Select Publications

2025 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘The Abercorn Assemblage: New insights into the sculptural repertoire of a central British monastery’ in K. Kilpatrick (ed.) Common Ground: Proceedings of a Conference in Honour of Anna Ritchie (Edinburgh: Scottish Society for Northern Studies), pp. 204-232 (Chapter 5).

2025 Sarah Semple, Tudor Skinner, Christina Smith, Derek Craig, & Paul Stamper. ‘‘Isolated Memorials’? A New Free-Standing Cross from Reymerston, Norfolk, in Context’ in S. Semple & J. Hawkes (eds.) Early Medieval Sculpture in its International Context (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer), pp. 374-400 (Chapter 26).

2025 Christina Smith. ‘New Cross-Components from Lindisfarne, Northumberland’ in S. Semple & J. Hawkes (eds.) Early Medieval Sculpture in its International Context (Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer), pp. 272-282 (Chapter 19).

2023 Nat Jackson, David Petts, et. al., with contribution from Christina Smith, ‘8.6.3-8.6.6: Namestones’ in Lindisfarne: The Holy Island Archaeology Project, pp. 38-39.

2023 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘Crossing Britain: The British ‘High’ Cross in Context and Development, AD 600-1100’ (Unpublished Doctoral Thesis, Department of Archaeology, Durham University).

2019 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘Sculpture in south-east Scotland, AD 400-1100’ in H. Christie & M. Kasten (eds.) Current Approaches to People, Places and Things in the Early Medieval Period (Oxford: BAR International Series 2951), pp. 65-75.

2018 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘Crossing the Tweed and Clyde: The southern Scottish high cross in context, AD 600-1100’ (Unpublished Master’s Thesis, Department of Archaeology, Durham University).

2017 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘Of Border Britons and Bernicians: A study of the distribution of stone sculpture in south-east Scotland, AD 400-1100’ (Unpublished Master’s Thesis, Department of Medieval History, University of Glasgow).

2016 Christina Cowart-Smith. ‘In decore suo: Bede and the Visual Arts at the Northumbrian Joint Monastery of Wearmouth-Jarrow’ (Unpublished Undergraduate Thesis, Department of Classics, Stanford University).