On Thursday 18th March 2021 at 7.30pm Eileen Waller will give a short talk on the WI woods in Histon followed by Martin and Moya from Besom who will talk about this wonderful local charity and how they help those in need with our help.
If you would like to attend this meeting please email sophie.howson@googlemail.com for the joining details. New members and visitors are welcome. No charge…you may come to two meetings free of charge before you join.
Early Settlement in Histon & Impington: A View from the Fields with Rob Noble, Histon & Impington Archaeology Group, on Monday 12th April 2021 at 7:30 pm
This talk will be followed by the HIAG AGM at 8.30pm.
Where, why, and how did our predecessors occupy the local landscape? The quintessential English village scene with its church, manor house and timber framed thatched cottages clustered at its core seems almost timeless. Yet the present organisation and location of our rural settlements is essentially of medieval origin, and from that period and later we can also draw on documentary evidence. But what do we know about the organisation of settlement and land use stretching back into pre-history? For this we must turn to archaeology.
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This talk will review the methods which have been brought to bear on the archaeological study of the wider local landscape outside the present settled areas. These include field walking, ariel photography, and more recently, lidar imaging. It presents some of the accumulated evidence dating from the palaeolithic to the medieval periods, together with some new analysis and interpretation. It will discuss some of the probable influences on early settlement in the local area such as access to water and ground conditions.
The photos above show different visualisations of Home Field, one of Histon’s medieval open fields situated in the west of the village. Left to right: part of the 1801 survey map created prior to the Parliamentary enclosure; British Geological Survey map of surface geology showing Home Field as a sand and gravel river terrace; a Google satellite view of crop marks revealing ancient boundary ditches and Bronze Age barrows as well as geological features; a lidar image revealing elevated field boundary banks.
These photos show a small sample of the field walking finds from Home Field which give clues to early settlement. Left to right: Late Neolithic or Early Bronze Age worked flint tool (borer/fabricator); fragment of a Roman box flue tile (hypocaust); fragment of a Roman roof tile (tegula); sherds of early Saxon (6th/7th Century) decorated pottery.
If you would like to register for the talk please use the HIAG Contact Uspage and they will send you a Zoom link 3 days in advance of the talk. There is no charge for this event and you do not have to be a member.
If you would like to join and support HIAG or rejoin after a gap please use the link here. HIAG members will be sent the links automatically so they will not need to register for each talk.
On Wednesday 10th March – Diabetes Specialist Nurse Marie Rouse from Firs House Surgery will be talking about low-carb healthy-fat diets and putting Type 2 diabetes into remission. Even if you attended her session last March I’m sure a recap will be useful and there will be a chance to ask questions.
With Maria Medlycott, Senior Historic Environment Consultant,Essex County Council on Monday15th March 2021 at 7:30 pm
The talk will consist of an overview of 40,000 years of archaeology in Essex and how the archaeological finds are shaped by and in turn shape the landscape of the county. It will cover the end of the Ice Age, the introduction of farming, the creation of large-scale monuments, the development of the road network, villages and towns and the exploitation of the coastal marshes and woodlands. The talk will include examples from the areas of Essex closest to Cambridgeshire and the results of recent excavations.
Artist impression of medieval Stebbingford
It is hoped that the talk will demonstrate the range and significance of the archaeology of what is often a misunderstood county, and that it will enable comparisons and contrasts to be drawn with the archaeology of the Histon and Impington area.
Maria Medlycott was born and studied in Ireland. She came to work in Essex by accident in 1986, starting on the large-scale excavations in advance of the development of Stansted Airport The late 1980s and early 1990s were spent in the field excavating and fieldwalking sites across Essex. In 1995 she moved indoors to undertake the Essex Historic Towns Project. Since 1999 she has worked as an archaeological development control officer, providing archaeological advice on planning applications, primarily to Maldon and Harlow District Councils. She also has an ongoing programme of projects, on a wide-range of subjects from the publication of the unpublished archives of Roman Great Chesterford to the study of the Essex Coastal Grazing-Marshes.
If you would like to register for the talk please use the HIAG Contact Uspage and they will send you a Zoom link 3 days in advance of the talk. There is no charge for this event and you do not have to be a member.
If you would like to join and support HIAG or rejoin after a gap please use the link here. HIAG members will be sent the links automatically so they will not need to register for each talk.
Image at top – Excavating a Beaker burial near Harlow
The talk will review several Treasures from this Roman town and assess their significance. Stephen will go to on discuss the coming of Christianity to the eastern areas of England.
Professor Stephen Upex, University of Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley on Monday 8th March 2021 at 7:30 pm
Area of Durobrivae from the south-west
Durobrivae was a significant walled Roman town located near current day Peterborough. It grew up close to a Roman fort established to create and protect the crossing point of Ermine Street over the River Nene. There were extensive potteries and iron works close to the town. There were also many Roman villas or farmsteads in the Nene valley region – and an impressive official building or Praetorium across the river at Castor. The name Durobrivae translates as fort by the bridge and is first recorded in the late-second century; the route from Londinium (London) to Luguvalium (Carlisle) describes Durobrivas as 35 miles from Duroliponte (Cambridge) and 30 miles from Causennis (Ancaster)
Votive Plaque water Newton Hoard 4th century Roman
Prof Stephen Upex has written on a wide variety of topics related to British landscape history and archaeology and his interests range from prehistoric settlement, Roman and Saxon farming to medieval open fields systems – a topic which formed the subject of his PhD dissertation. He has excavated widely and contributed to several Time Team programmes for Channel Four. His book on the Romans in the East of England was published in 2008 and a new book on the Romans in the Peterborough area is due to be published soon Stephen is currently writing up a series of landscape and archaeological reports and books on sites within the East Midlands for the Society of Antiquaries. His research interests include various aspects related to medieval agriculture and landscape and the archaeology of Roman and Saxon settlement, as well as collecting data for a book on Roman pottery. Stephen lectures at the University of Cambridge, is a member of the Chartered Institute for Field Archaeologists and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
If you would like to register for the talk please use the HIAG Contact Uspage and they will send you a Zoom link 3 days in advance of the talk. There is no charge for this event and you do not have to be a member.
If you would like to join and support HIAG or rejoin after a gap please use the link here. HIAG members will be sent the links automatically so they will not need to register for each talk.
Artist Impression at top – Durobrivae from the Praetorium Image – Peterborough Museum
On Thursday 18th February 2021 at 7.30pm Douglas Palmer will talk at the zoom meeting of the Histon and Impington Women’s Institute. Telling the stories of four Cambridge women who helped pave the way for female participation in the study and research of Earth Science in Cambridge. Mrs Kenny Hughes, Dr Gertrude Elles, Helen Megaw and Margaret Sudbury.
If you would like to attend this meeting please email sophie.howson@googlemail.com for the joining details. New members and visitors are welcome. No charge…you may come to two meetings free of charge before you join.
Emma Moat, the HI Friends play therapist, is delighted to be able to offer advice and ideas around supporting your family using creative play therapy techniques, which will be helpful and fun for all ages. The workshops are suitable for parents and carers to help support their loved ones with practical and enjoyable activities. Full details will be given on registering.
Wednesday 17th and Thursday 18th March 7.30 – 8.45pm via Zoom
Emma is a play therapist and counsellor with 15 years’ experience and a training background and has delivered many workshops on different conditions to do with mental health.
A free 3-part workshop to parents from HI Friends on mindful connection with children on 1st, 8th and 15th March 7.30-8.30pm
Parenting during the pandemic is no easy task. With home-schooling, working from home and lack of places to stimulate the children, its no wonder relationships are tense and conflict at home could arise.
This set of 3 workshops will support parents in their communication and interactions with their children. The workshops with consider how children’s brains develop at various stages and look at the body mind connection and will explore how co-regulation leads to self-regulation and develops children’s emotional well-being. Using cutting edge theories about neuroscience, taught in a simple and digestible way, it will focus on how parenting styles can help children thrive and feel confident.
If you are feeling frustrated and like you are in a constant power struggle with your children or like emotional outburst feel unmanageable, this training will teach you the tools of emotion coaching to move things from conflict to communication.
This is an extraordinary site. The seat of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom for 300 years from the 5th century, close to Sutton Hoo, and occupying an area of 50 hectares! The wealthiest of all sites in the country in this period?
Royal Anglo-Saxon Rendleshamwith Faye Minter, Senior Archaeological Officer, Suffolk County Council on Monday 15th February 2021 at 7:30 pm
The now tranquil Deben valley in south-east Suffolk was once at the heart of the East Anglian Anglo-Saxon Kingdom, which is home to the princely ship burial discovered at Sutton Hoo in 1939, and the long-lost royal settlement found at Rendlesham.
This royal settlement, or vicus regius, is first mentioned in the 8th century by the venerable Bede, a Northumbrian monk, in his book The Ecclesiastical History of the English People.
Gold and Garnet Beads
Archaeological investigations at Rendlesham by Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service identified the site of this royal settlement in 2008 and has since revealed that it was active for almost 300 years, from the 5th to 8th centuries. Covering 50 hectares, the size of 70 football pitches, it is the largest and wealthiest settlement of its time known in England.
In this talk, Faye Minter will explore the archaeology of this Anglo-Saxon royal settlement and the archaeological techniques which have revealed it.
Fayeis an archaeologist who specialises in the identification of Roman and early medieval metal artefacts. As Senior Archaeological Officer for Suffolk County Council, Faye manages the county’s archives, the Finds Recording Team and several research projects, as well as advises developers and landowners.
For the past 12 years, Faye has been investigating Rendlesham on behalf of the archaeological service, which has involved many specialists, organisations, and volunteers. Faye also manages the new community archaeology project Rendlesham Revealed: Anglo-Saxon Life in South-East Suffolk which is funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. To find out more visit: https://heritage.suffolk.gov.uk/rendlesham
If you would like to register for the talk please use the HIAG Contact Uspage and they will send you a Zoom link 3 days in advance of the talk. There is no charge for this event and you do not have to be a member.
If you would like to join and support HIAG or rejoin after a gap please use the link here. HIAG members will be sent the links automatically so they will not need to register for each talk.
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