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Living off the Land Rhiannon Comeau

Living off the Land By Rhiannon Comeau

Living off the Land by Rhiannon Comeau


$197.99
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Summary

This volume sets Welsh medieval agricultural landscapes in a broader British context and demonstrates how it can illuminate archaeological and historical research.

Living off the Land Summary

Living off the Land: Agriculture in Wales c. 400-1600 AD by Rhiannon Comeau

This is the first book for a generation on medieval agriculture in Wales, presenting evidence which is of considerable relevance to those studying the development of the early medieval landscapes of England and Ireland. This collection of essays confronts the paradox that, though agriculture lay at the heart of medieval society, understanding of what this meant for Wales remains limited. The papers address key questions that include: how did the agricultural systems of Wales operate between c. 400 and 1600 AD? What light do they cast on the material evidence for life in the contemporary landscape? How similar or different was Wales to other areas of Britain and Ireland? Can we identify change over time? How do we go about researching early Welsh agriculture?

These issues are explored through new syntheses and case studies focused on Wales, and contextualising overviews of medieval agricultural systems in Ireland and England written by leading experts. Themes covered include the use of infield-outfield systems, seasonal land use and its impact on territorial and estate structures, and regional variation, all explored using a wide array of complementary multidisciplinary approaches. The introduction, written by the editors Rhiannon Comeau and Andy Seaman, gives context to the historiography, key debates, themes and issues surrounding this topic. The book also includes an afterword written by Professor Andrew Fleming.

Living off the Land Reviews

It is an important book which makes available timely and updated results as well as significant new insights into the practice and development of Welsh agriculture in the medieval period. It will provide a solid foundation for future studies, and is welcomed as a major contribution to the subject. * Archaeologia Cambrensis - Cambrian Archaeological Association *
[...] there is much that is of real substance, and being parochial, much that is relevant to Shropshire's Welsh borderland. * Transactions of the Shropshire Archaeological & Historical Society *
...a platform for more coherent, thematic research by deploying what is an excellent series of studies at various scales - local, regional and national - from 13 contributors. * Medieval Archaeology *
...represents a distinct advance on the work of previous generations of scholars, and it fulfils to a marked degree the editors' hope that it will provoke further studies that challenge and overtake existing understanding. * The Medieval Review *
The papers in this volume will be accessible and engaging even to readers unfamiliar with Wales; the editors must be commended for ensuring a consistent pitch and a reasonable length ... The glossary, which includes technical terms from medieval Welsh, will be helpful to many readers ... and the lengthy bibliography is very useful. [T]his slim volume succeeds in being not only an informative overview of recent work but also an inspiration for future study. Anyone looking for a research topic on medieval rural landscapes would be well advised to explore the chapters of this book and take up the editors' challenge: Over to you, readers. * Speculum - A Journal of Medieval Studies *

About Rhiannon Comeau

Rhiannon Comeau is completing doctoral research into the early medieval Welsh landscape at UCL Institute of Archaeology. Her earlier research has been published in Medieval Archaeology, Landscape History and Archaeologia Cambrensis. She has a particular interest in interdisciplinary approaches to the estates, focal places and agricultural systems of the early medieval period. She is a committee member of the Medieval Settlement Research Group and a Trustee for the Cambrian Archaeological Association. Andy Seaman is senior lecturer in early medieval archaeology at Canterbury Christ Church University. His research focuses on Wales and western Britain, and he has particular interests in settlements and the agrarian landscape, networks of power, and the early Church. He has published widely in these areas, including major articles on Dinas Powys hillfort and the 'multiple estate model'. He is engaged in a number of projects focused on South Wales, including the Arts and Humanities Research Council funded project Manifestations of Empire: Palaeoenvironmental Analysis and the End of Roman Britain.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of figures Contributors 1. Introduction - Rhiannon Comeau and Andy Seaman The wider picture 2. The Fields of Britannia: continuity and change within the early medieval landscape - Stephen Rippon 3. Resource management of seasonal pasture: some English/Welsh comparisons - Della Hooke 4. Changing perspectives on early medieval farming in Ireland - Meriel McClatchie, Finbar McCormick, Thomas R. Kerr and Aidan O'Sullivan Wales 5. Living off the land in medieval Welsh law - Sara Elin Roberts 6. Medieval field systems in north Wales - Bob Silvester 7. Y Filltir Sgwar: mapping the history of local land in a Welsh heartland - David Austin 8. The practice of 'in rodwallis': medieval Welsh agriculture in north Pembrokeshire - Rhiannon Comeau 9. Landscape, settlement and agriculture in early medieval Brycheiniog: the evidence from the Llandaff Charters - Andy Seaman 10. Culture, climate, coulter and conflict: pollen studies from early medieval Wales - Tudur Davies Moving forward 11. Welsh landscape history: notes from the edge - Andrew Fleming Glossary A general bibliography of key work on Wales Index

Additional information

GOR010136858
9781911188391
1911188399
Living off the Land: Agriculture in Wales c. 400-1600 AD by Rhiannon Comeau
Used - Like New
Paperback
Windgather Press
2019-07-25
264
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

Customer Reviews - Living off the Land