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![](/img/remote/192x192/515124291?href=https%3A%2F%2Fcommons.wikimedia.org%2Fwiki%2FSpecial%3AFilePath%2FArchaeologia%2520Cambrensis%2520%25281846-1899%2529%2520%2528Welsh%2520Journal%2529.jpg%3Fwidth%3D1000)
photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
Archaeologia Cambrensis is a Welsh archaeological and historical scholarly journal published annually by the Cambrian Archaeological Association. It contains historical essays, excavation reports, and book reviews, as well as society notes and accounts of field visits. The journal has included "much valuable material on the manuscripts, genealogy, heraldry, toponymy, folklore and literature of Wales". Source: Wikipedia (en)
Editions published in Archaeologia Cambrensis 200
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Living the dream: the legend, lady and landscape of Caernarfon Castle, Gwynedd, North Wales
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Excavation of the Ty'n-y-Coed earthworks 2011-14: the Dinas Powys 'Southern Banks'
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Early medieval cemeteries at Llanbedrgoch and Llaniestyn, Anglesey
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Gresham revisited again: a further look at the medieval monuments of north Wales
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"A landscape revisited: recent work on Roman sites in the Walton Basin, Radnorshire"
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Presidential Address: Maritime Archaeology and Wales: some cross-disciplinary currents
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'Receiving scorn and mocking': the iconography of the Christ aux outrages in Wales and the Western European
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"The architecture, patronage and date of St Winefride's Well, Holywell"
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"Tinkering with the dead: taphonomic analysis of human remains from Tinkinswood chambered tomb, Wales"
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"Clawdd Mawr cross-ridge dyke, near Abergwynfi: new evidence for its construction and date"
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Prehistoric settlement and activity at Bolton Hill, Pembrokeshire
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Carn Goedog medieval house and settlement, Pembrokeshire
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Early medieval enclosure at Glanfred, near Llandre, Ceredigion
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A Late Bronze Age ring-fort at Bayvil Farm, Pembrokeshire
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The Dyffryn Lane and Hindwell Neolithic cursuses and other cursus monuments in Wales revisited
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"The Romano-British villa at Abermagwr, Ceredigion: excavations 2010-15"
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"Presidential Address: 'Castles in the Air and cottages on the rock': Iolo Morganwg (1747-1826) as stonemason and builder"
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The Carmelites in medieval Wales
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Llandegai A - sanctuary or settlement?
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Llandegai excavations 1966-67: further thoughts on interpretations
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The newly-identified Roman fort and settlement at Wiston, Pembrokeshire
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Land use and environmental history of Waun Llanfair, an upland landscape above Penmaenmawr, North Wales
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Excavations at the Castell Mawr Iron Age hillfort, Pembrokeshire
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Neolithic palisaded enclosures of Radnorshire's Walton Basin
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Early medieval settlement and field systems at Rhuddgaer, Anglesey
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New light on a dark deed: the death of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, Prince of Wales
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Presidential Address. 'Those proud ambitious heaps': whither castle studies?
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The Great Gatehouse, Kidwelly Castle: its history, construction and function (1388-1422)
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"The Shire Hall, Denbigh"
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The history and digital reconstruction of Holt Castle, Denbighshire
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New discoveries of early medieval carved stones in Wales
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Illuminating Lesser Garth Cave, Cardiff: the human remains and post-Roman archaeology in context
Subject - wd:Q4785374