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Support future seasons of the show: https://patron.podbean.com/ForeignCou... Buy Foreign Countries a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/foreigncountriespod... https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_... Dr. Andy Seaman, Canterbury Christ Church University. https://www.canterbury.ac.uk/arts-and... Publication: ANDY SEAMAN AND LEO SUCHARYNA THOMAS. 'Hillforts and Power in the British Post-Roman West: A GIS Analysis of Dinas Powys', European Journal of Archaeology 23 (4) 2020, 547–566, The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seventh centuries AD. In western and northern Britain, hillforts are interpreted as power centres associated with militarized elites, but research has paid less attention to their landscape context, hence we know little about the factors that influenced their siting and how this facilitated elite power. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) provide opportunities for landscape research, but are constrained by limitations of source data and the difficulty of defining appropriate parameters for analysis. This article presents a new methodology that combines data processing and analytical functions in GIS with techniques and principles drawn from ‘traditional’ landscape archaeology. A case study, focused on Dinas Powys, suggests that the strategic siting of this hillfort facilitated control over the landscape and has wider implications for our understanding of patterns of power in post-Roman Britain. Keywords: hillforts, power, post-Roman Britain, GIS, viewsheds, least-cost paths Dr. Michelle Comber, University of Ireland Galway. https://www.nuigalway.ie/our-research... Publication: Michelle Comber (2019) Square Ringforts? A Contribution to the Identification of ‘Ringfort’ Types, Medieval Archaeology 63:1, 128-153, ONGOING DISCUSSIONS of the monuments commonly referred to as ‘ ringforts’ in Ireland include the definition and investigation of specific types of these enclosures. Rectilinear, or subsquare, enclosures comprise one such type, with examples identifiable in the well-preserved archaeological landscape of the Burren (Co Clare) in western Ireland. It is also possible to extend such identification into the counties of the western seaboard, from Co Cork in the south to Co Donegal in the north. Questions of chronology, function, status, and cultural identity are addressed. Although a measure of variation may exist within the category of rectilinear enclosures, there is some uniformity of morphology and chronology and, perhaps, function. This is a podcast about new and innovative research in archaeology. Each episode I talk with pioneering and influential archaeologists about their journal papers, books and research projects. Season 1 is all about the latest research into the Archaeology of the Roman West. Season 2 is on Innovative Research in Australia. Season 3 is on Early Medieval Europe. Future Seasons: Well, I'm open to suggestions! Medieval Europe, Osteoarchaeology, Mesoamerica, Pacific Archaeology, Prehistoric Burials, Post-Medieval, Scientific Techniques, South-east Asia, Bronze Age Monuments. You tell me! So, if you would like to hear seasons 4, 5 and more, then you might like to become a Patron of the show. Just click the Patron button: https://patron.podbean.com/ForeignCou...