<p>The research presented in this book advances scholarship on Anglo-Saxon non-elite rural settlements through the analysis of material culture. Forty-four non-elite sites and the high-status site of Staunch Meadow, occupied throughout the Anglo-Saxon period (c. 5th-11th centuries) and geographicall
Rural settlements and society in Anglo-Saxon England
β Scribed by Helena Hamerow
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 207
- Series
- Medieval history and archaeology
- Edition
- 1. edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In the course of the fifth century, the farms and villas of lowland Britain were replaced by a new, distinctive form of rural settlement: the settlements of the Anglo-Saxons. This volume presents the first major synthesis of the evidence - which has expanded enormously in recent years - for such settlements from across England and throughout the Anglo-Saxon period, and what it reveals about the communities who built and lived in them, and whose daily lives went almost wholly unrecorded. Helena Hamerow examines the appearance, function, and 'life-cycles' of their buildings; the relationship of Anglo-Saxon settlements to the Romano-British landscape and to later medieval villages; the role of ritual in daily life; and the relationship between farming regimes and settlement forms. A central theme throughout the book is the impact on rural producers of the rise of lordship and markets, and how this impact is reflected in the remains of their settlements. Hamerow provides an introduction to the wealth of information yielded by settlement archaeology, and to the enormous contribution that it makes to our understanding of Anglo-Saxon society.
β¦ Table of Contents
Content: List of figures
Preface and Acknowledgements
1. The Study of Anglo-Saxon Rural Settlements
2. Anglo-Saxon Buildings: Form, Function, and Social Space
3. Settlement Forms and Community Structures
4. Ritual and Domestic Life
5. Farming Systems and Settlement Forms
6. Production, Exchange, and the Shape of Rural Communities
References
Index
β¦ Subjects
Land use, Rural -- England -- History -- To 1500.;Civilization, Anglo-Saxon.;Social archaeology -- England.;Land use, Rural.;Social archaeology.;England.;Angelsachsen.;LaΜndlicher Raum.;Siedlung.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This wide-ranging analysis of later Anglo-Saxon culture and society will be indispensable to students of history, literature and archaeology. The death-bed and funerary practices of this period have been comparatively and unjustly neglected by historical scholarship; Victoria Thompson examines them
<span>A study of the implications and practices of wills and will-making in Anglo-Saxon society, and of the varieties of inheritance strategies and commemorative arrangements adopted.<br><br>A remarkable series of Anglo-Saxon wills have survived, spanning the period from the beginning of the ninth c
The tenth and eleventh centuries saw a number of very significant developments in the history of the English Church, perhaps the most important being the proliferation of local churches, which were to be the basis of the modern parochial system. Using evidence from homilies, canon law, saints' lives
This first full-length study of the Anglo-Saxon episcopate explores the activities of the bishops in a variety of arenas, from the pastoral and liturgical to the political, social, legal and economic, so tracing the development of a particularly English episcopal identity over the course of the tent
Contents: Introduction / Nicholas Howe and Catherine E. Karkov -- From British to English Christianity : deconstructing Bede's interpretation of the conversion / Nicholas Brooks -- High style and borrowed finery : the strood mount, the long -- Wittenham stoup, and the Boss Hall brooch as complex