Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Archaeologists, Power and the Recent Past
- Part One Constructing Memories, Constructing Communities
- Part Two Engaging the Past, Engaging the Present
- Politics, Publics and Professional Pragmatics: Re-Envisioning Archaeological Practice in Northern Ireland
- Archaeology, Politics and Politicians, or: Small p in a Big P World
- ‘No Certain Roof but the Coffin Lid’: Exploring the Commercial and Academic Need for a High Level Research Framework to Safeguard the Future of the Post-Medieval Burial Resource
- ‘Men That Are Gone … Come Like Shadows, So Depart’: Research Practice and Sampling Strategies for Enhancing Our Understanding of Post-Medieval Human Remains
- Dialogues Between Past, Present and Future: Reflections on Engaging the Recent Past
- Index
‘No Certain Roof but the Coffin Lid’: Exploring the Commercial and Academic Need for a High Level Research Framework to Safeguard the Future of the Post-Medieval Burial Resource
from Part Two - Engaging the Past, Engaging the Present
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Archaeologists, Power and the Recent Past
- Part One Constructing Memories, Constructing Communities
- Part Two Engaging the Past, Engaging the Present
- Politics, Publics and Professional Pragmatics: Re-Envisioning Archaeological Practice in Northern Ireland
- Archaeology, Politics and Politicians, or: Small p in a Big P World
- ‘No Certain Roof but the Coffin Lid’: Exploring the Commercial and Academic Need for a High Level Research Framework to Safeguard the Future of the Post-Medieval Burial Resource
- ‘Men That Are Gone … Come Like Shadows, So Depart’: Research Practice and Sampling Strategies for Enhancing Our Understanding of Post-Medieval Human Remains
- Dialogues Between Past, Present and Future: Reflections on Engaging the Recent Past
- Index
Summary
Since the landmark excavation at Christchurch Spitalfields, interest in post-medieval burial archaeology has grown substantially. In the past five years, over 5000 post-medieval burials have been excavated in London alone. Concurrently, public interest in our recent past has increased, as shown by the popularity of programmes such as Who Do You Think You Are? Yet legal, ethical and practical constraints determine that assemblages are often reburied — limiting the archaeologist's ability to achieve the research potential of the burial resource — or they are exhumed in a non-archaeological manner. There is an undeniable danger of losing irreplaceable information which may be unlocked through research on human remains and associated grave goods, textiles and coffin furniture, using recently adopted and minimally invasive techniques such as biochemical analysis, 3D laser scanning and computed radiography. This situation needs to be addressed by the creation of a rigorous, long-term research framework which can optimise academic research, and inform excavation and analysis. Coupled with new ways of engaging with the public, such research can provide a holistic picture of the past. As full-economic costing has widened the gap between commercial archaeology and the higher education sector, this paper discusses how a consortium approach, involving traditionally separate disciplines and other stakeholders can create such a strategy.
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- Information
- Archaeology, the Public and the Recent Past , pp. 125 - 144Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013