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The Lincolnshire Architectural and Archaeological Society merged with the Lindsey Local History Society in 1965 and in 1974 the society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology was created by a further mergers with the Lincoln Archaeological Research Committee. [7] and the Lincolnshire Industrial Archaeology Group.
Sawyer, Peter, Anglo-Saxon Lincolnshire, 1998 (Lincoln: Lincolnshire Society for History and Archaeology) Vince, Alan G., Pre-Viking Lindsey, 1993 (Lincoln: City of Lincoln Archaeology Unit) ISBN 978-0951498774; Whitwell, J. B., Roman Lincolnshire, 1970 (Lincoln: Lincolnshire Society for History and Archaeology)
Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, Vol. 35, pp35–40; Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England, (1963), Monuments Threatened or Destroyed, A Select List: 1956-1962. Stocker, D.A., (1999), A Very Goodly House Longging to Sutton…" A Reconstruction of John of Gaunt's Palace, Lincoln in Lincolnshire History and Archaeology. Vol ...
Jews' Court is a Jewish museum and Liberal Jewish congregation and synagogue, located on Steep Hill in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England, in the United Kingdom. The building was listed as a Grade I building in 1953 [2] and houses the headquarters of the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology. [3]
Baker F. T. (1985) A Lifetime with Lincolnshire Archaeology: Looking back over 60 years. The Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology. Colyer C. et al. (ed. Jones M. J. (1999)), The Defences of the Lower City: Excavations at the Park and West Parade 1970-2 and the discussion of other sites excavated up to 1994. CBA Research Report 114.
History of Lincolnshire; List of historic sites in Lincolnshire; 0–9. 1920 Louth by-election; A. ... Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology; Somerby Hill;
History of Lincolnshire. Kingdom of Lindsey; Lindum Colonia; List of castles in England This page was last edited on 23 April 2024, at 19:54 (UTC). Text is available ...
It was established in the September 1988 on the initiative of Lincolnshire County Council. It became a registered charity on 9 January 1991, at the same time gaining independence from the county council and merging with the established Trust for Lincolnshire Archaeology.