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This open-access and peer-reviewed academic publication stems from the activities of the Offa’s Dyke Collaboratory, a research network founded in April 2017 to foster and support new research on the monuments and landscapes of the Anglo-Welsh borderlands and comparative studies of borderlands and frontiers from prehistory to the present. The proceedings of a series of academic and public-facing events have informed the character and direction of the Journal. Moreover, its establishment coincides with the Cadw/Historic England/Offa’s Dyke Association funded Offa’s Dyke Conservation Management Plan as well as other new community and research projects on linear earthworks. Published in print by Archaeopress in association with JAS Arqueología, and supported by the University of Chester and the Offa’s Dyke Association, the journal aims to provide a resource for scholars, students and the wider public regarding the archaeology, heritage and history of the Welsh Marches and its linear monuments. It also delivers a much-needed venue for interdisciplinary studies from other times and places.
Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester and researches public archaeology and archaeologies of death and memory. He co-edits the Offa’s Dyke Journal and writes an academic blog: Archaeodeath.
The Offa’s Dyke Collaboratory and the Offa’s Dyke Journal – Howard Williams and Liam Delaney ; Offa’s Dyke: ‘the Stuff that Dreams are Made of’ – Ann Williams ; Wat’s Dyke: An Archaeological and Historical Enigma – Margaret Worthington Hill ; Hidden Earthworks: Excavation and Protection of Offa’s and Wat’s Dykes – Paul Belford ; Llywarch Hen’s Dyke: Place and Narrative in Early Medieval Wales – Andy Seaman ; The Danevirke: Preliminary Results of New Excavations (2010–2014) at the Defensive System in the German-Danish Borderland – Astrid Tummuscheit and Frauke Witte ; Making Earthworks Visible: The Example of the Oswestry Heritage Comics Project – John Swogger
'Volume 1 has delivered an exceptional series of articles which illustrates the breadth of interest and variety in how people engage with dykes.' – Tim Malim, Archaeologia Cambrensis 170 (2021)
Ben Guy, Howard Williams, Liam Delaney, Cardiff University) Guy, Ben (Research Associate, University of Chester) Williams, Howard (Professor of Archaeology
David Morgan Evans, Howard Williams, Kara Critchell, Sheena Evans, University of Chester) Williams, Howard (Professor of Archaeology, University of Chester) Critchell, Kara (Lecturer in History
Howard Williams, Caroline Pudney, Afnan Ezzeldin, University of Chester) Williams, Howard (Professor of Archaeology, University of Chester) Pudney, Caroline (Senior Lecturer in Archaeology