Bibliography - Malcolm Lyne
Bibliography Home

Publications

The Hassocks cemetery, by Malcolm A. B. Lyne, published 1994 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 132, article, pp.53-86) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 12979] & The Keep [LIB/500294] & S.A.S. library

Hastings, Haestingaceaster and Haestingaport. a question of Identity, by Pamela Combes and Malcolm Lyne, published 1995 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 133, article, pp.213-224) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 13209] & The Keep [LIB/500288] & S.A.S. library

Lewes Priory: Excavations by Richard Lewis, 1969-82, by Malcolm A. B. Lyne and Mark Gardiner, published June 1997 (197 pp., Lewes: Lewes Priory Trust, ISBN-10: 095308390X & ISBN-13: 9780953083909) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/503443] & West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries
Abstract:
A detailed record of the findings of Richard Lewis who died before he could publish the results of his work.

The Roman pottery production site at Wickham Barn, Chiltington, East Sussex, by Chris Butler and Malcolm Lynne, published 12 June 2001 (British Archaeological Reports , viii + 98 pp., Oxford: Archaeopress, ISBN-10: 1841712426 & ISBN-13: 9781841712420) accessible at: British Library

A Roman field boundary at 'Greenfields', Middleton-on-Sea, West Sussex, by M. John Saunders, Malcolm Lyne and Sheila Hamilton-Dyer, published 2004 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 142, shorter article, pp.135-139) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 15489] & The Keep [LIB/500360] & S.A.S. library   View Online

The Roman pottery assemblage from Hills Place, Horsham, West Sussex, by Malcolm Lyne, published 2008 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 146, short article, pp.203-205) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 15997] & The Keep [LIB/500364] & S.A.S. library   View Online

Excavations at Pevensey Castle, 1936 to 1964, by Malcolm A. B. Lyne, published 10 January 2010 (163 pp., British Archaeological Reports, ISBN-10: 1407306294 & ISBN-13: 9781407306292) accessible at: British Library

A late Roman "Hall" at Batten Hanger, West Sussex, by James Kenny, Malcolm Lyne, John Magilton and Paul Buckland, published November 2016 in Britannia (vol. 47, article, pp.193-207)   View Online
Abstract:
Excavation of the latest surviving structures of the villa at Batten Hanger in West Sussex indicates that a large aisled building was demolished in the late fourth or fifth century and replaced by a large hall 31.6 m long by 11.5 m wide, orientated approximately east-west. The survival of pad stones shows this space to have been divided into seven bays, with the more westerly bays screened off by a cross wall. The east wall of the building had collapsed outwards and was largely complete. A coin of Valentinian III suggests that occupation continued at least to the middle of the fifth century. The Supplementary Material available online (http://journals.cambridge.org/bri) contains a detailed presentation of the coin hoard and the pottery assemblages.