¿Dónde están los muertos de las batallas medievales? Un estudio preliminar

Autores/as

  • Anne Curry University of Southampton
  • Glenn Foard University of Huddersfield

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53351/ruhm.v8i16.523

Palabras clave:

Edad Media, muertos en combate, yacimientos arqueológicos, batallas

Resumen

Publicado originalmente en inglés como Anne CURRY y Glenn FOARD: “Where are the dead of medieval battles? A preliminary survey”, Journal of Conflict Archaeology, 11:2-3 (2016), pp. 61-77. Disponible en https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15740773.2017.1324675 Traducido por Alberto Prieto García.

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Biografía del autor/a

  • Anne Curry, University of Southampton
    Professor Anne Curry is a Professor of Medieval History at the University of Southampton. Her research focuses on war, politics and society in the later middle ages. In recent years her main work has been on the battle of Agincourt and on the soldiers of English armies. She is also very interested in civil-military relations (especially on the place of women - not just Joan of Arc - in warfare), in Henry V, and in the armies of the Wars of the Roses. I have also directed a project on English Gascony - ‘Old Wine in New Bottles' (a reminder that this area was a major source of wine for medieval England).
  • Glenn Foard, University of Huddersfield

    Glenn was awarded a BA in Geography from University College London in 1974 and an MA in Archaeology from the Institute of Archaeology, University of London in 1976. In 2008 he gained a PhD in battlefield archaeology from the University of East Anglia.

    He worked as a professional archaeologist in Northamptonshire from 1976 to 2002, as Sites and Monuments Officer, Planning Archaeologist and later as County Archaeologist. While working in the county he designed and was involved in the implementation of various major projects including the Raunds Area Project, the Northamptonshire Extensive Urban Survey, and a major GIS mapping project on the historic landscape of the county. He also undertook a 20 year programme of archaeological aerial survey and digital mapping.

    From 2002 – 2010 he worked as an archaeological consultant, for the Battlefields Trust , English Heritage, Historic Scotland and others, on various major projects mainly in battlefield archaeology. This included preparing the content of the UK Battlefields Resource Centre for the Battlefields Trust (2002-2006). Glenn lectures widely on battlefield archaeology and occasionally contributes to TV archaeological programme, most recently Time Team Special 20:1066 The Lost Battlefield, broadcast in 2013.

    He is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and advisor on archaeology to the Battlefields Trust. He was visiting lecturer in the Institute for Medieval Studies, University of Leeds 2005-2010, joining the University of Huddersfield as Reader in Battlefield Archaeology in 2010.

    Currrent he is writing up a national survey of battlefields of the Wars of the Roses and a detailed documentary and field investigation of the battle of Barnet, and undertaking a three year project to investigate the 1461 battlefield at Mortimer's Cross, Herefordshire.

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Publicado

2019-07-11 — Actualizado el 2020-03-22

Cómo citar

¿Dónde están los muertos de las batallas medievales? Un estudio preliminar. (2020). Revista Universitaria De Historia Militar, 8(16), 230-250. https://doi.org/10.53351/ruhm.v8i16.523

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