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1823 in archaeology
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The year 1823 in archaeology involved some significant events.
Excavations
- Roman tombs near Lorium, Etruria (1823–4).
- Roman villa near Bramdean, Hampshire, England.
Finds
- January - In a cave on the Gower Peninsula of south Wales, Rev. William Buckland discovers the "Red Lady of Paviland", the first identification of a prehistoric (male) human burial. The bones are discovered with those of the woolly mammoth, proving that the two had coexisted, although Buckland dates the human remains as Roman.
- Summer - Smythe's Megalith, a Neolithic tomb, is discovered in Kent, England, and excavated by local antiquarian Clement Smythe.
- Borough Hill Roman villa in the midlands of England is discovered by archaeologist, George Baker.
- The Caergwrle Bowl, a decorated Middle Bronze Age artefact, is discovered in north east Wales.
- The Ormside bowl, a gilded silver Anglo-Saxon double-bowl, dating from the mid-8th century, is found in Great Ormside, Cumbria.
Events
- Rev. Dr. Henry Duncan completes reconstruction of the Northumbrian Ruthwell Cross in Scotland.
Births
Deaths
- December 3 - Giovanni Battista Belzoni, Italian explorer of Egyptian antiquities (born 1778)
References
References
- Aldhouse-Green, Stephen. (October 2001). "Great Sites: Paviland Cave". British Archaeology.
- (22 November 2011). "Borough Hill & Cracks Hill".
- "Ormside Bowl". [[York Museums Trust]].
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