
Lloyd Laing
Author of Celtic Britain
About the Author
Lloyd Laing is a senior lecturer in archaeology at the University of Nottingham Jenny Laing is a full-time writer, with interests in archaeological fieldwork and landscape studies
Series
Works by Lloyd Laing
A catalogue of Celtic ornamental metalwork in the British Isles, c. A.D. 400-1200 (1993) 4 copies, 1 review
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Laing, Lloyd
- Legal name
- Laing, Lloyd Robert
- Birthdate
- 1944-12-06
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- Senior Lecturer in Medieval Archaeology, Liverpool University
- Relationships
- Laing, Jennifer (wife)
- Nationality
- Scotland
- Associated Place (for map)
- Scotland
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Reviews
At 420 pages, copiously illustrated with line drawings and black and white photographs, this is good value for money ($50 for the paperback edition on Amazon). No color plates, but you can't have everything. This is essentially a university-level textbook, not a mass-market coffee table book. The material is clearly written and extremely well-organized, and the author has, as he says in the preface, "endeavoured to remove as much jargon as is feasible." The book includes three appendices, show more abundant footnotes, suggestions for further reading, and an impressive bibliography.
After an introduction and a general survey of the Celtic world, the author gets down to details. The next eight chapters cover settlements, farming, everyday objects and equipment, industry and technology, trade and communications, clothes and jewelry, art and ornament, and the church. This is followed by area-specific chapters on south-western Britain, Wales, Ireland and the Isle of Man, Southern Scotland and northern England, and Northern Scotland. To cover all this ground in the space available (the appendices start at page 335) means that no discussion can be in any great depth, but Laing still manages to cram in an impressive amount of detail, and the abundant citations allow the interested reader to follow up on any particular point. No space is wasted on philosophical arm-waving; this is an "only the facts" treatment. show less
After an introduction and a general survey of the Celtic world, the author gets down to details. The next eight chapters cover settlements, farming, everyday objects and equipment, industry and technology, trade and communications, clothes and jewelry, art and ornament, and the church. This is followed by area-specific chapters on south-western Britain, Wales, Ireland and the Isle of Man, Southern Scotland and northern England, and Northern Scotland. To cover all this ground in the space available (the appendices start at page 335) means that no discussion can be in any great depth, but Laing still manages to cram in an impressive amount of detail, and the abundant citations allow the interested reader to follow up on any particular point. No space is wasted on philosophical arm-waving; this is an "only the facts" treatment. show less
A bit out dated now, science has moved on and there have been more finds since it was written in the 70s, but still a good catalogue of finds and sites
Catalogue of Celtic Ornamental Metalwork in the British Isles C.A.D.400-1200 (British Archaeological Reports (BAR) Briti by Lloyd Laing
An overview of British ornamental metalwork with illustrations, mostly line drawings. Entries for each piece may include: name, basic description (incl metal content), current location, expanded description, dimentions, condition, association of find, comment, and references.
Not as good a source for Pictish Metalwork as 'The Work of Angels' and line drawings are only satisfactory,
Not as good a source for Pictish Metalwork as 'The Work of Angels' and line drawings are only satisfactory,
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- Works
- 26
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 1,156
- Popularity
- #22,230
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 55
- Languages
- 1













