
Warwick Rodwell
Author of The Archaeology of Churches
About the Author
Works by Warwick Rodwell
The Coronation Chair and Stone of Scone: History, Archaeology and Conservation (Westminster Abbey Occasional Papers) (2013) 16 copies
Dorchester Abbey, Oxfordshire: The Archaeology and Architecture of a Cathedral, Monastery and Parish Church (2009) 7 copies
The Lantern Tower of Westminster Abbey 1060-2010: Reconstructing its History and Architecture (Westminster Abbey Occasional Papers) (2010) 3 copies
The Small towns of Roman Britain: Papers presented to a conference, Oxford, 1975 (British archaeological reports) (1975) — Editor — 3 copies
Rivenhall: Investigations of a Villa, Church and Village, 1950-1977 (Cba Research Report) (1985) 2 copies
Westminster: The Art, Architecture and Archaeology of the Royal Abbey and Palace. 2-volume set (2016) 2 copies
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Rodwell, Warwick
- Other names
- Rodwell, W. J.
- Birthdate
- 1947
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- professor (Archaeology)
archaeologist - Organizations
- University of Reading
- Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
Well, not quite; it's the archaeology of Christian churches in Great Britain. With that, it's still an interesting book, well organized, with great photographs and line drawings (the aerial view of a fully excavated church with all the subfloor graves and their occupants appealed to my ghoulish tastes).
However, it contains one astonishing sentence: (p127)
"There is no doubt that dowsing works - it is used daily by farmers, water engineers, and others, to discover the whereabouts of buried show more pipes and drains - but its scientific basis remains largely unexplained."
The author then goes on to explain that although "most archaeologists dismiss dowsing", "some elements of dowsed plans have been subsequently validated by excavation..."
I find it astonishing that an eminent archaeologist (he's a professor at the University of Reading and Consultant Archaeologist to Westminster Abbey, Bristol, Lichfield and Wells cathedrals) does not understand that just because something is "used daily" doesn't mean that it "works". To be fair, there's only one paragraph in the book mentioning dowsing (or any other pseudoscience); I guess I can forgive Mr. Rodwell a single eccentricity. So the book is recommended with a caution. show less
However, it contains one astonishing sentence: (p127)
"There is no doubt that dowsing works - it is used daily by farmers, water engineers, and others, to discover the whereabouts of buried show more pipes and drains - but its scientific basis remains largely unexplained."
The author then goes on to explain that although "most archaeologists dismiss dowsing", "some elements of dowsed plans have been subsequently validated by excavation..."
I find it astonishing that an eminent archaeologist (he's a professor at the University of Reading and Consultant Archaeologist to Westminster Abbey, Bristol, Lichfield and Wells cathedrals) does not understand that just because something is "used daily" doesn't mean that it "works". To be fair, there's only one paragraph in the book mentioning dowsing (or any other pseudoscience); I guess I can forgive Mr. Rodwell a single eccentricity. So the book is recommended with a caution. show less
Far too dry for the layman, and probably too dry for the professional, but you can't fault their thoroughness.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 24
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 149
- Popularity
- #139,412
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 43

