
Trees and Timber in the Anglo-Saxon World
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Content
- List of illustrations
- 1: Michael D. J. Bintley and Michael G. Shapland: An Introduction to Trees and Timber in the Anglo-Saxon World
- Timber in Anglo-Saxon building practice
- 2: Michael G. Shapland: Meanings of Timber and Stone in Anglo-Saxon Building Practice
- 3: Mark Gardiner: The Sophistication of Late Anglo-Saxon Timber Buildings
- 4: John Baker: References to Timber Building Materials in Old English Place-Names
- Perceptions of Wood and Wooden Objects
- 5: Martin G. Comey: The Wooden Drinking Vessels in the Sutton Hoo Assemblage: Materials, Morphology and Usage
- 6: Jennifer Neville: The Exeter Book Riddles' Precarious Insights into Wooden Artefacts
- 7: Michael D. J. Bintley: Brungen of Bearwe: Ploughing Common Furrows in Exeter Book Riddle 21, The Dream of the Rood, and the Æcerbot Charm
- 8: Pirkko Koppinen: Breaking the Mould: Solving the Old English Riddle 12 as Wudu 'Wood'
- Trees and Woodland in Anglo-Saxon Belief
- 9: Clive Tolley: What is a 'World Tree', and Should We Expect to Find One Growing in Anglo-Saxon England?
- 10: John Blair: Holy Beams: Anglo-Saxon Cult Sites and the Place-Name Element Beam
- 11: Michael D. J. Bintley: Recasting the Role of Sacred Trees in Anglo-Saxon Spiritual History: the South Sandbach Cross 'Ancestors of Christ' Panel in its Cultural Contexts
- 12: Della Hooke: Christianity and the 'Sacred Tree'
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