Roman Infrastructure in Early Medieval Britain
The Adaptations of the Past in Text and Stone
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- FAKTA
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Utgitt:
2021
Forlag: Amsterdam University Press
Innbinding: Innbundet
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9789463727532
Format: 23 x 16 cm
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«Focusing on Britain from the end of the fourth century to the middle of the eighth century, Mateusz Fafinski considers how the Roman past was reactivated. [...] A book-length study of this phenomenon is a useful addition to the existing literature. [...] From the perspective of northern history, the discussion and interpretation of the evidence for a number of sites will be of interest."
- Thomas Pickles, Northern History (2021)»
List of Maps
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Chapter I: Frameworks: From Historiography to the Principal Terms
1. Infrastructure
2. Governance Resource
3. Continuity
4. Re-Use
5. City
Chapter II: Movements: The Charters and Roman Transport Infrastructure
1. Writing Roads Down: Roman Roads in Documentary Practice
2. The Eastern Charters
2.1 Source Introduction
2.2 Roads and Bridges in Boundary Clauses
2.3 State of Maintenance
2.4 Obligations and Burdens
3. The Western Charters
3.1 Source Introduction
3.2 Roads in Western Charters
3.3 Alienation
4. Conclusions
Chapter III: Adaptations: Roman Urban Spaces in Post-Roman and Early Medieval Britain
1. A Very Long Goodbye: Recognising Roman Urbanism in Britain
2. Urban Spaces in the Sub-Roman Period (c. 382-c. 442)
2.1 Transformations of Roman Towns in Britain
2.2 409/410 - the Year(s) Nothing Happened?
2.3 Candidates for Limited Urban Survival
2.4 Coins and Urban Spaces
2.5 Problematising the Shift
3. Urban Spaces in the Pre-Conversion Period (c. 442-597)
3.1 Tax-Gathering and Re-Use of Roman Towns
3.2 Limited Town Functions the Idea of Multifocal Governance
4. Urban Spaces in the Conversion Period and the Times of Bede (597-735)
4.1 The Strategies of Activation
4.2 Sources of Authority
4.3 Between "Continuity of Place" and "Urban Continuity"
4.4 Perceiving Roman Urban Spaces
5. Conclusions
Chapter IV: Spaces: The Church and What Rome Left
1. Tinkering with the Past: Church and the Inheritance of Rome
2. Lawand Space
2.1 Regulating the Role of the Church
2.2 Acquiring and Granting Space
3. Symbolical Geographies
3.1 The "Christian Foundation Legend" and Roman Remains
3.2 Recreating Rome
3.3 Reoccupying Urban Spaces as Ecclesiastical Capitals
4. Memory and Infrastructure
4.1 Whithorn and Remembering Rome
4.2 Wilfrid and the Importing of Memory
5. Conclusions
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index