1st Edition
Eckweek, Peasedown St John, Somerset Survey and Excavations at a Shrunken Medieval Hamlet 1988–90
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Summaries (English/French/German/Spanish)
Abbreviations
1 Introduction
1.1 Background to the project
1.2 Geology, topography and landuse
2 Documentary and Archaeological
Background
2.1 Documentary, archaeological and landscape
evidence (by Dr Nick Corcos, 2013)
2.2 The placename Eckweek (by Dr Michael
Costen)
2.3 Eckweek in Domesday Book (by Dr Frank
Thorn)
3 Surveys
3.1 Preliminary surveys
3.2 Geophysical survey (by Andrew Payne of
Historic England, 1989, updated 2015)
4 Excavations
4.1 Excavation areas and methodologies
4.2 Summary of structural phasing
4.3 The excavated evidence
4.4 Watching brief
5 Artefacts and Environmental Evidence
5.1 Prehistoric ceramics – pottery, briquetage
and a bronze-working crucible (by Dr Elaine
Morris, 1992, updated 2015)
5.2 Romano-British pottery (by Dr Jane Timby,
2015)
5.3 The late Saxon, Saxo-Norman, medieval and
post-medieval pottery (by Andrew Young and
Alexander Kidd, 1990–1991, updated 2015)
5.3.1 The petrology of medieval pottery (by
D F Williams PhD FSA - Department of
Archaeology, University of Southampton, 1991)
5.4 Coins (by Sarah Newns, 2015)
5.5 Iron and lead objects (by Ann Thompson,
1991)
5.6 Copper alloy objects (by Sarah Newns, 2015)
5.7 Flint (by Vince Russett, 1991)
5.8 Worked stone objects (by Alexander Kidd
and Andrew Young, 1991)
5.8.1 The petrology of medieval whetstones of sandstone
from Eckweek (by Professor Gilbert Kelling -
Department of Geology, University of Keele, 1991)
5.9 Clay tobacco pipe (by Sarah Newns, 2014)
5.10 The composition of a group of later medieval
copper alloy ‘ingots’ and other objects (by
Nigel Blades, 1991)
5.11 Worked bone objects (by Sarah Newns, 2015)
5.12 The jet bead SF627 (by Sarah Newns, 2015)
5.13 Faunal remains (by Dr Simon Davis, 1992,
updated 2015)
5.14 Charred plant remains (by Wendy
Carruthers, 1995, updated 2015)
5.15 Molluscs (by Dr Matt Law, 2014)
6 Independent Dating
6.1 Radiocarbon dating (Queens University
Belfast, 1991, reviewed and updated by
Dr Peter Marshall, 2015)
6.2 Comment on the 1991 radiocarbon dates (by
Andrew Young, 1991, revised 2015)
7 Reconstructing Late Saxon and Medieval
Eckweek (2015)
7.1 The medieval buildings and structures
7.2 Artefacts: the character and distribution of
Late Saxon and medieval finds
7.3 Artefactual evidence for settlement
development – continuity and change
7.4 Artefacts and ecofacts – general conclusions
7.5 The agricultural and domestic economy
8 Synthesis
8.1 Prehistoric activity
8.2 Late Saxon and medieval settlement
Bibliography
Index
Biography
Andrew Young was born in Gloucestershire, is a graduate of the University of Bristol and a former student of the late Mick Aston. He is a Member of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists and has worked as a commercial archaeologist since 1987 and as Principal Archaeologist with Avon Archaeological Unit in Bristol, which he founded in 1991. He and his wife Donna live in Highland Scotland but he remains a Director of Avon Archaeology and also works part-time as Senior Archaeologist with Highland Archaeology Services.






