It is proposed that our understanding of medieval town foundation is limited by a failure to appreciate that ‘town’ is a relational category. It is argued that urban character emerges from social relations, with some sets of social relationship revealing urbanity and others not, as places develop along distinctive, but related, trajectories. This argument is developed through the application of assemblage theory to the development of towns in thirteenth-century southern England. The outcome is a proposal that, by focusing on the social relations through which towns are revealed as a distinctive category of place, we can better comprehend why and how towns mattered in medieval society and develop a greater understanding of the relationship o...
A new theoretical approach to medieval rural settlement, built on the concept of intensity, is propo...
Research on Iron Age agglomerations has a long tradition, but only recently have the environs of the...
The complexities of identifying and understanding settlement hierarchy in early medieval England (c....
It is proposed that assemblage theory offers the possibility to explore archaeological evidence in ...
Most of Britain’s larger towns have lost their former medieval character. In many cases, only isolat...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
How were early medieval people connected to each other and to the wider world? In this collection, a...
Variations in the fortunes of six late medieval ports in Sussex are considered using data derived fr...
The question of how the earliest medieval towns emerged is often framed around a false dichotomy of ...
The study of the topography, origins, growth and development of English medieval towns in has been t...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher. © Windgather Press 2007
methodology; modeling; conurbation; urban networks; urban history The economic history of the countr...
This study attempts to shed new light on the development of towns in early England from late-Roman t...
middle ages; urban history An early ascertainment of space syntax is that it establishes the correla...
Towns are complex and diverse institutions with complex and diverse relationships to their hinterlan...
A new theoretical approach to medieval rural settlement, built on the concept of intensity, is propo...
Research on Iron Age agglomerations has a long tradition, but only recently have the environs of the...
The complexities of identifying and understanding settlement hierarchy in early medieval England (c....
It is proposed that assemblage theory offers the possibility to explore archaeological evidence in ...
Most of Britain’s larger towns have lost their former medieval character. In many cases, only isolat...
This thesis will argue that the most effective way of understanding the physical development of medi...
How were early medieval people connected to each other and to the wider world? In this collection, a...
Variations in the fortunes of six late medieval ports in Sussex are considered using data derived fr...
The question of how the earliest medieval towns emerged is often framed around a false dichotomy of ...
The study of the topography, origins, growth and development of English medieval towns in has been t...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher. © Windgather Press 2007
methodology; modeling; conurbation; urban networks; urban history The economic history of the countr...
This study attempts to shed new light on the development of towns in early England from late-Roman t...
middle ages; urban history An early ascertainment of space syntax is that it establishes the correla...
Towns are complex and diverse institutions with complex and diverse relationships to their hinterlan...
A new theoretical approach to medieval rural settlement, built on the concept of intensity, is propo...
Research on Iron Age agglomerations has a long tradition, but only recently have the environs of the...
The complexities of identifying and understanding settlement hierarchy in early medieval England (c....