Publications
Greatham Church. Fabric, Date, Dimensions, Implications, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published 1988 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 126, article, pp.93-104) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 10371] & The Keep [LIB/500303] & S.A.S. library
Greatham Church: a response, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published 1990 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 128, note, pp.264-265) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 11106] & The Keep [LIB/500301] & S.A.S. library
The Washington Estate: new evidence on an ancient boundary, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published 2005 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 143, article, pp.205-214) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 15610] & The Keep [LIB/500361] & S.A.S. library View Online
Abstract:Although historical evidence for the Anglo-Saxon estate boundary at Washington has been discussed in the past, there has been little on-the-ground investigation to find any physical evidence of its actual route across the landscape. Examination of the boundary's probable course has discovered several sections of earthwork bank, and these are discussed in relation to the historical sources.
South Downs National Park Inquiry, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published April 2008 in Sussex Past & Present (no. 114, article, pp.6-7, ISSN: 1357-7417) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/500475] & S.A.S. library View Online
Preview:The long running saga of the South Downs National Park (SDNP) is nearing resolution. The re-opened Public Inquiry (at the Chatsworth Hotel, Worthing) is now hearing evidence about a few outstanding problems and objections, till late April 2008.
Historic landscapes protected: South Downs National Park confirmed at last!, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published August 2009 in Sussex Past & Present (no. 118, article, p.4, ISSN: 1357-7417) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/500475] & S.A.S. library View Online
Mysteries & Disaster: Buncton Church ten years on, by Robin Milner-Gulland, published December 2014 in Sussex Past & Present (no. 134, article, pp.4-5, ISSN: 1357-7417) accessible at: The Keep [LIB/507923] & S.A.S. library View Online
Preview:All Saints' Church (sometimes called 'Chapel'), Buncton, may seem like everyone's favourite Sussex country church. Tantalizingly glimpsed to the north of the A283 between Steyning and Washington, it stands outside any modern village, on a small rise with a fine view of Chanctonbury Hill, accessed by path and footbridge across a ravine. When reached, it seems memorably simple and ancient, its early-Norman origins at once apparent - though this simplicity is somewhat misleading. People behave proprietorially towards it, as if they'd discovered it themselves. But ten years ago, on 10/11th November 2004, someone took advantage of its isolation to deface it in an outrage without equal (so far as I know) in recent times. This article is intended to serve as a reminder of this event - to which you won't find any reference in the church itself - and to draw attention to various mysteries, not wholly unconnected, that the building presents.
West Chiltington church: structure and wall paintings, by Robin Milner-Gulland, John F. Potter and Pamela Tudor-Craig, published 2016 in Sussex Archæological Collections (vol. 154, article, pp.169-193) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 18939] & The Keep [LIB/509465] & S.A.S. library
Churches and Chapels of the South Downs National Park, by David Parsons and Robin Milner-Gulland, published 16 January 2017 (137 pp., Sussex Archæological Society, ISBN-10: 0904973271 & ISBN-13: 9780904973273) accessible at: S.A.S. library