... Craig Y Cilau Storey Arms Carn Goch Iron Age Hill Fort
Carreg Cennen Castle
Castle Coch, Breconshire Crickhowell Castle ...
Tretower Castle

the Brecon Beacons National Park Authority has a statutory duty to conserve the landscape. It employs a number of specialist staff including an archaeologist. The national park plan recognises that archaeological remains are important evidence of the past life of the landscape and its relationship with the peoples tat have occupied it. This applies not just to outstanding historical monuments such as castles or standing stones but to less obvious but equally significant landscape features such as patterns of field enclosure. The Brecon Beacons National Park contains an enormous variety of items of interests dating from prehistoric times through medieval times and including more recent evidence of the impact on our landscape of the Industrial Revolution. There are some 3700 recorded sites of which 256 are protected as scheduled ancient monuments. The

14. Archaelogy Of The Voice - Mike Pearson Of Brith Gof Explores Issues Of Performan
And to Dave Edwards (Datblygu), Owain Wright (Rheinallt H. Rowlands) and AnnMatthews (Ectogram), the cracked voices of welsh music.
http://www.theatre-wales.co.uk/critical/voice.htm
The past was not silent
Performance theorist and archaeologist MIKE PEARSON reflects on some of the issues raised by the Centre for Performance Research, Aberystwyth's recent conference on 'An Archaeology of the Voice'.
Archaeology is the relation we maintain with the past. People experience things, appropriate them and produce a meaning for themselves. In this sense, archaeology is something that each of us routinely does: this we could call 'the archaeological imagination'. And there is increasingly a feeling that archaeology should include a defamiliarising of what is taken as given, revealing the equivocality of things and experiences: an attitude critical and suspicious of orthodoxy; an approach which embraces the im- possibility of any final account of things; a poetics of the past; a practice sensual, subjective and phenomenological - making sense of things that were never certain or sure in the first place. Which is why I found little in the authorised presentations on the development of vocal technique in English theatre and much in the autobiographical account/demonstration by Roberta Carreri of her years at Odin Teatret, half-remembered, part-fictionalised, always embodied. In considering points of contact between archaeology and the voice, three interlocking notions come to mind: the voice in the past, the voice

15. Archaeology In Wales - Archaeoleg CAMBRIA Archaeology
Jones, GRJ, 1985 ‘Forms and patterns of Medieval settlement in welsh Wales’, Churches 19967’, unpublished report by Archaeoleg Cambria archaelogy
http://www.acadat.com/HLC/uplandceredigion/_uplandceredigionreferences.htm
Home Historic Landscape Characterisation Upland Ceredigion Cymraeg REFERENCES Books, articles and papers
Bick, D E, 1983 The Old Metal Mines of Mid-Wales: Part 2 The Rheidol to Goginan Bick, D E, 1986 Frongoch Lead and Zinc Mine, British Mining No. 30 Bick, D E, 1988 The Old Metal Mines of Mid-Wales: Part 3 Cardiganshire - North of Goginan Cadw, 1992 Strata Florida Abbey Cadw, Countryside Council for Wales and ICOMOS UK, 1998 Register of Landscapes of Outstanding Historic Interest in Wales Caseldine, A, 1990 Environmental Archaeology in Wales Chapman, J, 1992 A Guide to Parliamentary Enclosures in Wales Countryside Council for Wales, 1995 Cors Caron Coyler, R, 1984 Roads and Tracks of Wales Cumberland, G, 1796 An Attempt to Describe Hafod Edlin, H L, 1959 Cambrian Forests Griffiths, J H, 1988 Bro Annwyl y Briniau Hughes, S J S, 1981 The Cwmystwyth Mines, British Mining 17 Hughes, S J S, 1988 The Goginan Mines, British Mining 35 Inglis-Jones, I, 1990 Peacocks in Paradise Lewis, W J, 1955 Ceredigion: Atlas Hanesyddol

16. T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence Of Arabia) / 100 Welsh Heroes / 100 Arwyr Cymru
About 100 welsh Heroes. At Oxford he studied archaelogy and Lawrence begana lifelong fascination with Arab culture, visiting the Middle East several
http://www.100welshheroes.com/en/biography/telawrence
52. T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia)
Groundbreakers (143 votes) Archaeologist, soldier, writer and campaigner for Arab independence The extraordinary life of T.E. Lawrence began in what were definitely scandalous circumstances for the times. He was born at Tremadoc on the Llyn peninsula, where his parents had fled to escape the disapproval of polite Dublin society. His father, Irish baronet Sir Thomas Chapman, had left his wife for Sarah Guner, Lawrence’s mother and the governess of Chapman’s legitimate children. The couple assumed the name Lawrence after their elopement. Although their stay in Wales was brief – the family moved on to Scotland within a year or so- Lawrence’s birthplace qualified him for a Welsh scholarship at Jesus College Oxford where his life took a decisive turn. At Oxford he studied Archaelogy and Lawrence began a lifelong fascination with Arab culture, visiting the Middle East several times before joining the army on the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Lawrence was posted to British headquarters in Cairo where he eventually became liaison officer with the local Arab rulers. The quality of his contacts –and the considerable trust they placed in him – meant he was well placed to assist the Arab uprising against the Turks, then a major regional power.

17. StudentZone - Archaeology
University of Wales, Bangor School of History and welsh History; University ofBirmingham - Ancient History and archaelogy Department
http://www.studentzone.org.uk/academic/courses/archaeology.html
Archaeology
Courses and Research
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18. Archaeology Links
ClwydPowys Archaeological Trust - CPAT is one of four welsh Archaeological Trusts University of Wales, Newport - SCARAB (Study of Culture, archaelogy,
http://pages.britishlibrary.net/cba.wales/links.html
Cyngor Archaeoleg Brydeinig
CYMRU
Council for British Archaeology
WALES
** Online Information for Archaeology in Wales **
CBA Wales Home
About CBA Wales CBA Wales' Newsletter What's On ... Join Us
This page contains links to web sites of archaeological interest, particularly sites concentrating on Welsh archaeology. If you have such a page, or know of one which would be a suitable addition, please contact our web master.
Other CBA Sites
Local Trusts
  • Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust - CPAT is one of four Welsh Archaeological Trusts working to help protect, record and interpret all aspects of the historic landscape in Wales.
Government Organisations
  • Cadw: Welsh Historic Monuments - Created in 1984, Cadw carries out the complete range of responsibilities for the conservation, presentation, and promotion of the built heritage of Wales on behalf of the National Assembly for Wales.
    - The Royal Commission was established in 1908 to make an inventory of the ancient and historical monuments of Wales and Monmouthshire. It is currently empowered by a Royal Warrant of 1992 to survey, record, publish and maintain a database of ancient and historical sites, structures and landscapes in Wales. It is also responsible for the

19. The Welsh School Of Architecture
the Noble Savage Toward an archaelogy of Modernism, by Max Adolf Vogt, Powell CG – BSc Degree Commentary, WSA Degree Exhibition 1999, welsh School
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/archi/research/publications99.html
The Welsh School of Architecture
Research
home 1999 Publications Alexander DK, Jenkins HG, Weaver N and Jones PJ Monitoring of Low Energy Housing at Clase , Final Report to Gwalia Housing Association, November 1999 (1999) pp 49 Alexander DK Condensation Risk Assessment of Hampshire County Cricket Ground Club Phase 3, Final Report to Buro Happold, November 1999 (1999) pp13 Alexander DK Simulations of Drimaster LEPIV Using HTB2 II Humidity Calculations , Final Report to Home Ventilation (Nuaire) Ltd, January 1999 (1999) pp14 Alexander DK Simulations of Drimaster LEPIV Using HTB2 III Open Plan Assumption , Final Report to Home Ventilation (Nuaire) Ltd, February 1999 (1999) pp10 Alexander DK Comparative Testing of the GreyWolf VentCal 100 Ventialtion Measurement Device , Final Report to GreyWolf Sensing Solutions Ltd, December 1999 (1999) pp7 Baker C, Roberts A, Johns J and Bowden D

20. Architecture 1999 Publications - Cardiff University
the Noble Savage Toward an archaelogy of Modernism, by Max Adolf Vogt, MITPress, welsh School of Architecture, UW Cardiff (1999) pp 32
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/research/publications/pubs/year1999/archi.html
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Architecture 1999 Publications
Alexander D K - Comparative Testing of the GreyWolf VentCal 100 Ventialtion Measurement Device, Final Report to GreyWolf Sensing Solutions Ltd , December 1999 (1999) pp7 Alexander D K - Condensation Risk Assessment of Hampshire County Cricket Ground Club Phase 3 Final Report to Buro Happold , November 1999 (1999) pp13 Alexander D K - Simulations of Drimaster LEPIV Using HTB2 II Humidity Calculations, Final Report to Home Ventilation (Nuaire) Ltd , January 1999 (1999) pp14 Alexander D K - Simulations of Drimaster LEPIV Using HTB2 III Open Plan Assumption, Final Report to Home Ventilation (Nuaire) Ltd , February 1999 (1999) pp10 Alexander D K, Jenkins H G, Weaver N and Jones P J - Monitoring of Low Energy Housing at Clase, Final Report to Gwalia Housing Association , November 1999 (1999) pp 49 Baker C, Roberts A, Johns J and Bowden D (Editors) - Habitat CTI The Journal of the CTI Centre for the Built Environment, 7 (1999) pp 53 ISSN 1326-5020 Baker C, Roberts A, Johns J and Bowden D (Editors)

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