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. This volume sets out to provide explanations of the process behind that great formative movement in the fabric of our culture. Using a combination of archaeological and documentary evidence, the authors show that there is no single, easy reason for the development of villages and hamlets, but that they grew out of a complex combination of social, agricultural and political influences. The text explores the origins and develo...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher.© Maney Publishin
The aim of the thesis was to take a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside and to discover...
An inter-disciplinary approach has been adopted for the study of historical process in the landscape...
This book explores the experiences of rural communities who lived between the seventh and ninth cent...
Researchers seeking to establish the origins of medieval villages have typically been divided into t...
Many attempts have been made to classify the complex patterns of historic settlement and landscape i...
Our current understanding of the medieval local environment is largely based on scholarly writings f...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
Pollen evidence has, to date, made little contribution to our understanding of the origins and devel...
This compelling new study forms part of a new wave of scholarship on the medieval rural environment ...
How were the field boundaries created and cultivated by the farmers of prehistoric and Roman Britain...
© 2006 Society for Medieval Archaeology. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher. Journal ho...
The amount of accumulated research on English medieval villages has created the current state of Eng...
The High Weald in south-east England forms a pays with a distinctive landscape and settlement histor...
In recent years, work on the medieval English peasant has tended to stress the degree of interaction...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher.© Maney Publishin
The aim of the thesis was to take a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside and to discover...
An inter-disciplinary approach has been adopted for the study of historical process in the landscape...
This book explores the experiences of rural communities who lived between the seventh and ninth cent...
Researchers seeking to establish the origins of medieval villages have typically been divided into t...
Many attempts have been made to classify the complex patterns of historic settlement and landscape i...
Our current understanding of the medieval local environment is largely based on scholarly writings f...
The last two decades have witnessed a marked rise in middle Anglo-Saxon settlement research, as arch...
Pollen evidence has, to date, made little contribution to our understanding of the origins and devel...
This compelling new study forms part of a new wave of scholarship on the medieval rural environment ...
How were the field boundaries created and cultivated by the farmers of prehistoric and Roman Britain...
© 2006 Society for Medieval Archaeology. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher. Journal ho...
The amount of accumulated research on English medieval villages has created the current state of Eng...
The High Weald in south-east England forms a pays with a distinctive landscape and settlement histor...
In recent years, work on the medieval English peasant has tended to stress the degree of interaction...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher.© Maney Publishin
The aim of the thesis was to take a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside and to discover...
An inter-disciplinary approach has been adopted for the study of historical process in the landscape...