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Interim statement on the 1990s research excavations at Tintagel Castle and Tintagel Churchyard, Cornwall, UK. Significant new evidence of early burial was found during a first season of excavation in the churchyard in 1990 which links... more
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      Post-Roman BritainCornish HistoryAmphorae (Archaeology)Tintagel
Illustrated account of a second season of the research excavations at Tintagel Churchyard, North Cornwall, UK in 1991. Significiant new discoveries were made revealing an early cemetery and later burials as well as the foundation walls of... more
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      Early Medieval ArchaeologyPost-Roman BritainCornish HistoryTintagel
Illustrated account of season one of a research excavation of Mound C in Tintagel Churchyard, North Cornwall, UK, in 1990. Preliminary results discovered an important early cemetery at this location with links to the 5th and 6th century... more
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      Post-Roman BritainCornish HistoryTintagel
This short paper discusses the evidence for King Arthur's birth at Tintagel, based upon the inscription found on the Artognou Stone.
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      Arthurian StudiesArthurianaking ArthurCornwall
On his final visit to Britain, Rudolf Steiner’s schedule of lecturing was hectic. He delivered three lectures a day during the Anthroposophical Society’s Summer School at Torquay (11-22 August 1924) - but that is another story. Steiner... more
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      AnthroposophyRudolf Steinerking ArthurTintagel
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      Late Antique ArchaeologyPost-Roman BritainLate AntiquityByzantine Archaeology
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      Mythology And FolkloreTintagelAncient Celtic Faith
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      Medieval ArchaeologyEarly Christian ArchaeologyTintagelMedieval Glastonbury
'Welcome to Tintagel, the birthplace of King Arthur' is a phrase often repeated at this small village on the north coast of Cornwall where legend, childhood stories and merchandise all serve to attract thousands of visitors per year. As... more
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      Mythology And FolkloreFolklorePublic ArchaeologyCornish Studies
Long shrouded in Arthurian lore, an island off the coast of Cornwall may have been the remote stronghold of early British kings
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      Post-Roman Britainking ArthurTintagelDark Ages Britain
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      Landscape ArchaeologyTintagelDark Ages BritainCornish Archaeology
Charles Thomas (1928-2016) was a Cornishman and archaeologist, whose career from the 1950s spanned nearly seven decades. This period saw major developments that underpin the structures of archaeology in Britain today, in many of which he... more
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      ArchaeologyLandscape ArchaeologyEarly Medieval ArchaeologyMedieval Archaeology
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      Mythology And FolkloreArchaeologyFolklorePublic Archaeology
'Come hither, thou proud porter, I pray thee come hither to me… Tell who may be lord of this castle,' he says, 'Or who is lord in this cuntry?' 'Cornewall King,' the porter sayes, 'There is none soe rich as hee…'
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      RomansByzantine HistoryCornish HistoryCornwall
This paper examines the key construct of an identity through images by looking at monuments and sculptures of pictorial representations within cultural heritage, by using the partial defacement of the recent construct Merlin statue by the... more
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      Mythology And FolkloreCultural HeritageIconoclasmIdentity (Culture)
A recent assessment of the evidence, old and new, for the nature and dates of the main sites within the Tintagel complex appeared first in Antiquity (Thomas 1988a). The paper ended by stating that ‘properly planned and rigidly controlled... more
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      ArchaeologyCornish HistoryAmphorae (Archaeology)Antiquity