Anglo-Saxon Cross (Alnmouth) - Source of Reference
The information on this website is based on a range of published and unpublished works. Below is a list of the source of information used in writing this record.
(1) Bateson, E. 1895. A History of Northumberland, vol.2 (Newcastle upon Tyne), 439
(2) Bateson, E. 1895. A History of Northumberland, vol.2 (Newcastle upon Tyne), 467.
(3) Bateson, E. 1895. A History of Northumberland, vol.2 (Newcastle upon Tyne), 489-490 illus
(4) Bruce, J.C. 1880. A Descriptive Catalogue of Antiquities, chiefly British, at Alnwick Castle (Newcastle upon Tyne), 69-71, no.279.
(4a) Archaeologia 10 Pl 36 472 (Brand)
(4b) Archaeologia Aeliana 1st series 8 (1 173 185)
(4c) Stevens, G., 1884. Handbook of the Old Northern Runic Monuments of Scandinavia and England, 1, 461
(5) MacLauchlan, H. 1867. Additional Notes to Roman Roads in Northumberland (Newcastle upon Tyne), 6.
(6) Collingwood, W.G., 1927. Northumbrian Crosses of the Pre-Norman Age (London), 62, fig.79.
(7) Field Investigators Comments F1 JHO 12-FEB-1954
(8) Cramp, R., 1984. Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture in England. (Oxford University Press), 161-2
(9) Coatsworth, E., 1977. Archaeologia Aeliana 5 series 5, 198-201
(10) Cramp, R. and Miket, R., 1982. Catalogue of the Anglo-Saxon and Viking Antiquities in the Museum of Antiquities, Newcastle upon Tyne. (Newcastle upon Tyne: Museum of Antiquities), 13-14
(11) GUARD, 1993. Northumberland Coastal Survey. (Unpublished)
(12) Hawkes, J., 2002. The Sandbach Crosses: Sign and significance in Anglo-Saxon sculpture. (Dublin: Four Courts Press), 44-46
(12a) Coatsworth, E., 1979. The Iconography of the Crucifixion in pre-Conquest Sculpture in England. (Unpublished Durham University PhD thesis), volume 1, 209-213 and volume 2, 4-5 and pl 84
(13) This record includes National Record of the Historic Environment Information provided by Historic England on 4 January 2021 licensed under the Open Government Licence [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/]