The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Worthy Park, Kingsworthy, near Winchester, Hampshire. Sonia Chadwick Hawkes , Guy Granger , Justine Bayley , Elisabeth Crowfoot , Bernard Denston , Marion Cox , Elizabeth Fry-Stone , Chris Unwin , English Heritage

Speculum ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 198-199
Author(s):  
Frank Siegmund ◽  
Joan A. Holladay
Keyword(s):  

Britain & Ireland - Mark Edmonds & Tim Seaborne. Prehistory in the Peak. 223 pages, b&w photographs, 6 maps. 2001. Stroud & Charleston (SC): Tempus; 0-7524-1483-6 paperback £15.99 & S26.99. - Keith Branigan & Patrick Foster. Barra and the Bishop’s Isles: living on the margin. 160 pages, 74 b&w figures, 36 colour plates. 2002. Stroud & Charleston (SC): Tempus; 0-7524-1947-1 paperback £16.99 & $27.99. - Andrew J. Lawson Potterne, 1982-5: animal husbandry in later prehistoric Wiltshire (Wessex Archaeology Report No. 17). x+368 pages, 117 figures, 46 tables, 17 plates. 2000. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology; 1-874350-28-0 (ISSN 0965-5778) paperback £26. - Joanna Brück (ed.). Bronze Age landscapes: tradition and transformation, viii+231 pages, 85 figures, 17 tables. 2001. Oxford: Oxbow; 1-84217-062-7 paperback £35 & US$55. - Peter Salway (ed.). The Roman era: the British Isles, 55BC–AD410. xxii+286 pages, 26 figures. 2002. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 0-19-873194-9 £11.99. - Michelle P. Brown & Carol A. Farr (ed.). Mercia, an Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe, xiv+386 pages, 60 figures. 2001. London: Leicester University Press; 0-7185-0231-0 hardback £75. - M. Redknap, N. Edwards, S. Youngs, A. Lane & J. Knight (ed.). Pattern and purpose in Insular art: proceedings of the 4th international conference on Insular art held at the National Museum & Gallery, Cardiff, 3–6 September 1998. xi+292 pages, 167 figures, 2 tables. 2001. Oxford: Oxbow; 1-84217-058-9 hardback £48 & US$85. - Gustav Milne with Nathalie Cohen and Tony Dyson, Jacqueline Pearce & Mike Webber. Excavations at Medieval Cripplegate, London: archaeology after the Blitz, 1946–68. xiv+153 pages, 150 figures. 2002. Swindon: English Heritage; 1-8-5074-771-7 paperback £25. - Bruce Watson, Trevor Brigham & Tuny Dyson. London Bridge: 2000 years of a river crossing (MoLAS Monograph 8). xix+258 pages, 157 figures, 19 tables. 2001. London: Museum of London; 1-901992-18-7 paperback £22. - Marjorie Lyle. Canterbury: 2000 years of history (2nd ed.). 160 pages, 88 b&w figures, 27 colour plates. 2002. Stroud & Charleston (SC): Tempus; 0-7524-1948-X paperback £15.99 & $26.99.

Antiquity ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (292) ◽  
pp. 570-573
Author(s):  
N. James

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Thorpe
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfric Abbot of Eynsham ◽  
Benjamin Thorpe
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
pp. 23-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Avallone ◽  
Claudia Gabbioneta ◽  
Paola Ramassa ◽  
Marco Sorrentino

Increased comparability of financial statements across adopting countries is one of the main objectives of IFRS adoption. The level of achievement of this objective, however, is still debatable. While some studies have documented that crosscountry comparability of financial statements has increased after IFRS adoption, other studies have found that comparability has actually decreased since 2005. We contribute to this debate by studying whether the motivations for goodwill writeoff are the same or vary across countries with different accounting systems. Although a good deal of research has investigated the motivations for goodwill writeoff, our study is the first to analyze whether these motivations vary across countries with different accounting systems. We find that firms that expect low cash flows in the future are more likely to report goodwill write-offs if they are located in countries with an Anglo-Saxon accounting system than if they are located in countries with a Continental accounting system. These results suggest that IFRS are "interpreted" differently in different countries and that harmonization of financial statements has not been fully achieved yet.


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