Cookies

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Otherwise, we'll assume you're OK to continue.

Department of Archaeology

Current Research Postgraduates

Dr Sarah Semple, BA (hons), MSt Hist. Res., DPhil

Senior Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology
Telephone: +44 (0) 191 33 41115

Contact Dr Sarah Semple (email at s.j.semple@durham.ac.uk)

Biography

I undertook my undergraduate training at University College London and after several years in contract archaeology, completed an MSt and then a DPhil in archaeology at Oxford University. After holding Career Development Fellowship in Archaeology at St. Cross College, Oxford, I took up a full-time lectureship in archaeology at the new University of Chester and arrived in Durham in 2006.

My research focusses on the early medieval period in Britain and Europe. I am especially interested in understanding early medieval interaction with the natural and man-made environment with particular reference to the role of landscape in definitions of identity, religion and cult practice, as well as charting the ideological and political uses of natural topography and ancient remains. These interests have come to fruition in a new book Anglo-Saxon Perceptions of the Prehistoric. Ritual, Religion and Rulership due out with OUP in 2013. They led as well to a successful collaboration with Richard Jones (Leicester) in the delivery of an AHRC-funded network series in 2009: Sense of Place in Anglo-Saxon England now published as an edited volume Sense of Place in Anglo-Saxon England (2012).

My interests in assembly and political practice are on-going and I currently collaborate on a three-year international project funded by the Humanities in Europe Research Area. The Assembly Project TAP examines multidisciplinary evidence for the emergence of assembly sites and administrative frameworks across Northern Europe from AD 300-1300.

Since joining the department at Durham, I have initiated a number of regional field projects. In 2009, I began a collaboration with Sam Turner (Newcastle), funded by English Heritage, exploring the internationally important monastic sites of Wearmouth and Jarrow. One Monastery in Two Places has used a combination of non-intrusive survey techniques and digital data resources to explore the fabric of the buildings and the impact of these monasteries on the immediate and wider hinterlands. The results are forthcoming as a jointly-authored monograph.

Further regional involvements include field investigation at Yeavering, Northumberland, Sockburn, Co Durham and at Etal on the Northumberland border and buildings survey at Seaham Church. 

I now assist with the Corpus for Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture working to facilitate the online release of the full corpus. I have just become Deputy Editor for the international journal Medieval Archaeology, and as Associate Director in 2011, helped in the creation of the new Durham Institute for Medieval and Early Modern Studies. These involvements my keen interest and commitment to furthering research of all kinds on early medieval societies. At present I lead the Ritual Religion Belief and Place Research Group.

 

Supervises

Publications

Books: authored

Books: edited

Essays in edited volumes

  • Reynolds, A. & Semple, S. (Published). Digging for names: archeology and place-names in the Avebury Region. In Sense of Place in Anglo-Saxon England. Jones, R. & Semple, S Shaun Tyas. 76-100.
  • Jones, R. & Semple, S. (2012). Making Sense of Place in Anglo-Saxon England. In Sense of Place in Anglo-Saxon England. Jones, R. & Semple, S. Shaun Tyas. 1-17.
  • Reynolds, A. & Semple, S. (2011). Anglo-Saxon non-funerary weapon depositions. In Studies in Early Anglo-Saxon Art and Archaeology: Papers in Honour of Martin G. Welch. Brookes, S., Harrington, S. & Reynolds, A. Oxford: Archaeopress. 40-48.
  • Semple, S. (2011). Sacred Spaces and Places in Pre-Christian and Conversion Period Anglo-Saxon England. In The Oxford Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Archaeology. Hamerow, H., Hinton, D. A. & Crawford, S. Oxford: University Press. 742-763.
  • Semple, S.J. (2010). In the Open Air. In Signals of Belief in Early England: Anglo-Saxon Paganism Revisited. Carver, M.O.H, Sanmark, A. & Semple, S.J. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Sanmark, A. & Semple, S. J. (2010). The topography of outdoor assembly sites in Europe with reference to recent field results from Sweden. In Perspectives in Landscape Archaeology. Lewis, H. & Semple, S. J. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. BAR International Series 2103: 107-119.
  • Semple, S.J. (2009). Recycling the Past: Ancient Monuments and Changing Meanings in Early Medieval Britain. In Antiquaries and Archaists, the Past in the Past, the Past in the Present. Aldrich, M. & Wallis, R. J. Reading: Spire Books Ltd. 29-45.
  • Semple, S.J. (2004). Locations of Assembly in Early Anglo-Saxon England. In Assembly Places and Practices in Medieval Europe. Pantos, A. & Semple, S.J. Dublin: Four Courts Press. 135-154.

Journal papers: academic

Research Groups

  • North East Research Group
  • Ritual, Religion, Belief and Place Research Group

Research Projects

  • Archaeology of Assembly and Governance: European Themes
  • Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture
  • Durham Medieval Archaeologists (DMA)
  • Temples and cult sites: long term religious traditions in Britain