8 research outputs found
The landscape of a Swedish boat-grave cemetery
This is the published PDF version of an article published in Landscapes© 2010. The definitive version is available at http://www.maneyonline.com/toc/lan/11/1The paper integrates topographical and experiential approaches to the mortuary landscape of a Viking period inhumation-grave excavated in 2005 within the cemetery at Skamby, Kuddy parish, Ăstergötland province, Sweden. We argue that the landscape context was integral to the performance of the funerary ceremonies and the subsequent monumental presence of the dead in the landscape. We offer a way to move beyond monocausal explanations for burial location based on single-scale analyses. Instead, we suggest that boat-inhumation at Skamby was a commemorative strategy that operated on multiple scales and drew its significance from multiple landscape attributes.British Academ
iDAH Research Software Engineering (RSE) Steering Group working paper
This is the final version. Available from the iDAH Research Software Engineering (RSE) Steering Group via the DOI in this record.âŻOur purpose was to convene a broad and representative
group from the UK Research Software Engineering (RSE) community to discuss opportunities for and barriers to the
development of Arts & Humanities (AH) RSE capability, with a specific focus on contributing to the AHRC Infrastructure for Digital Innovation and Curation in Arts and Humanities (iDAH) project and a wider remit to consider longer term strategic priorities and opportunities for alignment with UKRI and EU initiatives. The discussion was intended to be foundational, inclusive, and broad-ranging, involving a wide stakeholder group encouraged to engage in âblue-skyâ thinking over short, medium, and long-term time horizons. The analysis contained in this working paper should be read in that context, as a reflection of early stage discussions intended to provide a platform for future more focused activity. Additional discussion and analysis is needed to produce substantive actionable conclusions
Local regeneration A guidance document
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:GPC/08194 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo