-
Miranda Jane
Aldhouse-Green, FSA, FLSW (née
Aldhouse; born 24 July 1947) is a
British archaeologist and academic,
known for her
research on the Iron Age...
- main
reason for the
decline of the
druid orders.
Archaeologist Miranda Aldhouse-Green (2010) ****erted that
Caesar offered both "our
richest textual source"...
-
peoples may
point to a
Common Celtic origin of the cult.
Scholar Miranda Aldhouse-Green
writes that the
deity probably pre-existed the
Roman period. Philologist...
-
previously been suggested,
usually in the
later part of this range;
Miranda Aldhouse-Green is
typical in
using "2nd-1st
century BC" in 1996. It was dredged...
- ISBN 87-7801-725-4.
Aldhouse-Green,
Miranda J. (2006).
Boudica Britannia.
Pearson Education. pp. 95–96. ISBN 1-4058-1100-5. (
Aldhouse-Green 2004, p. 93) (
Aldhouse-Green...
- in one region, but
others were more
widely known.
According to
Miranda Aldhouse-Green, the
Celts were also animists,
believing that
every part of the natural...
- them, is
Barry Cunliffe, ed.
Roman Bath (Oxford
University Press) 1969.
Aldhouse-Green,
Miranda (2007). "Gallo-British
Deities and
their Shrines". In Todd...
-
adviser breaks modern-era record". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2017.22878.
Aldhouse,
Peter (January 18, 2017). "Trump's war on
science isn't what you think"...
- 233–263.
Mattingly (2006), pp. 351–427.
Millet (1992).
Percival (1976).
Aldhouse-Green,
Miranda J. (2018).
Sacred Britannia: the gods and
rituals of Roman...
-
mythology are
believed to be
versions of
earlier deities.
According to
Miranda Aldhouse-Green, the
Celts were also animists,
believing that
every part of the natural...