The Contemporary Archaeology of Offa’s Dyke

Howard Williams

Abstract


This article evaluates the present-day material cultures of Offa’s Dyke, Britain’s longest linear monument. Having previously considered how Offa’s Dyke is constituted in today’s landscape through road and residence signs (Williams 2020), artistic heritage trails (Williams 2023a) and heritage interpretation panels (Williams 2025), here I consider the broader assemblage of art, material cultures, monuments, waymarkers and local landscape features between Sedbury (Gloucestershire) to Prestatyn (Denbighshire) that together constitute a variegated landscape-scale assemblage we can define as ‘today’s Offa’s Dyke’. While elements are designed to support the Offa’s Dyke Path National Trail, other components have accrued by happenstance to waymark, interpret and commemorate Offa’s Dyke both along the surviving line of the monument, following the path, but also in locations disconnected from either. Today’s Offa’s Dyke is a late-modern hybrid of embodied practice and diverse materialities. This perspective invites reconsideration of the monument’s role within the contemporary landscape. It offers recommendations for enhancing heritage interpretation in the Welsh Marches, with attention to the complex interplay of landscape, monument, and borderland identities.

Keywords


art; contemporary archaeology; heritage; landscape; memory; Offa’s Dyke

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References


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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23914/odj.v7i0.14336

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