User talk:Johannes.Richter

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Amber
I have moved Burnham Market more or less unchanged.
 * I have no strong feelings about the new title Amber in British place names - feel free to move it.
 * I do have a feeling the article verges into the area of original research. A few references and external links (other than to your own PDF) would reduce the risk of it being denounced as original research.
 * You need to add category/ies to the article and create links to it from other articles such as Cromer and Humber.

Also:
 * I do not believe any Burnhams have disappeared under the waves - have you any evidence?
 * Do you think that Burnham in a place name always indicates amber?

-- RHaworth 11:13, 2005 Jun 2 (UTC)

Have a look at this page by David Fincham and search for Brancaster. -- RHaworth 17:47, 2005 Jun 2 (UTC)

Thank you for the comments.

I have placed answers in the relevant discussion pages. I do not think the name Burnham itself justifies the amber trading thesis.

The Burnhams seem to be amber trading towns for the follwoing reasons:


 * the location of the Burnhams at Brancaster Bay between Cromer and the Humber mouth
 * the early density of at least five villages with an attribute "burn" in their names, indicating a wealthy area with richess by an unknown source.
 * the precise four locations of amber trading in Britain in the article: "Das Gold des Nordens", by Karl Jülicher, Periodical Pan, April 1982)
 * equivalent namegiving systems elsewhere, eg. in Germany (near Hamburg and at the Brennerpass)

Johannes.Richter 12:55, 4 Jun 2005 (UTC)

License tagging for Image:Amber sources in Europe.jpg
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File:German Amber Roads.gif
The source you listed here for what is an academice paper you wrote seems to have become a dead link :( Sfan00 IMG (talk) 19:37, 19 May 2016 (UTC)