Bronze Age living history displays for visitors centres and museums, covering everything from domestic living through to metalworking. We have produced some of the finest cameos of Bronze Age living for television.
Britain's favourite archaeology magazine
Bronze Age living history displays for visitors centres and museums, covering everything from domestic living through to metalworking. We have produced some of the finest cameos of Bronze Age living for television.
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On the night of 31 March 1986, Hampton Court Palace caught fire. The great state apartments, built … [Read More...]

What is archaeology alongside a film crew like? Matthew Symonds found out. There is something … [Read More...]

In the 18th and 19th centuries, hundreds of thousands of people crossed the Atlantic to a New World … [Read More...]

Roman mosaics are perhaps the most spectacular Roman remains in Britain. Many of the finest come … [Read More...]

In the early 4th century, a troop of boatmen were transferred from one end of the Roman Empire to … [Read More...]
A guide to all the major university archaeology departments in the UKHere we list all the major … [Read More...]

Former CA Editor Lisa Westcott spent an inspiring week in the trenches, brushing up on her … [Read More...]

One of the advantages of being Editor-in-Chief is that sometimes one is invited to some rather nice … [Read More...]
Special Offer: 3 FREE issues! For a limited time only, we are … [Read More...]

Wellington Arch, the famous landmark on Hyde Park Corner, re-opened to the public today (9 May) … [Read More...]

There were over 300 leper hospitals in Medieval England. Mostly founded between the 12th and 13th … [Read More...]

After four weeks of fun, frivolity and fascinating finds, the first series of Pub Dig series has … [Read More...]

The traditional image of a Medieval leper is a familiar one. Tainted by spiritual pollution, they were outcasts shunned by society. Yet excavations on the site of St Mary Magdalen leper hospital in Winchester are revealing a different picture. Here the afflicted were cared for in substantial structures, before being laid to rest in a carefully … [Read More...]

The past is constantly being re-written. Across the country there are hundreds of excavations going on. It’s back-breaking work in often tough conditions, but the findings are essential for our understanding of our past. Yet who has the time to visit them all and put their findings into context? We do! For 40 years Current Archaeology has been … [Read More...]

Current Archaeology has a sister magazine - Current WORLD Archaeology Current World Archaeology covers the world from the first emergence of man up to yesterday: from Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Near East, to Anatolia, Classical Greece and Rome, as well as Asia and the Far East. Launched in 2003 as the sister magazine to Current Archaeology, we report on … [Read More...]