I began to experiment with fibre and cord; with no particular outcome in mind. Teaching myself drop spinning with sheep’s wool. Spinning led to whorl making – from clay, chalk, wood and resin set charcoal and chalk. With spindles of hazel wood. There is no impulse for historical/archaeological accuracy, just exploring their materiality. To improveContinue reading “Fibre trials & experiments”
Author Archives: Caroline. Z. Morris
Archival Rabbit Hole 4
Helen O’Neil, born Helen Evangeline Donovan in 1893, lived with her family at Camp House which straddled the western entrance to Salmonsbury Camp. During the Thirties Helen Donovan married Bryan O’Neil, a British archaeologist who became Chief Inspector of Ancient Monuments. They had met on site. After the 1932-34 excavations, Helen continued with occasional excavationsContinue reading “Archival Rabbit Hole 4”
Archival Rabbit Hole Three
The Dunning Donovan excavation continued for three more seasons. 1932 The digging season in 1932 was rich in finds, with the discovery of hut sites of three superimposed periods (Roman, late and early iron age) just within the western bank of the Camp. This area was described as site III. At least one had aContinue reading “Archival Rabbit Hole Three”
Archival Rabbit Hole Two
The largest portion of the Salmonsbury Archive that arrived in the Corinium in 2023 came from early twentieth century excavations. During the Twenties, A.S.Owens of Keble college, Oxford had been bringing undergraduates to Bourton on the Water for quiet study and had wanted to excavate the earthwork which was usually referred to as a RomanContinue reading “Archival Rabbit Hole Two”
Archival Rabbit Holes 1
Modern archaeological archive reports can be quite dry to someone who responds to the more narrative form of history. So, my way in to understanding this site was historical. I looked for the ways Salmonsbury camp was written about in the past. This rabbit hole was deep – prehistoric sites have been understood in allContinue reading “Archival Rabbit Holes 1”
The Past is a Foreign Country
they write things differently there Salmonsbury Camp – recorded as `Sulmonnes Burg’ (Suhl monnes-burg = Ploughman’s burg) in a charter of Offa of Mercia dated AD 779. The courts of the Liberty or Hundred of Salmonsbury traditionally assembled at the northern entrance to the enclosure throughout the medieval period. “It is so called from BurgContinue reading “The Past is a Foreign Country”
Totem
In the Seventies the redoubtable Helen O’Neill found a strange object on the Avilon site at #SalmonsburyCamp She called it a totem. It isn’t with the archive and after research I have concluded that it was returned to the landowner. It’s whereabouts now are, so far, a mystery. Based on the illustration in GC Dunning’sContinue reading “Totem”
Burying the site
Experiments have begun for my #SalmonsburyCamp project.Recreated the camp in cloth and wool, then I’ve buried it.I’ll dig it up in a month or so.I should have started this social media malarkey a while back after my first days on site but time and task ran away with me. @coriniummuseum @gloswildlife @greystonesfarm@aceagrams @tnluk @dcmsgovuk#acesupported #DYCP
Field Walking
In 2023, Will Chester-Master, one of the custodians of Abbey Home Farm approached the Corinium Museum to display field walking flint finds in the temporary exhibition space; inspired by the success of Art and Archaeology of Belas Knap Long barrow exhibition by Elizabeth Poraj-Wilczynska the year before. The proposition developed into an exhibition featuring artists’Continue reading “Field Walking”
Equinox.Autumn.2022
Here’s a video put together by Kel Portman of some work I’ve recently been involved with. The brief was to respond in any medium of our choice around sunrise, midday or sunset on the Autumn Equinox – producing a work at any or all of the times.
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