With contributions by Nigel Cameron, Paul Davies, Simon Dobinson, Rowena Gale, Alejandra Gutiérrez, Sheila Hamilton-Dyer, Jen Heathcote, Colin Humphreys, Julie Jones, Amanda Kear, Annette Kreiser, Alan Outram, Richard Parker, the late David Richards, Jane Timby, Heather Tinsley, and Ciorstaidh Trevarthen.
From 1993, the North Somerset Levels Project sought to investigate the origins and development of this area of reclaimed coastal marshland during the first and second millennia AD. The inter-disciplinary approach taken has added archaeological (survey and excavation) data, palaeoenvironmental evidence, studies of documentary sources, architecture, cartography and field- and place-names, to what was already known about the historic landscape. This report, which publishes the findings of the project, examines local and regional changes and variations in the landscape, focusing on two major phases of exploitation, modification and transformation during the Roman and medieval periods. Factors such as agriculture, grazing, salt production, fishing, draining, flood defence, and the establishment of settlements, roads, commons, field systems, as well as cultural factors, are all discussed, as evidence from the local area is placed within a wider regional context. An excellent study which exemplifies all that is new and exciting in landscape study.
Author(s): Stephen Rippon
Series: Council for British Archaeology. CBA Research Reports, 152
Publisher: Council for British Archaeology
Year: 2006
Language: English
Pages: 398
City: York
List of abbreviations viii
List of illustrations ix
List of tables xi
Acknowledgements xiii
List of contributors xiv
Summary xv
Glossary xix
Part 1: Understanding the history of a landscape
1. Introduction: a marshland community and its landscape 3
2. Researching the origins and development of an historic landscape 17
Part 2: Late prehistoric and Romano-British landscape
3. The wetland wilderness: the late prehistoric and Romano-British environment 33
4. Landscape modification and transformation in the late Iron Age and Roman period 42
5. The Romano-British landscape reconstructed and in context 64
Part 3: The making of the historic landscape
6. Created on a cleaned slate: a characterisation of the historic landscape 85
7. Of kings, bishops and knights: the social and tenurial context of landscape change 126
8. Peasants and yeomen: the tenements and houses of a marshland community 149
9. The evolution of a marshland settlement: Puxton — ‘summer dike’, village and hamlet 190
10. The medieval and post-medieval environment and economy of Puxton: palaeoenvironmental reports 229
Part 4: Discussion and conclusions
11. Changing environment and economy in the 1st and 2nd millennia AD 251
12. Changing patterns of wetland utilisation in context 267
References 280
Bibliography 285
Index 302
CD: Tables and figures (58 pp.)