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The Yorkshire Archaeological & Historical Society

Since 1863

For everyone interested in Yorkshire's past

Programme 2025: Key events


Prehistory Research Section events:

2025

May - Saturday 17th May 2025 - Members' Morning. Talks at 11am - 12.30pm

Two talks given by PRS members on their research and GUESTS ARE WELCOME TO JOIN US with no charge.

Venue: Conservatory Room at St George’s Centre, 60 Great George Street, LEEDS, LS1 3DL https://stgeorgescentreleeds.org.uk/
Entrance through the gates to the left of St George's Church steps.

To help plan the room space, it will be helpful to know numbers attending the talks, please reply to info.prehist@yahs.org.uk

Simon Campbell-Skelling
‘Prehistory under siege: The threatened prehistoric landscape of North West Leeds’
Clayton Wood and its neighbour, tiny Iveson Wood, are relatively little known woodlands in North West Leeds. Not only are they important environmental sites but also contain rare urban survivals of Bronze Age and later prehistoric settlements and field systems. There are two known scheduled sites in the area but also suggestions of a wider prehistoric landscape extending far beyond the boundaries of the scheduled areas. Worryingly, both the scheduled sites and the wider area face significant threats from development and damage by the public. This talk will focus on what is known of the site, what evidence there is for wider prehistoric settlement and suggestions for further research.

Paula Ware
‘Small Sites with Exceptional Results: How commercial archaeology contributes to archaeological research’
The talk will illustrate with examples of sites throughout Yorkshire where archaeological excavation has contributed to our understanding and with collaboration with academic institutions provided results of regional, national and international significance. Many of the sites were originally not considered more than ‘standard rural sites’ but it is often the earlier deposits that provide the compelling evidence that leads us to reconsider many aspects of Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age societies. The advancement of scientific dating and DNA analysis provides us with tighter chronologies and insights into movement of populations.

Possible Archaeological Events for Your Diary:

N/A

Guest Lectures (open to all) 

Bradford University: School Archaeological and Forensic Science guest lectures series.

Lectures start at 5.30pm in Richmond Building (room E59) and as a webinar.

Please note - Your E-Mail Address:

The majority of members now receive their notices and newsflashes electronically. If your contact details have changed, please let me know, so that our address list remains up-to-date. If you wish to change the way you receive your section information, please drop me a line - either by email, or by post: John Cruse, 26 Logan Street, Market Harborough, Leicestershire, LE16 9AR

Above programme updated 22 April 2025

 

 

More on North Yorkshire county archives

  • Posted On: 10 May 2018

I've been to Northallerton to find out more about the consultation currently in progress about the future shape of North Yorkshire's archives service.

I am reassured that there's no suggestion of services in Northallerton being curtailed. The problem with collections like these is that most of their contents are unique, and need specialist care, so have to be kept together a central location. Northallerton is more accessibile than anywhere else in the county, but North Yorkshire is large, and east-west travel particularly difficult. Unlike many other record offices, North Yorkshire has commendably maintained a full service through the week. Even so, many North Yorkshire residents are not realistically ever going to manage to get there.

So how to spread the message about what's kept at North Yorkshire RO, beyond the volunteer work and events at Northallerton? The obvious route to reach more people is online, which may mean setting up some virtual activity in libraries in other outposts. NYRO is looking for your ideas.   

You're very much encouraged to complete the survey. Archives can be quite a specialist area, but to anyone interested in researching the past, they are vital. It helps to have a good website and more detailed cataloguing - sounds unglamorous, but a thorough online list can save you a long journey, or at least enable a researcher to see that a day out to Northallerton is worth the trip. But please think about what you'd like of an archive - help in uncovering the history of a house or village? Advice available in your locality? Online access to scans of a particular set of documents? Your views are really important. Responding to the survey shows that people are interested. This isn't just restricted to residents of North Yorkshire - anyone is welcome to fill out the survey. This is all our history. Here's the link again. 

 

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