Assessing the contribution of commercial archaeology to the study of Roman Essex, 1990-2004: Neil Holbrook
Excavation of a Roman landscape and prehistoric features at Elsenham Quarry, Elsenham: Stephen Hammond & Steve Preston
Roman Billericay: excavations by the Billericay Archaeological and Historical Society 1970-1977: M Medlycott, the late S Weller & P Benians
Roman settlement, pottery production, and a cemetery in the Beam Valley, Dagenham: Edward Biddulph, Kate Brady, Ben M Ford & Paul Murray
A new perspective on the coinages of early Roman sites in Essex: Mark Curteis
Roman and post-medieval archaeology at Pierrefitte Way, Braintree: Andrew A S Newton
Carved in stone: a late Iron Age and Roman cemetery and evidence of a Saxon minister, excavations near St Nicholas Church, Great Wakering 1998 and 2000: Ruarigh Dale, the late David Maynard, Susan Tyler and Tom Vaughan
Ripple Road, Barking: environmental evidence for Thames-side Medieval parklands or open gardens: Michael J Allen, Cornelius Barton, A J Chapham & Rob Scaife
The fifteenth-century building accounts of the Duchy of Lancaster in Essex: Pat Ryan
Waltham Forest: a Cambridge manuscript: Richard Morris
Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick and the government of Essex 1619-1629: Christopher Thomson
Wivenhoe House: a tale of two lost 18th century mansions and the sea-captains who built them: Pat Marsden (view online: http://www.wivencyclopedia.org/History/Wivenhoe%20House%20for%20blog%2022%2005%2012.pdf )
The accounts of Augustus Veley: a peripatetic master teaching French, 1808 to 1814: David Tomlinson
The Essex workhouse master 1760-1837: Jane Pearson
Rev. John Howard Marsden: rector of Great Oakley and first Disney professor of archaeology at Cambridge University: Michael Leach
Seymour Street brickworks, Chelmsford: archaeological investigations 2001: E M Heppell, A Letch, M Peachey & P Ryan
Archaeology in Essex 2009: Phillippa Sparrow Shorter notes:
An upper Palaeolithic flint knife from Othona: Hazel Martingell
Saxon skeleton at Bradwell on Sea: M Medlycott & E M Heppell
Figures of St John from late medieval processional crosses found in Essex: Phillip Wise Book reviews Essex Bibliography: Andrew Phillips & Paul Sealey