Notes on Contributors

NOTES ON THE CONTRIBUTORS Brendan Chester-Kadwell PH.D., M.A., M.soc.sc., PGCERT.ARCH.C0NS.: is a landscape historian specialising in the origins and development of rural settlement. He has worked exclusively in East Anglia and the High Weald, although most of his current work is in the latter area. He is currently collaborating with The High Weald AONB JAC and English Heritage on the study of dispersed settlement. Deborah Cole, M.A., PH.D.: is an adult education tutor for the WEA and researches and speaks on topics to do with early Kentish histOI)' and archaeology. As a committee member of the KAS and Tonbridge Historical Society she contributes to their projects and publications. She lives in Tonbridge and has recently published a book with the help of an Allen Grove award. on which this article is based, entitled The Tonbridge Circular Walk in the footsteps of mediaeval knights. For further details see: www.tonbridgecirculanva.lk. co.uk. M eriel Connor, M.A., M.PHIL., F.S.A.: her primary research interest is Canterbul)' Cathedral PriOI)'. Published work includes a book entitled John Stones Chronicle. Christ Church Priory, 1417-1472. Recently she contributed biographies of Christ Church priors to the ODNB, and material for an interactive DVD-ROM 'English Catl1edrals and Monasteries' to the University of York. Member of the KAS Historic Buildings Committee; ViceChairman of the Friends of CAT. for which she has for years organized, and contributed to, the successful annual guided walks given during the Canterbury Festival. Jonathan Cotton, B.A., M.A., F .s.A.: spent much of his archaeological career at the Museum of London, initially as a field archaeologist and latterly as Senior Curator, Prehistory and Public Archaeology. Having elected to take early retirement from the Museum after 33 years' service in May 2011 he is now a freelance archaeological consultant specialising in the prehistory of London and the surrounding region. Veronica Craig-Mairt: during her early career she worked at the Universities of Sussex and Kent as a specialist librarian. As a mature student, she completed a B.A. and M.A. in History, gaining a distinction in the latter, at the University of Kent. She was keenly interested in Anglo-Sa.xon history but did not pursue her academic studies any further. Instead she continued to work as a professional genealogist, developing an in-depth knowledge ofKentish family records. Ben Croxford PH.D.: is the Historic Environment Record Officer at Kent County Council. He has previously worked in a variety of roles within UK commercial archaeology (consultancy survey and excavation) and on research projects in 1\misia and Italy. His principal interest is Roman archaeology. Gillian Draper, PH.D., F.R.HIST.s., F.S.A.: teaches landscape history at the University of Kent and local history at Canterbury Christ Church University. She is currently contributing 337 CONTRIBUTORS two chapters on towns and settlement to the forthcoming Early Medieval Kent, 800-1220 edited by S. Sweetinburgh (Boydell). She is also the Events and Development Officer for the British Association for Local History, and a convenor of the Locality and Region seminar at the Institute of Historical Research, University of London. Simon Elliott, M.A.: is studying for a PH.D. in Archaeology at the University of Kent, having graduated with an M.A. in Archaeology from UCL's Institute of Archaeology and an M.A. in War Studies from KCL. He is co-Director of the Roman villa excavation at Teston and a CBA South East Committee Member. Duncan Harrington: is both a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and the Society of Genealogists and President of the Kent Family History Society. He is a freelance historian, and compiles the Kent Records, New Series for the Kent Archaeological Society. With Patricia Hyde he has published two important books on the history of Faversham: Faversham Oyster Fishe,y and The Early Town Books of Faversham. They are currently working on a new history of Faversham Abbey. Richard H elm, B.A.(HoNs), PH.D.: a Senior Project Manager at the Canterbury Archaeological Trust, he has conducted a broad range of excavation projects in Kent and the SouthEast He has been involved in commercial archaeology since 1986, and since 1995 has followed his research interests in African archaeology for which he is presently conducting fieldwork in Kenya and Tanzania as part of the Sealinks Project (www.sealinks.arch.ox.ac. uk). Emma Jeffery, B.A., M.A., A.I.F.A.: started her career at Compass Archaeology immediately after university and has worked on numerous projects including coordinating the production of the publication article on Sittingboume. Other work in Kent includes surveys of historic buildings - a probable seventeenth-century house in Lower Stone Street, Maidstone, and a 1940s air raid shelter at Frittenden Primary School. She has recently completed an M.A. dissertation on the establishment of Anglo-Saxon minsters in Kent. Howard A. Jones, B.A.(HoNs), DIP.ARCH. RIBA: is a retired architect who has spent a lifetime recording and restoring historic buildings, and many years in Kent as an amateur archaeologist. c.s. Knighton, M.A., PH.D., D.PHIL., F.S.A., F.R.HIST.S.: was formerly an Editor of State Papers for the Public Record Office. He has studied collegiate foundations in the 16th and 17th centuries, especially Westminster Abbey, and he contributed to the official history of Rochester Catl1edral. Lately his main concern bas been with the naval history of the same period. Since 2009 he has been a Principal Assistant Keeper of Archives at Clifton College. Frank Meddens, B.A., PH.D., F.S.A., lvl.I.F.A.: is a director of Pre-Construct Archaeology Ltd responsible for post-excavation projects, and a honorary research fellow at Royal Holloway, University of London, as well as a research associate of the Institute of Andean Studies, and he is also a current council member of the IFA . Philip L.A. Newill, M.CHEM., PH.D., AMRsc: is a native of Kent, educated at The Norton Knatchbull school, Ashford. After a lengthy university education (M.CHEM. degree, 2004; PH .D. in bio-organic chemistry, 2011) his career is currently dormant. His scientific interests include natural products, organonitrogen chemistry, and antibiotics. His antiquarian interest began in heraldry and bas recently extended to include the documentary study of historic buildings. He is currently a volunteer guide at Godinton House. 338 CONTRIBUTORS Laura O'Sbea-WaU

Previous
Previous

Obituaries

Next
Next

Annual Report and Accounts 2013