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Dive into the research topics where David Mullin is active.

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Featured researches published by David Mullin.


Antiquity | 2001

Remembering, forgetting and the invention of tradition: burial and natural places in the English Early Bronze Age

David Mullin

The author looks at construction and subsequent use-pattern of round barrows in the Cheshire Basin. He argues that the use of natural mounds for burial during the Early Bronze Age may be the result of mistaken identity, indicating a forgetting of the past.


The Antiquaries Journal | 2017

‘WHERE WATER WELLS UP FROM THE EARTH’: EXCAVATIONS AT THE FINDSPOT OF THE LATE BRONZE AGE HOARD FROM BROADWARD, SHROPSHIRE – CORRIGENDUM

Richard Bradley; Jodie Lewis; David Mullin; Nicholas Branch

The paper begins by considering the importance of springs as a focus for votive deposits in Bronze Age Britain. This is not a new idea, but nowhere has this association been examined through the excavation of one of these features. The point is illustrated by excavation at the findspot of a famous group of Late Bronze Age weapons, the Broadward hoard, discovered in 1867. Little was known about the site, where it was found or the character of the original deposit, but a study of contemporary accounts of the hoard, combined with geophysical and topographical surveys, led to small-scale excavation in 2010, which showed that the deposit had most probably been buried in a pit on the edge of a spring. Other finds associated with the spring included an Early Bronze Age macehead, a Roman pot and various Saxon and medieval animal bones. The latest deposit, with a postmedieval carbon date, included a wooden knife or dagger. An adjacent palaeochannel provided an important environmental sequence for this part of the English–Welsh borderland and suggests that the Late Bronze Age hoard had been deposited not far from a settlement. A nearby earthwork enclosure was associated with a clay weight, which may be of similar date. Despite the limited scale of the fieldwork, it illustrates the potential for treating springs associated with artefact finds on the same terms as other archaeological deposits.


The Archaeological Journal | 2012

...An Assemblage of Ponderous Stones: Recent Archaeological Fieldwork at Stanton Drew Stone Circles

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin

Despite containing one of the largest stone and timber circles in Britain, the Late Neolithic monument complex at Stanton Drew, Somerset, has seen surprisingly little archaeological work. This paper presents the results of new fieldwork, which included excavation around a recently discovered recumbent stone, test-pitting on the floodplain of the River Chew and fieldwalking close to the monuments. The excavations revealed that the recumbent stone had been deliberately buried in the medieval period and also uncovered other archaeology of this date. The test-pitting exposed thick deposits of alluvium and from this it is argued that the landscape has changed dramatically since the monuments were constructed. The fieldwalking revealed a relatively low density of lithics which may indicate that activities around the monuments were carefully controlled. Also considered is the siting of the Stanton Drew monuments and their intimate relationship with the River Chew.


Archive | 2003

The Bronze age landscape of the northern English midlands

David Mullin


Archive | 2016

Excavations at a Cropmark Henge near Bredon, Worcestershire

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin


Archive | 2015

Where Water Wells Up From the Earth: Excavations at the Findspot of the Late Bronze Age Broadward Hoard, Shropshire

Richard Bradley; Jodie Lewis; David Mullin; Nicholas Branch


Archive | 2012

Between the Channel and the Chalk: A Regional Perspective on Grooved Ware and Beaker Pottery from the Mendip Hills, Somerset

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin


Archive | 2012

West of Wessex, But Only Just: Round Barrow Construction on the Mendip Hills, Somerset

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin


Archive | 2011

New Excavations at Priddy Circle I, Mendip Hills, Somerset.

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin


Archive | 2010

Dating the Priddy Circles, Somerset.

Jodie Lewis; David Mullin

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Jodie Lewis

University of Worcester

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