Mattapany (18ST390) (Site Name Keyword)
51-72 (72 Records)
Representative artifacts: North Devon gravel-tempered chafing dish
Mattapany (18ST390): Pantile and Dutch Brick (2004)
Representative artifacts: Pantile and Dutch brick
Mattapany (18ST390): Pipe Bowl (2004)
Representative artifacts: Pipe bowl
Mattapany (18ST390): Plaster (2004)
Representative artifacts: Plaster
Mattapany (18ST390): Purple Splattered Tin-Glaze (2004)
Representative artifacts: Purple splattered tin-glaze
Mattapany (18ST390): RB Pipe Heel (2004)
Representative artifacts: RB pipe heel
Mattapany (18ST390): Rhenish Brown Stoneware (2004)
Representative artifacts: Rhenish brown stoneware
Mattapany (18ST390): S Pipe Stem (2004)
Representative artifacts: S pipe stem
Mattapany (18ST390): Scored Brick (2004)
Representative artifacts: Scored brick
Mattapany (18ST390): Table Glass (2004)
Representative artifacts: Table glass
Mattapany (18ST390): Terra Cotta Pipe Bowls (2004)
Representative artifacts: Terra cotta pipe bowls
Mattapany (18ST390): Thimble (2004)
Representative artifacts: Thimble
Mattapany (18ST390): Thimble Top (2004)
Representative artifacts: Thimble top
Mattapany (18ST390): Tin-Glazed Earthenware (2004)
Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed earthenware
Mattapany (18ST390): Tin-Glazed Earthenware (2004)
Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed earthenware
Mattapany (18ST390): Tin-Glazed Tile and Window Lead (2004)
Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed tile and window lead
Mattapany (18ST390): Tobacco Tin Lid (2004)
Representative artifacts: Tobacco tin lid
Mattapany (18ST390): WE Pipe Bowl (2004)
Representative artifacts: WE pipe bowl
Measuring the Advent of Gentility (2005)
My own long-term interest has been to trace the process by which English cultural norms were adapted to New World conditions, to provide insight into why that adaptation occurred, and to assess the role of material culture in effecting that change. As such these are the kinds of questions that have been in the air at least since the 1970s, but which require a rich corpus of comparative and regionally representative evidence in order for archaeologists to have any hope of success in answering...
Midden Analysis Charts from Mattapany (2004)
Midden analysis charts produced for the Comparative Archaeological Study of Colonial Chesapeake Culture project
Notions of Comfort in the Early Colonial Chesapeake (2005)
In previous papers we have sought to use archaeological data to rethink some of the reigning assumptions about life in colonial Chesapeake, and move toward a new vision of an early colonial Virginia “frontier.” Our work has focused principally on a few sites in the Virginia tidewater and along the upper reaches of the Rappahannock spanning the years between 1640 and 1760. Last year, for example, we used the artifactual and architectural data from a circa 1690 Rappahannock plantation to argue...
On Living and Dying in the Colonial Chesapeake (2005)
A group of scholars interested in the daily lives and social and cultural relationships of the inhabitants of the Colonial Chesapeake developed the project A Comparative Archaeological Study of Colonial Chesapeake Culture, funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Beginning in the fall of 2003 we began collecting information from 18 rural 17th to 18th century archaeological sites in Maryland and Virginia into digital form....