In much of Europe, the advent of low-input cereal farming regimes between c.ad 800 and 1200 enabled landowners—lords—to amass wealth by greatly expanding the amount of land under cultivation and exploiting the labour of others. Scientific analysis of plant remains and animal bones from archaeological contexts is generating the first direct evidence for the development of such low-input regimes. This article outlines the methods used by the FeedSax project to resolve key questions regarding the ‘cerealization’ of the medieval countryside and presents preliminary results using the town of Stafford as a worked example. These indicate an increase in the scale of cultivation in the Mid-Saxon period, while the Late Saxon period saw a shift to a l...
This thesis provides an interpretation of Iron Age and Roman arable practice in the East of England,...
This thesis investigates the influence of socio-economic conditions on crop cultivation and consumpt...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
In much of Europe, the advent of low-input cereal farming regimes between c.ad 800 and 1200 enabled ...
In much of Europe, the advent of low-input cereal farming regimes between c.ad 800 and 1200 enabled ...
The early Middle Ages saw a major expansion of cereal cultivation across large parts of Europe thank...
The early Middle Ages saw a major expansion of cereal cultivation across large parts of Europe thank...
This collection comprises the digital archive for Feeding Anglo-Saxon England (FeedSax): The Bioarch...
This collection comprises the digital archive for Feeding Anglo-Saxon England (FeedSax): The Bioarch...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
Across Europe, the early medieval period saw the advent of new ways of cereal farming which fed the ...
Across Europe, the early medieval period saw the advent of new ways of cereal farming which fed the ...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
It has been the aim of the present study to analyse and interpret recently collected archaeobotanic...
This thesis provides an interpretation of Iron Age and Roman arable practice in the East of England,...
This thesis investigates the influence of socio-economic conditions on crop cultivation and consumpt...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
In much of Europe, the advent of low-input cereal farming regimes between c.ad 800 and 1200 enabled ...
In much of Europe, the advent of low-input cereal farming regimes between c.ad 800 and 1200 enabled ...
The early Middle Ages saw a major expansion of cereal cultivation across large parts of Europe thank...
The early Middle Ages saw a major expansion of cereal cultivation across large parts of Europe thank...
This collection comprises the digital archive for Feeding Anglo-Saxon England (FeedSax): The Bioarch...
This collection comprises the digital archive for Feeding Anglo-Saxon England (FeedSax): The Bioarch...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
Across Europe, the early medieval period saw the advent of new ways of cereal farming which fed the ...
Across Europe, the early medieval period saw the advent of new ways of cereal farming which fed the ...
There is a growing recognition within Anglo-Saxon archaeology that farming practices underwent mome...
It has been the aim of the present study to analyse and interpret recently collected archaeobotanic...
This thesis provides an interpretation of Iron Age and Roman arable practice in the East of England,...
This thesis investigates the influence of socio-economic conditions on crop cultivation and consumpt...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...