{"title":"Molas Monograph","description":"\u003cp\u003eDive into the detailed world of Molas art with this monograph series. Explore the intricate textile traditions of the Kuna people, uncovering symbolism and cultural significance within each vibrant design.\u003c\/p\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"romano-british-cemetery-on-watling-street-book-anthony-mackinder-9781901992113","title":"A Romano-British Cemetery on Watling Street","description":"Excavations in 1996 and 1997 at 165 Great Dover Street,  Southwark uncovered important new evidence of burials and  structures associated with a Roman roadside cemetery to the  south-east of the Southwark. The cemetery was most extensive in  the early third century, and indicates that construction of  high-status mausolea and other burial structures extended about  half a kilometre down Watling Street from the boundary of the  settlement. The arrangement of the structures and lack of  intercutting burials suggest that the cemetery held private plots  used by wealthy families for extended periods of time. One of the  burials contained the cremated remains of a female, with at least  nine pottery tazze, eight pottery lamps with images of Anubis and  a gladiator, and an exceptional array of plant remains, many  imported from the Mediterranean, including stone pine, white  almond and the first occurrence in London of date fruit.","brand":"WoB","offers":[{"title":"GB \/ VERY_GOOD \/ INTERNAL","offer_id":49507735601425,"sku":"GOR003269747","price":0.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true},{"title":"GB \/ GOOD \/ INTERNAL","offer_id":52834594029841,"sku":"GOR001983193","price":0.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0784\/4072\/6801\/files\/190199211X.jpg?v=1750834465"},{"product_id":"prestigious-roman-building-complex-on-the-southwark-waterfront-book-b-yule-9781901992519","title":"A prestigious Roman building complex on the Southwark waterfront","description":"Excavations upstream of Roman London bridge in north Southwark  uncovered evidence for mid 1st-century AD land reclamation and  the establishment of a road and buildings. The waterfront was  extended northwards in c AD 80 and new buildings, including  rectangular and circular masonry buildings associated with grain  storage, were constructed around a newly aligned yard or roadway.  In the early 2nd century a prestigious new building complex,  established on a different alignment, may have had a military or administrative purpose. Ranges of rooms, some plastered and  elaborately painted, enclosed a courtyard bath suite. 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In the late 3rd century AD wings were  added to the house, the bathhouse was modified and the barns were  replaced by a large aisled structure. Unlike many other villa  sites there is no evidence for continued occupation in the  post-Roman to early Saxon period.","brand":"WoB","offers":[{"title":"GB \/ VERY_GOOD \/ INTERNAL","offer_id":49541983895825,"sku":"GOR013279485","price":0.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0784\/4072\/6801\/files\/190199256X.jpg?v=1750834466"},{"product_id":"bankside-book-anthony-mackinder-9781901992120","title":"Bankside","description":"The multi-period site of Benbow House lies next to the Thames,  and is a fine example of the multifarious and colourful  activities that took place in London over the centuries. The  earliest extant evidence of human activity within the excavation  area was an attempt at land consolidation in the 12th or 13th  century. This was followed by three periods of building from the  13th century onwards. Nine or ten buildings can be dated to the  13th and 14th centuries, and probably included the remains of  'stews' - inns or brothels known from documentary sources.  Further buildings were constructed in the 16th and 17th  centuries, including a possible animal-baiting arena. 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The Rotherhithe property was acquired c 1349  by Edward III and the existing house rebuilt by him in 1353-61  with two courts, including a riverside range of apartments. Royal  interest ceased after Edward's reign, and the house passed to  Bermondsey Priory in 1399. The fragmentation of the site into smaller properties, including ones with industrial uses, is  charted. The Southwark site contained three notable residences  during the medieval period and tidal mills on the waterfront. The  14th-century moated house of the Dunley family and a  pleasure-house built by Edward II, the Rosary, were both acquired  by Sir John Fastolf for his own grand London residence in the  1440s. In the later 16th century there was massive immigration into this part of Southwark and by the mid 17th century the  former moats and gardens were built over with small properties  and alleys. 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Excavation revealed a number of ditched enclosures, some used for the interment of 169 inhumations and five cremation burials, some for other purposes. Among the early burials men outnumbered women by five to one, but by the later 3rd and 4th centuries AD a more even sex ratio prevailed. Subadults were well represented, with one area apparently set aside for the burial of neonates and children. The cemetery attracted some particularly wealthy 4th-century AD burials, including at least two in stone sarcophagi, one of which contained an inner, decorated, lead coffin enclosing a young woman. She had been anointed with imported resins and buried in fine clothing, with unusual glassware and jet items. 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