Since 1996 a team of volunteers has taken part in annual excavations at the Norfolk village of Sedgeford, in a pioneering ‘democratic archaeology’ project investigating a typical rural landscape. This volume introduces the new model in which experts and amateurs work together and presents analysis of their most significant finds, revealing changes in settlement and land use from the Stone Age to the First World War. Slightly off-mint.
Neil Faulkner FSA was a British archaeologist, historian, writer, lecturer, broadcaster, and political activist. Educated at King’s College, Cambridge and the Institute of Archaeology, University College London, Faulkner was a school teacher before becoming an archaeologist.
He was currently a Research Fellow at the University of Bristol, Editor of Military History Monthly, and Co-director of the Great Arab Revolt Project (in Jordan) and the Sedgeford Historical and Archaeological Research Project (in Norfolk, England). On 22 May 2008, he was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London