Heritage Practice Training Event
Historic England are running a training event titled “Organic residue analysis and pottery production sites” It will be held in York on 23 March 2017
Click here for further details
Historic England are running a training event titled “Organic residue analysis and pottery production sites” It will be held in York on 23 March 2017
Click here for further details
The Society has a large collection of Journals, Manuscripts, Books, Leaflets, Pamphlets, Offprints and Excavation Reports.
Click here to read how you can access these publications
Saturday 25th March 2017 at 2:30pm
Antony Annakin-Smith
For more information visit our lecture programme page
This conference will be held on Saturday 19th and Sunday 20th November 2016, click here for more information
CAS lecture by David Hopewell (Gwynedd Archaeological Trust/Ymddiriedolaeth Archaeolegol Gwynedd) on Saturday 3rd December 2016 at 2:30pm in the Lecture Theatre of the Grosvenor Museum. For more information visit our lecture programme page
has just been published, click here for more information and access to a pdf version of the document
Click here to download this interesting article which uses some information from an interview with Alan Williams
Extensive investigations, archaeological excavations and surveys were commissioned by Cheshire West and Chester Council to inform the programme of repairs and restoration for the structure. The proposals have been designed in full by Ramboll Structural Engineers in consultation with Historic England. Scheduled Monument and Listed Building Consent have been secured to implement the proposals.
The work will extend over several months with anticipated completion in late summer 2016. The work will be phased to minimise disruption during the construction process. it is hoped that the entrance will remain open for the majority of the works. There will be short periods of time when the entrance will be closed for public safety, during which the exit will be utilised as an entrance and exit as per previous times when the entrance has been closed off.
Click here to read further information about this work.
The Chester Archaeological Society is pleased to announce that David James Laverty has been awarded the Society’s dissertation prize for 2015 for his dissertation “The Search for Mithras in Roman Britain: A Reassessment of the Archaeological Evidence”.
The Society offers an annual prize of £100 to students in the Department of History and Archaeology at Chester University for the best final year archaeology dissertation, preferably on a local subject. The winner is invited to submit an edited version of the dissertation for publication in the Society’s Journal.
Click here to read a synopsis of this dissertation.
For more information please read our Grants & Awards page.