References
- Collingwood, R. G., and R. P. Wright. 1965. The Roman Inscriptions of Britain I Inscriptions on Stone. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Gilyard-Beer, R. 1951. The Romano-British Baths at Well. Research Report No.1. Leeds: Roman Antiquities Committee of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society.
- Hilson, S. 2005. Teeth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Kitson-Clark, M. 1935. A Gazetteer of Roman Remains in East Yorkshire. Leeds: Roman Antiquities Committee of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society.
- Lucy, S. 2000. The Anglo-Saxon Way of Death: Burial Rites in Early England. Stroud: Sutton.
- Margary, I. 1973. Roman Roads in Britain. 3rd ed. London: Phoenix House.
- McKenzie, M., and C. Thomas. 2020. In the Northern Cemetery of Roman London. Excavations at Spitalfields Market, London E1, 1991-2007. London: Museum of London Monograph, 58.
- Monaghan, J. 1997. Roman Pottery from York. The Archaeology of York 16/8. York: Council for British Archaeology.
- Moore, J., J. Montgomery, J. Evans, and G. Nowell. 2018. York Lead Coffin Burial Isotope Report. Durham: University of Durham Archaeological Services.
- Panter, I. 2008. “Assessment of the Lead Coffin.” In Hundayfield Farm, Marton-cum-Grafton, North Yorkshire, Assessment Report, edited by B. Antoni, 25–27. York: York Archaeological Trust. Report 2008/9.
- Philpott, R. 1991. Burial Practices in Roman Britain: A Survey of Grave Treatment and Furnishing AD 43 – 410. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports British Series 219.
- Ramm, H. G. 1984. “The Duel Cross Milestone and Roman Roads West of York.” In Archaeological Papers from York Presented to M.W. Barley, edited by P. V. Addyman and V. E. Black, 43–45. York: York Archaeological Trust.
- RCHME. 1962. An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the City of York. Volume 1: Eburacum Roman York. London: HMSO.
- Roberts, C. A., and M. Cox. 2003. Health and Disease in Britain: From Prehistory to the Present Day. Stroud: Sutton.
- Smith, A., M. Allen, T. Brindle, M. Fulford, L. Lodwick, and A. Rohnbogner. 2018. Life and Death in the Countryside of Roman Britain. Britannia Monograph 31. London: The Roman Society.
- Storm, R. 2014. Osteological Analysis of the Human Skeletal Remains from Hundayfield Farm, Marton-Cum-Grafton, North Yorkshire. Bradford: University of Bradford Biological Anthropology Research Centre.
- Taylor, A., M. Green, C. Duhig, D. Brothwell, E. Crowfoot, P. W. Rogers, M. L. Ryder, and W. D. Cooke. 1993. “A Roman Lead Coffin with Pipeclay Figurines from Arrington, Cambridgeshire.” Britannia 24: 191–225. https://doi.org/10.2307/526728
- Toller, H. 1977. Roman Lead Coffins and Ossuaria in Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, 38.
- Wacher, J. 1995. The Towns of Roman Britain. 2nd ed. London: Batsford.
- Waterman, D. M., B. W. J. Kent, and H. J. Strickland. 1955. “Two Inland Sites with ‘Iron Age A’ Pottery in the West Riding of Yorkshire.” Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 38: 383–397.
- Wenham, L. P. 1960. “Seven Archaeological Discoveries in Yorkshire.” Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 40: 298–328.
- Wenham, L. P. 1968. The Romano-British Cemetery at Trentholme Drive. York. Ministry of Public Buildings and Works Archaeological Reports No.5. London: HMSO.
- Wrathmell, S. and A. Nicholson, eds. 1990. Dalton Parlours: Iron Age Settlement and Roman Villa. Wakefield: West Yorkshire Archaeology Service, 3.
- WYAS. 2007. Hundayfield Farm, Marton-Cum-Grafton, North Yorkshire: Geophysical Survey Report No. 1735. Wakefield: West Yorkshire Archaeology Service.
- YAT. 2020. Hunday Farm Strip Trenching September 2010. York: York Archaeological Trust.