Although the principles were not clearly articulated, the application of basic typological techniques can occasionally be found in the work of
early modern antiquaries. As early as the 1530s,
John Leland successfully identified
Roman bricks (under the misleading designation "Briton brykes") at several different sites, distinguishing them from more modern bricks by size and shape. Antiquaries began to recognise in the late 16th century that medieval
monumental effigies represented with their legs crossed were likely to be older than those with straight legs. In the late 17th century,
John Aubrey worked out crude evolutionary sequences based on typological distinctions for medieval architecture, handwriting, shield-shapes and costume, describing his technique as "comparative antiquitie". The outline of the development of medieval
Gothic architecture was further refined in the 18th century, notably by
James Bentham in his 1771
History and Antiquities of Ely Cathedral, and culminated in the clear sequence of styles published by
Thomas Rickman in 1817.
Richard Gough, in his
Sepulchral Monuments in Great Britain (1786–99), used comparative and typological methodology to analyse the development of
English church monuments. In the 19th and early 20th centuries archaeological typologies continued to be constructed using a combination of empirical observation and intuition. According to Eggers, most archaeologists give
Oscar Montelius the credit for the first serious application of the typological method, but in Eggers' view, his contemporary colleague from Stockholm, Hans Hildebrand made important contributions to the development of the methodology as well. Hildebrand published a fundamental paper on the development of
fibulae in the 1870s using the typological method, whereas Montelius at the same time went to international congresses and published smaller papers on this method. Augustus Pitt-Rivers also made significant contributions to the development of typology. In his lecture to the Society of Arts in 1891 Pitt-Rivers says, "When, as in the case of most prehistoric objects.., the date cannot be given, then recourse must be had to the sequence of type, and that is what I term 'Typology.' It is not an accepted term, and I am not aware that it has been applied before to the study of sequence of the types of the arts. But it appears to me that a name is wanted for this branch of investigation, which the term 'Typology' supplies." Another early example is the typology published in 1899 by
Flinders Petrie for the objects (mainly pottery) found in 900 prehistoric Egyptian graves. This typology formed the basis for his manual
seriation of the graves. Later on
William Albright became the leader of dating based on the typology of
Levantine pottery for excavations in the Middle East. ==Quantitative methodologies==