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caitlinrgreen's profile
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
Dr Caitlin Green
@caitlinrgreen

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Dr Caitlin Green

@caitlinrgreen

History, archaeology, place-names & early lit. Main research on post-Roman Britain & Anglo-Saxon England; also long-distance trade, migration & contact.

Cornwall/Lincolnshire
caitlingreen.org
Joined August 2014

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    1. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen 16 Dec 2017

      For interest, an early Anglo-Saxon pot from the Greetwell villa-palace & its implications :) http://www.caitlingreen.org/2015/04/an-early-anglo-saxon-pot-from-greetwell.html …pic.twitter.com/6TmVNbdyUO

      2 replies 10 retweets 33 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen 16 Dec 2017

      Fwiw, has been recently argued that the villa-palace's estate may have survived intact to become an Anglo-Saxon minster estate and, subsequently, the 11thC & later Monks Leys estate at Lincoln… http://www.caitlingreen.org/2015/02/roman-mosaics-from-lincolnshire.html … (pic=https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Monks_Abbey,_Monks_Road,_Lincoln_(431220060).jpg …)pic.twitter.com/OGqeN4En8m

      1 reply 12 retweets 32 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen 17 Dec 2017

      The outline of the 5th- to 6th-century apsidal church in the forum at Lincoln with the medieval cathedral behind.pic.twitter.com/a1IPli2Fyl

      2 replies 11 retweets 41 likes
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    4. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen 22 Dec 2017

      Also worth noting that the Roman gates at either end of the east–west road that passed through the forum may well have seen activity/maintenance too e.g. not only was Roman west gate still standing in 11thC, but so too was its first floor chamber... (pic=http://www.wellandantiquemaps.co.uk/western-gate-roman-lindum-lincoln-gentlemans-magazine-c1836 …)pic.twitter.com/UG91UyWE3r

      2 replies 15 retweets 54 likes
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    5. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen 22 Dec 2017

      Likewise, Lincoln's Roman Upper East Gate (which was demolished in 1763) was given along with its chambers to Bishop Alexander by the king as a residence in the mid-12th century… (pic=http://www.itsaboutlincoln.co.uk/lincolns-gates.html …)pic.twitter.com/5DVFf7qKFM

      2 replies 11 retweets 23 likes
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    6. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Jan 26

      Dr Caitlin Green Retweeted SLHA

      For interest, a reconstruction of Lincoln's Upper South Gate in the 13th century, by David Vale: https://twitter.com/SocLincsHist/status/956188711116525570 … :)

      Dr Caitlin Green added,

      SLHA @SocLincsHist
      C13 Lincoln as drawn by David Vale, showing the South Gate of the upper city @ the Cathedral. pic.twitter.com/MhxsinpC4R
      1 reply 4 retweets 20 likes
      Show this thread
    7. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 6

      The Roman North Gate of the Upper City at Lincoln — unlike the others, it has not been buried by the castle or dismantled in the early modern period, but is instead still used by traffic to this day :)pic.twitter.com/1FiwW1fHSW

      4 replies 27 retweets 83 likes
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    8. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 8

      Dr Caitlin Green Retweeted Dr Caitlin Green

      Incidentally, the place-name Lincoln is itself very interesting—seems, unusually, to be derived directly from the British form of the town-name: British Latin *Lindocolonia > Late British *Lindgolun > Old English *Lindcolun etc :)https://twitter.com/caitlinrgreen/status/759698675996037120 …

      Dr Caitlin Green added,

      Dr Caitlin Green @caitlinrgreen
      'The British Kingdom of Lindsey' — an article by me on the 'post-Roman' Lincoln region :) https://www.academia.edu/27372761/The_British_Kingdom_of_Lindsey … pic.twitter.com/ZMn7oTdupt
      3 replies 19 retweets 52 likes
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    9. Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 15

      Also worth noting that that the seventh-century Anglo-Saxon kingdom-name Lindissi — which survives as the modern district-name Lindsey — derived from a British group-/territory-name *Lindēs that referred to the people of Lincoln... https://www.academia.edu/27372761/The_British_Kingdom_of_Lindsey …pic.twitter.com/M82284XugY

      7 replies 11 retweets 48 likes
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    10. Gerard Kevin McBride‏ @McBrideGerard Mar 16
      Replying to @caitlinrgreen

      The coast line is much different from today.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      Dr Caitlin Green‏ @caitlinrgreen Mar 16
      Replying to @McBrideGerard

      Indeed; seen significant changes since the early medieval era :)

      3:24 AM - 16 Mar 2018
      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        1. Gerard Kevin McBride‏ @McBrideGerard Mar 16
          Replying to @caitlinrgreen

          Lincoln's function would have been different, the economy and political make different as well. No Grimsby or Great Yarmouth either.

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
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