Cynnwys cyfrolau diweddar o Archaeologia Cambrensis
Rhoddir crynodeb o brif gynnwys cyfrolau diweddar o’r cyfnodolyn.
Cyfrol 149 (2000)
A pagan celtic background for sheela-na-gigs? By Etienne Rynne
A sheela-na-gig from Llanon, Llansanffraid, Ceredigion. By Michael
Freeman
St Cristiolus’ churchyard, Eglwyswrw, Pembrokeshire: a post-conquest
cist cemetery. By Neil Ludlow
Some Irish/Welsh Methodist Links. By D A Levistone Cooney
The progress of ecclesiology and ritualism in Wales. By Nigel Yates
Stephen W. Williams of Penralley 1833-1889. By R W D Fenn and J
B Sinclair
The Ham, Llantwit Major: a Wyatt house and historic garden in the
Vale of Glamorgan. By Hilary M. Thomas
A pebble hammer from Trerew Brook, Little Berth-Glyd farm, Llantilio
Crossenny, Monmouthshire. By Graham A Makepeace
The Ogmore helmets: Theophilus Redwood’s memories of the
find-spot. By L A Toft
A puzzle picture at Abbey House, Strata Florida, Ceredigion. By
Christopher Davson
Reviews
Periodical Literature, 1999
Cyfrol 150 (2001)
Presidential Address: The Cambrians and the Railways: one
hundred and fifty years of links. By Keith P. Mascetti
A prehistoric and early medieval complex at Llandegai, near Bangor,
North Wales. By Frances Lynch and Chris Musson
A Roman Will from North Wales. By R S O Tomlin
Reviews
Periodical Literature on Wales, 2000
Cyfrol 151 (2002)
Presidential Address: ‘From the Welsh Good Lord Deliver
Me’: soldiers, papists and civilians in Civil War Monmouthshire.
By Jeremy K Knight
The Elijah Panel in St David’s Cathedral, Pembrokeshire and
its provenance. By Michael Eastham
Whitland Abbey, Carmarthenshire: a Cistercian site re-examined,
1994–99. By Neil Ludlow
The Sisters’ House at Minwear, Pembrokeshire: analysis of
the documentary and archaeological evidence. By Helen Nicholson
A history and survey of Haroldston House and gardens, Pembrokeshire:
an unexcavated manorial complex. By Roger Turvey
Reviews
Periodical Literature on Wales, 2001
Cyfrol 152 (2003)
Presidential Address: Back to the Future. By Geoffrey Wainwright
Three Castles of the Clare family in Monmouthshire during the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries. By S. G. Priestley and R. C. Turner
Urban and commercial networks in the later middle ages: Chepstow,
Severnside and the ports of southern Wales. By Spencer Dimmock
Thomas Thomas, 1817–88: the first national architect of Wales.
By Stephen Hughes
Reviews
Periodical Literature on Wales, 2002
Cyfrol 153 (2004)
Presidential Address: From Antiquarianism to Archaeology. By Muriel
E Chamberlain
A newly discovered Roman marching camp at Pen Plaenau in the Berwyn
mountains. By Hugh Toller
The inscribed stones of Llanaelhaearn Church, Gwynedd, and the
significance of their places of discovery. By Robert T J Evans
The medieval bishops' effigies at Llandaff Cathedral. By Madeleine
Gray
The royal apartments in the inner ward at Conwy Castle. By Jeremy
Ashbee
The name Baddegai, near Brecon. By Andrew Breeze
Castell Blaenllynfi, Brecknock: a Marcher castle and its landscape.
By Robert J Silvester, Paul Courtney and Sian E Rees
Architecture and the development of Beaumaris in the nineteenth
century. By Richard Hayman
Dimlands, Llantwit Major: a small-scale gentry house in Glamorgan.
By Hilary M Thomas
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