Also in @RoyalCornwall, the famous Artognou slate found in 1998 at Tintagel, Cornwall, a major 5th-6thC site :)pic.twitter.com/7OqVoUiv8s
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Distrib of L5/E6thC PRSW tableware in Britain & the W Mediterranean; Campbell's 2007 maps via https://www.academia.edu/7835510/Does_the_evidence_of_imported_pottery_and_glass_in_Post-Roman_Celtic_Britain_suggest_large_scale_trading_with_the_Mediterranean_and_the_continent_or_just_occasional_contact …pic.twitter.com/V8QsBZ2gyk
Interesting recent discussion of eastern Mediterranean imports into L5/E6thC Ireland+Britain: https://www.academia.edu/538307/Kelly_A._2010_The_Discovery_of_Phocaean_Red_Slip_Ware_PRSW_Form_3_and_Bii_ware_LR1_amphorae_at_Collierstown_in_County_Meath_-_an_analysis_within_a_broader_framework._Proceedings_of_the_Royal_Irish_Academy_110_35-88 …pic.twitter.com/Z66EbJUV2A
@caitlinrgreen I guess like the silk trade route there is a need of comprehensive writing on this trade route as well! So interesting
@Umarkarim89 It's def a fascinating trade route operating in Britain's "Dark Age"! :)
@caitlinrgreen well I even question these terms y the Roman England was dark? The culture,religious beliefs were totally unique in that time
@Umarkarim89 It's not a great term & I don't like it, but ppl do still use it, even academics :-/
@caitlinrgreen I think it's enough of me to think about this term with no electricity :D more contemplation can turn out to be negative hehe
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