PRESS RELEASE: Canterbury Archaeological Trust wins prestigious award as Rescue Dig of the Year following a record number of votes from the general public

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Top honours for  Rescue Dig of the Year  at the prestigious Current Archaeology Awards went to  Canterbury Archaeological Trust for their work at Folkestone Roman villa. First examined in 1924, coastal erosion prompted a re-examination of the site before it was lost forever. This revealed that the villa overlay a major Iron Age port of trade receiving large quantities of imported high status continental goods.

Keith Parfitt, who accepted the award on behalf of the Trust,  said: ‘The people of Folkestone will be so pleased to see this project recognised. Prior to our excavations, no one had seen the villa for 50 years so it was great that the local community could visit the site during our excavations.

 ‘Rescue archaeology is so important, and all of the projects nominated this year would have been worthy of winning — they all deserve recognition.’

 

The award for  Archaeologist of the Year  went to  Phil Harding. A household name following his appearance on 20 seasons of Channel 4’s  Time Team, Phil’s enthusiasm for archaeology has inspired countless others to enter the discipline. As well as digging at some of Britain’s most iconic sites with  Time Team, Phil is also a senior field archaeologist at Wessex Archaeology. He is honorary President of the Defence Archaeology Group, a tri-service extension of Operation Nightingale, the MOD initiative using archaeological fieldwork to help the recovery of injured servicemen. Despite the announcement of  Time Team‘s cancellation by Channel 4 at the end of last year, the programme has secured a lasting legacy by cementing archaeology in the public consciousness.

Phil Harding  said:

‘Stone the crows, I am not used to making acceptance speeches, but thank you to everyone who voted in the Current Archaeology Awards — not just those who voted for me, but everyone who registered their feelings about any of the projects. It shows how important archaeology is.

 ‘I would not have been offended if either of the other nominees had won; Bob Bewley [Heritage Lottery Fund] and Gustav Milne [Thames Discovery Programme] are seriously good archaeologists.

 ‘Thank you everyone for expressing an interest in archaeology. Sharing our love of the past is what it is all about and helps to keep archaeology alive.’

 

Accepting the award for  Research Excavation of the Year  was Richard Buckley, who headed University of Leicester Archaeological Services’ international headline-grabbing discovery of Richard III under a Leicester car park. This astonishing achievement has finally allowed the lurid comments by Tudor chroniclers about the physique of this most controversial king to be objectively assessed.

Richard Buckley  said:  ‘I am very grateful that the readers of Current Archaeology have chosen our project as Research Excavation of the Year – for me, what is really nice, having done so much archaeological work in Leicester over the decades, is that this discovery has focussed international attention on Leicester’s fantastic archaeology, which is some of best in Britain.

 ‘I am proud to accept this award for the Grey Friars Project, and in particular I want to thank Philippa Langley, who raised the money for the investigation and never doubted for a minute that we would find Richard III. This discovery is down to the hard work by our team, particularly Mathew Morris, who led the work on site, and our scientific team, who did the osteological and forensic work back at base camp. Jo Appleby, the team’s osteologist, and Turi King, who masterminded the DNA, deserve special mention.’

 

Winner of the award for Book of the Year (sponsored by Oxbow Books), was Rebecca Jones for Roman Camps in Britain (published by Amberley). This volume brings to life the mostly ephemeral traces of the temporary fortifications built by the Roman army while engaged in military campaigns or construction projects in Britain. The finest set of such fortifications surviving anywhere in the former Roman Empire, this book reveals an all-too-often neglected aspect of the Roman occupation.

Rebecca Jones said: ‘I would like to thank Current Archaeology for the support it gives to archaeology in Britain and in particular its strong interest in Roman archaeology.

‘I am very touched to have won — this book is based on research that I have been doing for a very long time, and to have this recognition is a great honour and a privilege. I would like to dedicate this award to my husband and two children.’

 

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For more information and photographs please visit www.archaeology.co.uk/press

Notes for Editors: Current Archaeology Awards

  • Current Archaeology, the UK’s leading archaeology magazine, announced the winners of their 2013 awards, presented by archaeologist and TV personality Julian Richards (of Meet the Ancestors fame) on March 1, as part of the  annual Archaeology Live 2013 conference, held at the University of London’s Senate House.
  • Voted for by subscribers and members of the public, the awards recognise the outstanding contributions to our understanding of the past made by the people, projects, and publications featured in the pages of Current Archaeology over the previous 12 months.
  • Almost 12,000 votes were cast, a new record for the awards and more than twice as many as last year (just over 5,500 votes).

 

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