Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society is a learned society concerned with the history and antiquities of the City of Bristol and the historic county of Gloucestershire. It was founded on 21 April 1876; and is a registered charity, number 202014.
Boyle is the Senior Curator of Archaeology and World Cultures at Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives, former Chair of the Society for Museum Archaeology, and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Bristol. [2] She was elected as a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London on 2 February 2015. [3]
After World War II, Ralph served as the first female chair of the Society of Archivists (1957–1960). She was General Secretary for the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society for 38 years, [3] Assistant Editor of the Bristol Record Society from 1946 and an active member of Bristol civic and conservation societies. [2] 'Miss Ralph ...
She received an OBE for services to archaeology in 1968, as well as serving on the council of the Society of Antiquaries, as President of the Cotteswold Naturalists' Field Club (1936 – 8), [4] and as the first woman president of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society (1949).
Barnard, E.A.B., 'The Incorporation of Evesham: a Study of the Foundation of the Municipal Borough in the 17th Century', Transactions of the Birmingham Archaeological Society 37 (1911), 1–15. Barnard, E.A.B., 'The Church and Rectory of Buckland, Co. Gloucester', Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society 45 (1923 ...
The Clifton Antiquarian Club is an archaeological society founded in 1884 in Bristol to investigate antiquities in the surrounding areas of western England and southern Wales. The 28 years of research undertaken by the members and associates of the original society fill the first seven volumes of the Proceedings of the Clifton Antiquarian Club ...
There is evidence of settlement in the Bristol area from the palaeolithic era, with 60,000-year-old archaeological finds at Shirehampton and St Annes. [1] Stone tools made from flint, chert, sandstone and quartzite have been found in terraces of the River Avon, most notably in the neighbourhoods of Shirehampton and Pill. [2]
Richard John Harrison (born August 1949) is an archaeologist and Professor in the University of Bristol, England. [1] Harrison studied at Selwyn College, Cambridge, and gained his Bachelor's degree in Archaeology and Anthropology from the University of Cambridge in 1970.