Settlement Change Across Medieval Europe

Settlement Change Across Medieval Europe
Author: Niall Brady,Claudia Theune
Publsiher: Ruralia
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2019-09-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 9088908060

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Innovations, transmissions and transformations had profound spatial, economic and social impacts on the environments, landscapes and habitats evident at micro- and macro-levels. This volume explores how these changes affected how land was worked, how it was organized, and the nature of buildings and rural complexes.

Fortified Settlements in Early Medieval Europe

Fortified Settlements in Early Medieval Europe
Author: Neil Christie,Hajnalka Herold
Publsiher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2016-08-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781785702389

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Twenty-three contributions by leading archaeologists from across Europe explore the varied forms, functions and significances of fortified settlements in the 8th to 10th centuries AD. These could be sites of strongly martial nature, upland retreats, monastic enclosures, rural seats, island bases, or urban nuclei. But they were all expressions of control - of states, frontiers, lands, materials, communities - and ones defined by walls, ramparts or enclosing banks. Papers run from Irish cashels to Welsh and Pictish strongholds, Saxon burhs, Viking fortresses, Byzantine castra, Carolingian creations, Venetian barricades, Slavic strongholds, and Bulgarian central places, and coverage extends fully from north-west Europe, to central Europe, the northern Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Strongly informed by recent fieldwork and excavations, but drawing also where available on the documentary record, this important collection provides fully up-to-date reviews and analyses of the archaeologies of the distinctive settlement forms that characterized Europe in the Early Middle Ages.

Early Medieval Settlements

Early Medieval Settlements
Author: Helena Hamerow
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2004
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780199273188

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This is an overview and synthesis of the extensive and rapidly growing body of archaeological evidence for early medieval buildings, settlements, farming, craft production, and trade among the rural communities of north-west Europe.

Landscapes of Change

Landscapes of Change
Author: Neil Christie
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2017-03-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781351923477

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Only in recent years has archaeology begun to examine in a coherent manner the transformation of the landscape from classical through to medieval times. In Landscapes of Change, leading scholars in the archaeology of the late antique and early medieval periods address the key results and directions of Roman rural fieldwork. In so doing, they highlight problems of analysis and interpretation whilst also identifying the variety of transformations that rural Europe experienced during and following the decline of Roman hegemony. Whilst documents and standing buildings predominate in the urban context to provide a coherent and tangible guide to the evolving urban form and its society since Roman times, the countryside in many ages remains rather shadowy - a context for the cultivation, gathering and movement of food and other resources, inhabited by farmers, villagers and miners. Whilst the Roman period is adequately served through occasional extant remains and through the survey and excavation of villas and farmsteads, as well as the writings of agronomists, the medieval one is generally well marked by the presence of still extant villages across Europe, often dependent on castles and manors which symbolise the so-called 'feudal' centuries. But the intervening period, the fourth to tenth centuries, is that with the least documentation and with the fewest survivals. What happened to the settlement units that made up the Roman rural world? When and why do new settlement forms emerge? Landscapes of Change is essential reading for anyone wanting an up-to-date summary of the results of archaeological and historical investigations into the changing countryside of the late Roman, late antique and early medieval world, between the fourth and tenth centuries AD. It questions numerous aspects of change and continuity, assessing the levels of impact of military and economic decay, the spread and influence of Christianity, and the role of Germanic, Slav and Arab settlements in disrupting and redefining the ancient rural landscapes.

Village Hamlet and Field

Village  Hamlet and Field
Author: Carenza Lewis,Patrick Mitchell-Fox,Christopher Dyer
Publsiher: Windgather Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 1997
Genre: History
ISBN: STANFORD:36105019811376

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Why is the countryside in some parts of England and Continental Europe dominated by large villages, while in many regions looser groupings of houses in hamlets, or isolated farms, provide the main forms of settlement? The answer lies in the period c.850-1200, when the settlement pattern which still survives was created.

Medieval Settlement

Medieval Settlement
Author: P. H. Sawyer
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis Group
Total Pages: 357
Release: 1976
Genre: Colonisation intérieure - Europe - Cas, Études de
ISBN: 0844810924

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Seasonal Settlement in the Medieval and Early Modern Countryside

Seasonal Settlement in the Medieval and Early Modern Countryside
Author: Piers Dixon,Claudia Theune
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2021-11-13
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9464270101

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In this book, the various structures and economic activities of medieval and post-medieval seasonal settlements all over Europe are presented.

Scale and Scale Change in the Early Middle Ages

Scale and Scale Change in the Early Middle Ages
Author: Julio Escalona,Andrew J. Reynolds
Publsiher: Brepols Publishers
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011
Genre: Archaeology, Medieval
ISBN: 250353239X

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Kings, aristocrats, peasants, and the Church are among the shared features of most early medieval societies. However, these also varied dramatically in time and space. Can petty regional kings, for instance, be compared to those in charge of a whole empire? Scale is a crucial factor in modelling, explaining, and conceptualizing the past. Furthermore, many issues that historians and archaeologists treat independently can be theorized together as processes of scale decrease or increase: the appearance of complex societies, the rise and collapse of empires, changing world-systems, and globalization. While a subject of much discussion in fields such as ecology, geography, and sociology, scale is rarely theorized by archaeologists and historians. This book highlights the potential of the concepts of scale and scale change for comparing and explaining medieval socio-spatial processes. It integrates regional and temporal variations in the fragmentation of the Roman world and the emergence of medieval polities, which are often handled separately by late antique and early medieval specialists. The result of a three-year research project, the nine case studies in this volume offer fresh insights into early medieval rural society while combining their individual subjects to generate a wider explanatory framework.