List of contributors
Preface
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Chapter 1: Everyday products in the Middle Ages: Crafts, Consumption and the Individual in Northern Europe c. AD 800-1600: An Introduction
Steven P. Ashby, Gitte Hansen, and Irene Baug
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Chapter 2:‘With staff in hand, and dog at heel’? What did it mean to be an ‘Itinerant’ artisan?
Steven P. Ashby
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Chapter 3: Itinerant Craftspeople in 12th Century Bergen, Norway - Aspects of Their Social Identities
Gitte Hansen
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Chapter 4: Urban craftspeople at Viking-age Kaupang
Unn Pedersen
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Chapter 5. Crafts in the landscape of the powerless
A combmaker’s workshop at Viborg SøndersøAD 1020-1024
Jette Linaa
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Chapter 6. Bone-workers in medieval Viljandi, Estonia: comparison of finds from downtown and the Order’s castle
Heidi Luik
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Chapter 7: Consumers and Artisans: Marketing Amber and Jet in the Early Medieval British Isles
Carolyn Coulter
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Chapter 8. The home-made shoe, a glimpse of a hidden, but most‘affordable’, craft.
Quita Mould
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Chapter 9. Fashion and Necessity. Anglo-Norman leatherworkers and changing markets
Quita Mould and Esther Cameron
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Chapter 10. Tracing the nameless actors: Leatherworking and production of leather artefacts in the town of Turku and Turku Castle, SW Finland
Janne Harjula
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Chapter 11. Ambiguous Stripes: a Sign for Fashionable Wear in Medieval Tartu
Riina Rammo,
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Chapter 12. Silk finds from Oseberg: Production and distribution of high status markers across ethnic boundaries
Marianne Vedeler
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Chapter 13. The soapstone vessel production and trade of Agder and its actors
Torbjørn P. Schou
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Chapter 14. Actors in quarrying. Production and distribution of quernstones and bakestones during the Viking Age and the Middle Ages
Irene Baug
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Chapter 15. The role of Laach Abbey in the medieval quarrying and stone trade
Meinrad Pohl
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Chapter 16. Iron producers in Hedmark in the medieval period - who were they?
Bernt Rundberget
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Chapter 17. What did the blacksmiths do in Swedish towns? Some new results
Hans Andersson
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Chapter 18. The Iron Age blacksmith, simply a craftsman?
Roger Jørgensen
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Chapter 19. Bohemian Glass in the North: Producers, distributors and consumers of late medieval vessel glass
Georg Haggrén
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Chapter 20. If sherds could tell: imported ceramics from the Hanseatic hinterland in Bergen, Norway. Producers, traders and consumers: who were they, and how were they connected?
Volker Demuth
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Chapter 21. Marine trade and transport-related crafts and their actors: People without archaeology?
Natascha Mehler
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