Miranda Jane Aldhouse-Green,FSA, FLSW (néeAldhouse; born 24 July 1947) is a Britisharchaeologist and academic, known for her research on theIron Age and theCelts. She was Professor of Archaeology atCardiff University from 2006 to 2013.[1][2] Until about 2000, she published asMiranda Green orMiranda J. Green.[a]
Her research interests areIron Age andRomano-Celtic, particularlyGallo-Romaniconography and sacrificial activities.[6] A report fromUniversities UK (EurekaUK, June 2006) cites Aldhouse-Green's research into understanding theCelts as one of the "100 major discoveries, developments and inventions", by academics throughout the UK, to have transformed the world in the last 50 years.[7] Her 2018 bookSacred Britannia: The Gods and Rituals of Roman Britain provides an in-depth overview of religion in the province, using evidence from epigraphy and material culture related to a variety of indigenous, eastern and military cults, and their associated rituals.[8]
^Wells, Peter S., "Review Article: Who, Where, and What Were the Celts? The World of the Celts by Simon James; Pagan Celtic Ireland: The Enigma of the Irish Iron Age by Barry Raftery; Celtic Britain by Charles Thomas; Celtic Goddesses: Warriors, Virgins and Mothers by Miranda Green; The World of the Druids by Miranda J. Green; Celtic Sacred Landscapes by Nigel Pennick",American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 102, No. 4 (Oct., 1998), pp. 814–816,JSTOR, where two of her books, both published in 1997, use different forms.
^King, Anthony (21 March 2019). "Book Review of Sacred Britannia: the Gods and Rituals of Roman Britain".Archaeological Journal. 176, 2019, Issue 2:386–387.doi:10.1080/00665983.2019.1591060.S2CID166864828 – via Taylor & Francis Online.