Tim Taylor (1) (1960–)
Author of The Atlas of Archaeology: The Definitive Guide to the Location, History & Significance of the World's Most Important Archaelogical Sites & Finds
For other authors named Tim Taylor, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: Current Archaeology
Series
Works by Tim Taylor
The Atlas of Archaeology: The Definitive Guide to the Location, History & Significance of the World's Most Important Archaelogical Sites & Finds (1998) 283 copies, 3 reviews
The Time Team Guide to the History of Britain: Everything You Need to Know About Our History Since 650 000 BC (2010) 25 copies
Time Team-Complete Series 16 1 copy
Time Team's Dig Village 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Taylor, Tim
- Legal name
- Taylor, Timothy
- Birthdate
- 1960
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
I'm a big fan of archaeology and the British program "Time Team" is endlessly fascinating, to me. In the series, actual archaeologist and other specialists perform digs. Each episode covers a fast 3-day dig (usually somewhere in England) to discover something expected or known-but-lost. I learned a lot about the history of England, from the prehistoric to early 20th century.
This book is from that Team. Various experts (including Time Team's resident artist) give both learned opinion and show more specific examples from actual fieldwork. The basic setup is an invented town (Timechester), which allows a single location that can be given a history throughout the last 452,000 years. Give or take.
Everything is based on actual knowledge of numerous locations throughout the British Isles, transferred to Timechester.
Each chapter is a time period, from the Paleolithic (450,000 BCE), which is mostly a description of the location and some fauna and nomadic peoples who used it, Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, High Medieval, Post-Medieval, Early Modern, to Present Day.
This is a good book for fans of archaeology, fans of extended British history, and fans of Time Team.
A great work that will continue to be of value, for many years to come! show less
This book is from that Team. Various experts (including Time Team's resident artist) give both learned opinion and show more specific examples from actual fieldwork. The basic setup is an invented town (Timechester), which allows a single location that can be given a history throughout the last 452,000 years. Give or take.
Everything is based on actual knowledge of numerous locations throughout the British Isles, transferred to Timechester.
Each chapter is a time period, from the Paleolithic (450,000 BCE), which is mostly a description of the location and some fauna and nomadic peoples who used it, Neolithic, Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, High Medieval, Post-Medieval, Early Modern, to Present Day.
This is a good book for fans of archaeology, fans of extended British history, and fans of Time Team.
A great work that will continue to be of value, for many years to come! show less
Enjoyable summary of the 2001 series, and a follow-on to the Ultimate Time Team Companion. This volume goes into more depth, and gives a slightly stronger flavour of how the show was produced.
Enjoyable summaries of a number of episodes from the first seven or so series of the long-running television show. Helpful for picking episodes to watch.
The Atlas of Archaeology: The Definitive Guide to the Location, History & Significance of the World's Most Important Archaelogical Sites & Finds by Mick Aston
Shows 1200 sites from around the world with explanations of hunter-gatherer societies to pottery found from 3700 B.C.E to the rituals surrounding a Saxon burial.
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 16
- Members
- 722
- Popularity
- #35,165
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 42
- Languages
- 3














