Rural Settlentents • ID Medieval Europe Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference Volume 6 edited by Guy De Boe & Frans Verhaeghe LA.P. Rapporten 6 Zellik 1997 I.A.P. Rapporten uitgegeven door I edited by Prof Dr. Guy De Boe Ru al Settlements .. Ill Medieval Europe Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference Volume 6 edited by Guy De Boe & Frans Verhaeghe I.A.P. Rapporten 6 Zellik 1997 Een uitgave van het Published by the Instituut voor het Archeologisch Patrimonium Institute for the Archaeological Heritage Wetenschappelijke instelling van de Scientific Institution of the Vlaamse Gemeenschap Flemish Community Departement Leefmilieu en Infrastructuur Department of the Environment and Infrastructure Administratie Ruimtelijke Ordening, Huisvesting Administration of Town Planning, Housing en Monumenten en Landschappen and Monuments and Landscapes Doomveld Industrie Asse 3 nr. 11, Bus 30 B -1731 Zellik - Asse Tel: (02) 463.13.33 (+ 32 2 463 13 33) Fax: (02) 463.19.51 (+ 32 2 463 19 51) DTP: Arpuco. Seer.: M. Lauwaert & S. Van de Voorde. ISSN 13 72-0007 ISBN 90-75230-07-9 D/1997 /6024/6 06 RURAL SETTLEMENTS - DE LANDELIJKE WERELD - LE MONDE RURAL - LANDLICHE SIEDLUNGEN was organized by Elisabeth Zadora-Rio werd georganiseerd door Marnix Pieters fut organisee par wurde veranstaltet von PREFACE It can reasonably argued that fieldwork and re- units. The archaeological study of individual buildings search concerning the rural world is one of the oldest and hamlets or villages continues to form the back- branches of modem medieval and -be it to a some- bone of the work and case-studies continue to abound. what more limited extent -later archaeology. In view But since the 50s and 60s the field has also changed of the importance ofthe rural component in medieval in other ways. Over the past three decades, the atten- and later society, this is hardly surprising. It can also tion paid to issues related to the different kinds and be argued that the emergence and development of this levels of spatial organisation has grown continuously particular field of archaeological research is strongly and is arguably the main or at least the most seminal indebted to questions raised by historians and related development to be noted. Specifically over the past 15 to a particular problem, to wit the- mainly late medie- years, intra-site approaches have increasingly been val- desertion of villages. The names of scholars such complemented with inter-site, local, micro-regional and as Maurice Beresford, John G. Hurst, Walter Janssen, regional ones; simultaneously, more and more atten- Stanislaw Tabaczynski, Jean-Marie Pesez, Gabrielle tion now also goes to site hierarchies and spatial organ- Demians d' Archimbaud and many others speak for isation on a much larger scale as well as to the spatial themselves, as do those of sites such as Wharram organisation of the rural landscape in terms of estates, Percy in Yorkshire. The early archaeological interest holdings, plots, and what can reasonably be termed in medieval deserted villages also led to specific re- catchment areas. In addition, the growing impact of search groups, amongst which the British D. M. VR. G. the natural sciences and more particularly of the envi- or Deserted Medieval Village Research Group imme- ronmental studies is also making itself felt - though diately comes to mind. still far less obviously than in the case of other catego- The D.M. VR. G. was of course mainly concerned ries of settlements. At the same time medieval and with the British Isles but its evolution over Medieval later rural archaeology seem to have moved away from Village Research Group to - after joining with the the older deterministic approaches and interpretations. Moated Sites Research Group, which focused on yet Rather, the development of the many forms of rural another type of mainly if not exclusively rural settle- settlement and the ways in which they were influenced ment- Medieval Settlement Research Group does pro- by and changed the local and regional environmental, vide a nice illustration ofhow the field developed, both social and economic setting is more and more looked in the United Kingdom and on the European Conti- in terms ofhuman behaviour and interactions. nent. Indeed, since the 50s and 60s, the archaeological Again- and as with the other themes discussed at study ofthe medieval and later rural world has moved the Brugge conference- the subject of rural settlement on and this in more ways than one. The work no longer cannot and should not be divorced from the many focuses almost exclusively on deserted medieval vil- other concerns of medieval and later archaeology. The lages and the field has expanded in many directions to sheer complexity of the subject entails inevitable links encompass all kinds of new issues. These include not with many other topics presented and discussed within only the many different forms of rural settlement - the context of the other sections of the MEDlEY AL isolated, nucleated or agglomerated- their variations, EUROPE BRUGGE 1997 conference, among them mate- their origins and their development through time but rial culture (section 07), trade and exchange (section also their setting, the landscapes in which the settle- 03), environment and subsistence (section 09). But the ments developed and how they changed those land- rural world also includes and interacts with specific scapes, and the intricate relations between rural settle- types of sites and settlements such as towns (section ment and other material components of medieval and 01), castles and defense-works (section 11) and reli- later society such as towns, castles, monasteries or gious buildings (section 04) and cemeteries (section other kinds of ecclesiastical, military and/or residential 02). In addition, art and architecture, including the meanings and the perception thereof are not absent - The second subsection groups twelve studies con- from the rural world (section 05), while the environ- cerning specific sites and has been sub-titled Case stu- ment and the subsistence problems (section 09) equal- dies. They reflect the continuing importance of this ly constitute major concerns. Some aspects of tran- type of work which offers ever more building blocks sportation and travel technology and organization for new questions and approaches, including regional (section 08) should not be forgotten either, and, finally, and even supra-regional ones. While focusing of spe- spatial analysis- the importance of which has already cific sites, these studies often also address broader is- been emphasized earlier- raises many theoretical and sues relevant to the individual site in question and methodological problems relevant to the study of the should therefore not be considered simple site-reports. rural world and some of these have been discussed - With four contributions, the subsection Territorial within the context of section 10 (Method and Theory organisation and central places looks at relations bet- in Historical Archaeology) of the Brugge conference. ween different sites and types of sites as well as at rela- All this sufficiently illustrates the need for bringing to- tions between different components of a territorial gether the information related to the many aspects of unit. the medieval and later worlds and societies, which was - Three papers, all of them concerned with the Ibe- one of the basic philosophies of the York and Brugge rian peninsula and with the specific subjects of silos, MEDIEVAL EUROPE conferences. storage and water management as well as with their For sheer practical reasons, however, a number of potential for understanding the often regional organi- contributions presented on the occasion of the interna- zation and development of rural settlement, have been tional conference on medieval and later archaeology brought together in a special subsection Settlement and MEDIEVAL EUROPE BRUGGE 1997 which took place in rural infrastructure which follows the previous sub- Brugge, Belgium, on 1 through 4 October 1997, have section because the notion of 'organization' is very been grouped in section 06 under the general heading much present in the comments. Rural settlements -Le monde rural- Landliche Sied- - Finally, five contributions brought together in the lungen- De landelijke were/d. The section was organ- subsection Settlements and landscapes return to the ized by Elizabeth Zadora-Rio (C.N.R.S., France) and theme of the broader context and setting of rural settle- Marnix Pieters (Institute for the Archaeological Herit- ments, in terms of either chronological development or age, Flanders, Belgium). in terms oflandscape development and organization. The present volume offers a collection of pre-print- ed papers, a number of which were presented orally Of necessity, the papers are rather short and the and debated during the sessions of section 06. Unfor- volume of course does not do total justice to the many tunately, a number of contributors to this section did excavations and the wealth of other types of research not submit a text in time for inclusion in the present work concerning rural settlement, the rural landscape volume while other colleagues could not attend and or some specific types of rural sites. Thus, for instance, present their contribution. In a few cases, texts were mills and what has been termed 'moated sites' are graciously made available for inclusion in the present largely if not totally absent from the picture. Nor does volume but due to the large offer of papers could not the volume provide a complete overview of the results be presented orally. All this explains why the general attained and knowledge acquired. Nevertheless, the 33 structure and the contents of the present volume do not papers included in the present volume emphasize the conform in all details to the programme of the confer- continuing importance and vitality of the study of the ence. Nevertheless, the volume has been organized medieval and later rural world while at the same time keeping in mind both the complexity of the subject and providing a good idea of the potential and of the the general lines of the structure of section 06 of the present state of the work in this particular field of re- conference as originally proposed by the organizers. search. They also demonstrate both the complexity of The texts available for the present volume have there- the subject and the recent developments in terms of fore been grouped in five sections, which at the same spatial approaches. This is even more true when the time largely reflect the current concerns and state of volume is considered within the context of the other research in the archaeological study of the medieval volumes in the present series of volumes linked to the and later rural world: Medieval Europe conference and when the reader - A first subsection, sub-titled Regional settlement takes into account that the rural world is also very studies, groups eight contribution which present regi- much present - directly or indirectly - in these other onal surveys and/or an assessment of the current state volumes. of the work and future issues related to the rural settle- ment of larger areas. Frans Verhaeghe & Guy De Boe 6 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Bruggc 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Matej Ruttkay Early Medieval Settlement Structure in Slovakia The tradition of archaeological research on medie- The rest of the finds represents isolated finds or val Slovakia is more than 50 years old. During this objects from different collections which cannot be period, scores of studies have been published and localized in a more exact way. excavations carried out, which resulted in a vast source As far as dating is concerned, the localities can be base. divided into three groups: The macro-region under discussion is oflowland 1) relatiyely reliably dated (larger collections ob- character with elevations ranging from 94 to 300 m tained mostly by systematic research) - 31 %, a.s.l. Approximately one sixth of the region is situat- 2) less reliably dated (e.g. larger collections of ed at an elevation of over 300 m a.s.l. sherds from investigations, etc.)- 63 %, The existence of man in this region in the past was 3) approximate dating (isolated, less pronounced determined by several factors. The density of settle- finds)- 6%. ment was to a significant degree determined by the The majority of finds (84 %) are reliably local- quality of local sources of energies, water sources ized, 11 %are approximately localized and the local- being among the most important ones. Other import- ization of 5 % of the finds is impossible. ant factors are the quality of soil, thermal energy, The settlements from the 6th to 12th centuries in slope tilt, etc. Undoubtedly, a very important role was southwestern Slovakia include a broad typological played by social and economic relations in the indiv- range of objects Taken together, 2978 objects have idual societies and the global geopolitical situation. been documented. Unfortunately, only limited or no Moreover, the development of the settlement process information is available for a large number of them. was determined by the occurrence of mineral resour- The basic classification is purely typological with ces (iron ore, stone, ores of non-ferrous metals, etc.). respect to the appearance of objects and not to their At the present time we have at our disposal infor- functions. The database which has been worked out mation from more than 2100 sites from within the gives different numbers of individual objects: macro-region. More than 1800 of them have been I. buildings- houses (647 objects), documented archaeologically (66% of these are settle- n. isolated heating devices (376 objects), ments, 26% burial places, 5.6% sacral buildings and III.A storage pits (559 objects), 2.4 % are not documented in a detailed way). The III.B cooking pits (127 objects), cartographic evaluation of the sites discovered in III.C other pits (282 objects), individual decades reveals a certain lack of balance of research in certain regions. The rise in the number of archaeological sites from 1950 to 1995 is illus- 1600 trated in Fig. 1. While about 320 sites were known in 1400 1950, by the year 1996 this number increased to 1995 1200 sites. 1000 As far as the way of acquisition of information is 800 1-~------- concerned, the absolute majority of sites were identi- 600 fied through surface surveys (998, i.e. 45 %) and in 400 the surveys carried out during construction activities 200 (376, i.e. 17 %). Together, these two ways represent 0 62 %. The second largest group consists of localities 0 LO 0 (!) 0 t'- 0 CO 0 0> LO 0> 0> Ol Ol 0> 0> 0> where minor conservation actions were carried out .....- (601, i.e. 28 %). In 105 (5 %) sites major conserva- Fig. 1. - Western Slovakia. Gradual growth of known tion actions or systematic investigations took place. archaeological sites from 1950 to 1995. 7 M. Ruttkay :'·,· I ·' !- .:~ [ Y:./ nad 300m 0 25km L _ _ _ _ _....c Dunaj Fig. 2.- Settlement of western Slovakia in 6th century (1. Slavs). IV. troughs (50 objects), oven. Open fireplaces were used somewhat less fre- V. wells (15 objects), quently, while clay ovens occurred the least. From VI. manufacturing objects (101 objects), the chronological point of view, the representation of VII. other objects, not specified (334 objects) the fireplace is the most stable one. Stone ovens occur For almost 500 other objects (sites), no informa- most commonly in Horizon I and II (6th-10th cen- tion is available and these were not included in the turies), while in the next period their occurrence reported work at all. During the whole studied period drops significantly. Clay ovens reveal a reverse devel- a relatively high proportion of finds belong to houses. opment and their occurrence rises especially from the From the 6th to the 12th century, the proportion of 11th century onwards. storage pits and isolated clay ovens gradually rises, The utilization of a specific type of oven depended while the number of cooking pits decreases. The first and foremost on its function and local sources of representation of the remaining types of objects shows building materials were of minor importance. The no significant fluctuations. analysis proved that the theory of ethnic determination The principal type of house in the 6th-12th cen- of clay oven occurrence is unjustified (these ovens turies is represented by slightly sunken or above- were found even in contexts with the Prague Type ground objects of a quadrangle ground plan (surface: ceramics). An exception may be the clay ovens of the 6-20m2 ; most frequent depth: 30-60 cm). When com- 11th-13th centuries, which markedly 'penetrated' the pared to surrounding regions of Central Europe, the region of the middle course of the river V ah and the presence of a considerable variety of these houses is lower part of the Dudvah basin, i.e. the regions where a specific feature of southwestern Slovakia. it is a they had not been found before. This fact may be feature which is very pronounced, particularly in the possibly connected with the migration of populations 6th-1Oth centuries. from the middle course of the river Nitra and the lower During the period under discussion, the heating course of the river Hron to this territory (the retreat of device used most frequently in the house was the stone inhabitants before the expansion of Old Magyars?). 8 Early Medieval Settlement Structure in Slovakia ! · >;:::j nad 300m 0 25km \___ ___ Fig. 3.- Settlement of western Slovakia in the middle of 7th century (1. Slavs, 2. Avars). The cartographic demarcation of the sites dating (Zabojnik 1988) and Komarno (Trugly 1993). Bet- from the 6th century does not give a picture of the ween these groups an uninhabited (buffer) strip of main spheres of interest of the oldest Slavonic groups land some 20-40 kilometres wide remained open. (Fig. 2). There was a moderate concentration found in This is an important discovery proving that between the region of the middle part of the Nitra basin, in the the Slavonic world north of the Danube (western basin of the Vah and in Zahorie (western Slovakia). Slovakia) and the Avar Kaganate, there were no closer In the first half of the 7th century, the area of the links, either peaceful or warlike. In this connection middle course of the river Nitra seems to have been the question of the localization of the Empire of again the most densely settled one. In the remaining Samo appears in a new light. It is very likely that the territory of the region, only sparse islets were settled. empire of the Slavonic tribes, led by the Frankish A relatively thin network of settlements represented merchant Samo, was established in the region of im- by the Prague Type ceramics is supplemented, like in mediate contacts between the Slavs and the Avars. the previous phase, by a system of cremation burial As this relation is absent in the studied region, it is places. In the close proximity to the Danube a new likely that the crystallizing core of Samo 's Empire phenomenon occurs: the first burial sites with skel- cannot have been the region of western Slovakia etons (Fig. 3). (with the exception of its westernmost edge). In the second half of the 7th century, the number The situation changed more markedly at the end of settlements increases markedly (Fig. 3). The bound- of the 7th century and in the 8th century. After the ary of localities represented by the Prague Type relatively thin and sparse settlement in the 6th-7th ceramics (Slavonic settlement) moves southward to centuries, a pronounced rise in the total number of the line Bratislava- Galanta- Bajc - Chl 'aba. At the settlement units was recorded (Fig. 4) and the density same time, settlements characterized by a different of population increased. Besides 82 localities dated material culture (Avar Kaganate) were being founded back to the 7th-8th centuries or to the 7th-9th centur- on the left bank of the Danube - Sturovo - Obid ies respectively, 112 localities dated back to the 8th 9 M. Ruttkay ~~~· ·· i nad 300m 0 25km Fig. 4.- Settlement of western Slovakia in 8th century (1. Slavs, 2. Avars and Slavs, 3. Avars). or to the 8th-9th centuries belong to this group. The 8th century, the nuclei of economic and social centres most densely populated areas - especially in the last - hillforts - were gradually established (Pobedim, third of the 8th century- belong to the region of the Majcichov, Nitra, Bratislava). They are generally middle course of the river Nitra, the area demarcated preceded by a gradual accumulation of settlements in by the triangle Sered' - Senec- Galanta, the left bank a relatively small region. of the Morava river between Bratislava and Skalica In the 9th century, the Slavonic substratum became and the middle course of the river V ah. A relatively predominant. As it follows from the total number of dense network of settlements is documented in the known localities, the increase in comparison with the basin of the Zitava river, on the upper course of the previous horizon represents a significant change per river Nitra and on the middle course of the river Ipel' century. The overall character of the settlements and (near Sahy). ofthe material culture discovered is of the same type As far as settlements are concerned and on the basis throughout the whole region. Due to the lack of signi- of the overall habitus and material culture, nearly the ficant chronological elements it is very difficult, for whole region studied seems to be a uniform unit link- the time being, to distinguish the objects and local- ed up to an older settlement. An exception here are the ities from the 9th and 1Oth centuries reliably, which southernmost areas where besides the typical ceramics would be very important from a historical point of of the Danubian type, the material culture includes a view. On the other hand, the pronounced similarity of type of coarser ceramics (so-called Avar ceramics) the material culture from the 9th and 1Oth centuries together with a high quality type of grey ceramics clearly negates the theories about the destructions by made on the potter's wheel (Srurovo, Obid, Komarno). or at least the destructive arrival of Old Magyar milit- As follows from the above-mentioned facts, in the ary companies. 8th century, the settlement network gradually becomes On one side there was a clear tendency towards denser and regions with a relatively compact settle- the extension of settled areas, on the other side the ment pattern were being established. At the end of the gradual concentration of the settlement network in 10 Early Medieval Settlement Structure in Slovakia l . /\ nad 300m o 25km L___ _ __ [l]]]J 2 nai Fig. 5.- Settlement of western Slovakia in 1Oth century (1. Slavs, 2. majority of Old Hu~garians, 3. majority of Slavs). the regions which had already been settled in the pre- Archaeological and also historical sources docu- vious horizon took place. At the same time, some ment a marked influence of Christian faith on the territories became almost devoid of settlements or forming of contemporary society. This is linked with were settled sparsely, as with the larger part of Zitny the origins of church building in the territory of ostrov on the south and a relatively large area bet- present-day western Slovakia. The occurrence of ween the rivers Zitava and Hron reaching almost up stone sacral objects is sporadic and it is linked with to the Pohronsk)' Inovec Mountains in the east. the presence of the highest social strata. So far four In the lOth century, it is possible to document the (Bratislava - Castle, Bratislava - Devin, Ducove, boundary of the Old Magyar interference (the river Nitra- Martinsk)' vrch) or six respectively (Nitra- Na Dudvah in the west, the line Hlohovec - Nitra - Levice, vrsku, Nitra - Castle) sacral buildings have been con- Fig. 5, in the north) also in material culture (graves vincingly dated to Horizon II. All of these sacral with armaments and a horse harness - sabre, sword, buildings are directly linked with hillforts. bow, bit, stirrup). As follows from the above, the principal tendency Their establishment is a result of vast social and towards the densifying and expansion of the settle- economic changes in the Middle Ages. On one side ment network in the 9th-lOth centuries took place in there were huge organizational and administrative the northern half of the region studied and was units built by a higher feudal power (residential, directed to the north. It means that for some reason, organizing, military and administrative functions), the contemporary inhabitants preferred localities on the other side there were smaller units often per- situated relatively higher to apparently more favour- forming a wide range of functions (defensive, econ- able places (from our point of view) in the southern omic, administrative etc.). part of the Danubian basin. The expansion of the Old The majority of central settlements or settlement Magyars was directed at a relatively sparsely settled areas respectively kept their role in the following area and did not aim at having a direct destructive centuries. impact on the settlement structure. 11 M. Ruttkay H:::::::::j:)jl nad 300rn 0 ~km I 1 Dunaj Fig. 6.- Western Slovakia. Distribution map offortifications within the macro-region (1. castle, 2. moated site). After the break-up of the Great Moravian Empire, area between Nitra and Nove Zamky can be dis- the settlement declined in the 11th and in the first half cerned. of the 12th century when the territory became part of A conspicuous decrease in the number of settle- the Early Hungarian feudal state. At the beginning of ments - the destruction of the settlement network - this period, most of the hillforts ceased to exist and can be discerned only in the western part of the only those of primordial importance survived and later region. This development was caused by several became centres of power and administration (Nitra, factors- adverse climatic conditions (rise in the levels Bratislava, Stary Tekov). This situation may be ex- of water courses), decreasing soil fertility, permanent plained by the inability of the Slavonic economic and conflicts with western neighbours. administrative structures of the 9th and 1Oth centur- In the 11th century, the border of the Hungarian ies to accommodate to the newly formed Early Hun- Kingdom was situated on the river Vah (the Dudvah garian establishment. respectively). The western part of the region prob- When compared with the previous horizon, the ably belonged in the political sphere of the Bohemian total area settled does not change significantly. The Kingdom. In the 11th century, monasteries were whole region of the basin of the river Nitra remains established on the northern edge of the Old Magyar the central settlement area. A characteristic phenom- dominion (Nitra, Skalka Hronsky Benadik) which enon is a drop in the density of the settlement net- played an important role in the conquest of the north- work in Zahorie and a mild concentration in the ern part of present Slovakia. southern parts of the region (eastern part of Zahoria, The 11th century is the time when hillforts could lower part of the Hron basin, the basin of the river no longer find their place in the qualitatively new Zitava), in the central part of the Nitra basin and in settlement structure. The only exceptions are the cen- the basin of the river Vah. At the same time a notice- tral hillforts which were gradually transformed to able decrease in the settlement density in the upper comitate castles (Nitra, Bratislava, Stary Tekov). part of the Zitava basin and in the Nitra basin in the These can already be considered to be real castles. 12 Early Medieval Settlement Structure in Slovakia nad 300m 0 25km @1 ti.§l2 --3 Fig. 7.- Western Slovakia. Towns with privileges and their economic background (1. town, 2. market). During the 11th century, the whole region became local nobles. unified from the cultural point of view- the material In southwestern Slovakia 43 fortifications of the inventory obtained a supra-ethnic character and it is lower nobility have been documented so far and almost impossible to trace any ethnic differences. another 12 are uncertain (Fig. 6). The dating of their The fact that beside the Slavs a considerably high construction back to the 11th century is more or less number of other ethnic groups were found in this hypothetical, without any convincing evidence. region is documented by written sources. The multi- Eleven registered fortifications are supposed to have ethnic character of southwestern Slovakia is docum- been built at the end of the 12th and in the first half ented by the investigation of the meso-region (the of the 13th century. The locality Partizanske - Slavs, the Hungarians, the Kalisz, the Cuman, the Simonovany and the wood-and-earth fortification in Pechenegs). Topol'cianky are the most pronounced examples. In By the end of the first half of the 12th century, the two cases, stone constructions are documented; in the situation at was already consolidated. Together with remaining localities wooden structures were prob- economic development, settlement started to increase ably erected. The boom in the construction of small again. This process is directly connected with the fortifications started as late as the half of the 13th gradual rise of towns. Increasing social differentia- century, i.e. after the Tartar invasion, when the need tion within the early feudal society activated the for a more thorough defense became obvious. building of castles (most often they were small fortif- One of the results of the structural change of ied areas with a wooden or stone tower-shaped con- original dominion royal property in Hungary is the struction). The castles served military purposes as well formation of towns (Fig. 7). The process of medieval as being symbols of the rising nobility. The settle- town formation can be summarized as follows ment complexes show considerable stability and gen- (Kucera 1978): erally they contain several 'central points', a church 1) up to the end of the lOth century: a period of or from the 13th century onwards also residences of large popular and densely populated towns of the 13 M. Ruttkay H:::::~:::H nad 300m o 25km Dunaj Fig. 8.- Western Slovakia. Early Medieval settlement (6th-13th century), general distribution map. castle town type with a pronounced political and Town privileges started to be given to the settle- military function and with an economy which was ments of an urban nature as late as the second third strongly subordinated the sovereign's power; of the 13th century. Five (or six respectively) towns 2) from the 11th century up to the year 1242: a are documented in the studied macro-region: Tmava period of the formation of large towns of different - 1238 Zumbothel, Statj Tekov - 1240 Suburbium types on the basis of older settlement and town cult- castri de Bars, Nitra- 1248 Nitra, Komamo - 1265 ures and centres; political, administrative and milit- Camarum, Bratislava- 1291 Posonium, Nove Mesto ary functions gradually recede to the background and nad Vahom 1253 (? ). the functions of commerce and merchants' guilds to- The comparison of archaeological sources and gether with the formation offree town artisans devel- excavations with historical sources shows that oped in a pronounced way; archaeological excavations and research are the main 3) from 1242 to 1306-1309: a period of the most information sources up to the end of the 12th century. productive growth of medieval towns. Starting from the 13th century, both types of archae- The social and economic function of these towns ological information are balanced and later historical is a characteristic feature; the towns were now acting sources gradually prevail over archaeological ones as the implementors of merchandising and monetary (Fig. 8). relations; the free mercantile guild or entrepreneurial The cartographic evaluation of finding localities activity respectively (commonly characterized as 'ius also allowed us to identify the most important fori') came to the fore. The whole of economic and crossings - fords on the river Danube and so-called social life was subordinated to the town community 'main roads-. The most important fords were located and the town also acted as a social and judicial near Srurovo, Patince, Komamo and Bratislava. institution to the outside. The town was often built From the above-mentioned facts, it appears that in and developed according to the proved organiza- the 6th to 13th centuries the lowland regions were tional forms known abroad. most densely settled areas. The mapping of find- 14 Early Medieval Settlement Structure in Slovakia spots and localities indicates that the southern part of Literature the region was relatively less densely settled (Zitny ostrov, the areas between the rivers Zitava and Hron KUEERA M. 1978: Geneza miest na Slovensku, and between the Nitra and the Vah). In the areas Archaeol. hist. 3, Bmo, 147-164. which are the most important from the point of view TRUGL Y S. 1993: Griffek esoroszlanok nepe, of settlement development (the basins of the Zitava Pozsony. and the Nitra), settlement density gradually increased ZABoJNiK J. 1988: On the problems of settlements of during the whole of the period studied. the A var Khaganate Period in Slovakia, Arch. Rozhl. 40,401-437,480. Dir. Matej Ruttkay Archeologicky Ustav Sav Akademicka 2 94921 Nitra Slovensko 15 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 M aria Beres Regionale Beziehungen der Dorfsiedlungen Siidostungarns vom 10. bis 13. Jahrhundert In diesem Referat wird eines der Elemente des si eh In der ersten Halfte unseres Jahrhundertes ent- zwischen dem 10. und 13. Jahrhundert in der Alfold- faltete Gabor Csallany eine regelmal3ige Tatigkeit Region des Karpatenbeckens entfaltenden Siedlungs- m it der Freilegung von Graberfeldem aus dem 10. netzes untersucht, namlich die Dorfer in einer engeren bis 12. Jahrhundert, was das Sammeln des mittelal- Region zwischen der Koros- und Maros-Mi.indung terlichen archaologischen Denkmaterials anbelangt. beiderseits der TheiJ3. Im Rahmen der ungarischen Als Marta Szell die mittelalterliche Siedlungskarte dorflichen Ausgrabungen, die in unserem Komitat einiger Gebiete dieses Areals skizzierte, wendete nicht planmal3ig und systematisch durchgefiihrt wur- sie seine Ausgrabungsergebnisse, femer die Doku- den, wurden die innere Struktur und die Objekte dieser mentation einiger Kirchenfreilegungen und die in erster Linie untersucht. Dementsprechend, also urkundlichen Angaben an. In dieser Region finden wegen der Zufalligkeit des archaologischen Quellen- archaologische topographische Arbeiten mit klei- materials konnte ich die Aufmerksamkeit der Analyse neren und gro13eren Unterbrechungen ab 1977 statt, des sich entwickelnden Dorfnetzes nur in beschei- femer aul3er den Details mehrerer Dorfsiedlungen denem Ma13e zuwenden (Abb. 1). wurde eines der Verwaltungs- und Kirchenzentren aus der Staatsgri.indungszeit: Szer erschlossen. Abb. 1. - Die Lage das Gebiet Komitat Csongrtid. 17 M. Beres Abb. 2.- Funde des Dmfes Szer -- aus dem 9. Jh . (nach Katalin Vcily1). .................... 0 9 ······ ······ 11 6 Zur Bestimmung des arpadenzeitlichen Siedlungs- 3. Kleinere Siedlungen, Dorfkeime. Ihr Bestehen ist bestandes bieten die regelmal3igen archaologischen nicht kontinuierlich: Zeitweise entvolkerten sie sich, Gelandebegehungen aul3er den Urkunden die meisten dann wurden sie emeut besiedelt. Keine Urkunden Angaben, Ober die innere Struktur und die Bauten stehen zur Verftigung. Aufgrund der archaologischen dieser Siedlungen erwarben wir Kenntnisse durch Funde und Objekte konnen sie von der zweiten Halfte Ausgrabungen und Analyse van Luftaufnahmen. In des 10. Jahrhunderts an datiertwerden (Tape, Abb. 4). meinem Referat werden drei Siedlungstypen aus- Im von uns untersuchten Gebiet (Ungam, nach ftihrlich analysiert. der heutigen Verwaltungseinteilung: Komitat Cson- 1. Aufgrund von Urkunden datierbare, zur Staats- grad) sind die untersuchten Dorfer aus dem 10. his gri.indungszeit sich auf dem koniglichen Burggut 13. Jahrhundert von ungi.instiger Lage, was die Mog- entwickelnde grol3e Dorfer mit einer Kirche. Die lichkeit der archaologischen Beobachtungen betrifft: Bewohner beschaftigten si eh mit Ackerbau und Tier- Sie befinden sich namlich im Weichbild oder in der, zucht. Solche Dorfer existierten vom 10. his 13. Jahr- unter landwirtschaftlicher Bestellung stehenden Ge- hundert kontinuierlich. Fallweise haben diese Sied- markung von heutigen Siedlungen. Vollkommen lungen- in unserem Area!- (bulgarische, slawische) konnte die Struktur keines Dorfes- unabhangig von VorHiufer aus dem 9. Jahrhundert, und die Bevolke- der ZugehOrigkeit zu einem der angegebenen Typen rung dieser tilgte die Steuer durch spezielle Dienst- - geklart werden, da es keine, die ganze Siedlung leistungen (Csomorkany, Sap, Szer, Abb. 2-3). untersuchende, komplette Freilegung gab. Darum ist 2. Kleinere Siedlungen mit Kirche, Ackerbau und unser Vergleichsmaterial nicht komplett, weder was Tierzucht treibende Bevolkerung. Ober diese stehen den Vergleich des Siedlungsdetails ahnlichen Alters uns keine Urkunden zur Verfi.igung. In der unter- in anderen Regionen noch was die Beobachtung der suchten Periode bestanden sie kontinuierlich. strukturellen Veranderungen innerhalb der einzelnen 18 Regionale Beziehungen der Dorfsiedlungen Slidostungarns vom 10. bis 13. Jahrhundert Abb. 3. - Funde des Dorfes Sap aus den 9-12. Jh. (nach Maria Beres). . . -- D. .. '. _-~: ., . .. . . ., Siedlungen betrifft. Es scheint doch, da/3 die Dorfer Anmerkungen und Literatur des Typs 1 durch ein inneres Grabensystem geglie- dert wurden. Die si eh danach gerichteten Ha user und BALINT Cs., Siidungarn im 10. Jahrhundert, Studia die umliegenden Speichergruben wurden in Reihen Archaeologica XI, Budapest, 1991. angeordnet. Fur die innere Struktur der Dorfer, BERES M., Regeszeti adatok Csongrad megye Arpad- gehOren sie zu irgendwelchem genannten Typ, ist die kori telepiilestortenetehez. Archaologische Anga- innere Bewegung am kennzeichnendsten (Abb. 5). ben zur arpadenzeitlichen (I 0-11. Jh.) Siedlungs- Unter den Ansiedlungsfaktoren der untersuchten geschichte der Umgebung Komitat Csongrad, Dorfer spielten die Besitzverhaltnisse au/3er den natur- Kezirat, Szeged, 1986, Manuskript. geographischen Gegebenheiten (Su/3wasser, ErhO- BLAZOVICH L. (Ed), A Koros- Tisza-Maros-koz telepii- hung, Weg, Flu/3ubergang, Rohstoff usw.) eine lesei a kozepkorban. Mittelalterliche Siedlungen bestimmende Rolle. Die Umstande und Ursachen der Umgebung der Koros-Teij3-Maros Fliissen, ihrer Zerstorung oder ihres Fortbestehens mussen Szeged, 1996. aber sorgfaltig erwogen werden. Die Zahl der Dorfer CSALLANY G., Avarkori es XI-XIII. szazadi leletek a des Siedlungsnetzes im 13. Jahrhundert nahm nach szentesi muzeumban. Awarische und ungarische dem Ende der behandelten Epoche bedeutend ab. Funde zu Szentes, Dolgozatok. Arbeiten des Das Verschwinden der Dorfer kann nicht ausschlie/3- Archaologischen Institut der Kon. Ung. Franz lich an den Tatarensturm 1241-1242 gekntipft wer- Josef Universitiit in Szeged IX-X, Szeged, 1933- den, sondern die, das Siedlungsnetz verandernde 1934, 221-280. Wirkung des Wirtschaftssystems kann in den meisten FEHER-ERY-KRALOV AN SKY, A Kozep-Duna medence Fallen als bewiesen betrachtet werden. magyar honfoglalas- es kora Arpad-kori sirleletei, 19 M. Beres Regeszeti tanulmanyok II, Budapest, 1962. KovALOVSZKI J., E!Ozetes jelentes a dobozi Arpad- kori falmisatasr61 1962-1974. Vorbericht Uber die Ausgrabung des arpadenzeitlichen Dorfes Doboz 1962-197 4, Archaeologiai Ertesito 102, Budapest, 1975, 204-223. KURTI B., Regeszeti adatok a Maros-torok videkenek 10-11. szazadi tOrtenetehez. Archaologischen An- gaben zur Geschichte der Umgebung der Maros- mi.indung in den 10-11-ten Jahrhunderten, in: A kokort6l a kozepkorig. Van der Steinzeit bis zum Mittelalter, Szeged, 1994, 369-386. SZELL M., Elpusztult falvak, X-XVII. szazadi regeszeti leletek Csongrad varmegye teri.ileten. Vemichtete Dorfer und Funde aus den X.-XVII. Jahrhunderten in Kom. Csongrad, Dolgozatok. Arbeiten des Archaologischen Institut der Kon. Ung. Franz Josef Universitat in Szeged XIX, Szeged, 1943, 176-182. V AL YI K., Szer kozepkori teleptilestOrtenete a regeszeti leletek ti.ikreben. Die mittelalterliche Siedlungsgeschichte von Szer im Spiegel der archaologischen Funden, in: Novak-Selmeczi, Falvak, mezovarosok az Alfoldon, Nagykoros, 1986, 117-129. Ab b. 4. - Funde des Dorfes Tape a us den 10-11. Jh. (nach Maria Beres). Maria Beres Mora Serene Museum Roosevelt per 1-3 H- 6720 Szeged Ungarn Abb.5.- Die Lage des Dorfes Typ 1 (nach J. Kovalovszki). o~e"! .,..,.:.;:)..:.•~•ls ·-- 1 i . i ' .i:~i:·~:lo r.:.n:iud.i ll.li•\1'\ 20 Rural Settlement in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 J.L. Bintliff The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece Abstract tic housing, such as the ubiquitous early Modem 'longhouse' (makrinari) which our analysis of desert- Since 1978 the Boeotia Archaeological Survey ed villages at Rhadon (between Pyrgos and Pavlo, has discovered some 300 rural settlements and anal- North Boeotia) and site VM4 (near Palaiopanagia, ysed three ancient city sites through surface study. South-West Boeotia), together with oral history The Medieval Village Project is a subproject which reports, suggests formed the typical rural dwelling is focused on deserted Medieval and Postmedieval from the 16th century at least in the region. Some of village sites, combining surface mapping and arte- our earlier work (Fig. 3) on village houses has recent- fact collection with information from Byzantine, ly been published by Nancy Stedman in an edited Frankish and Ottoman chronicles and tax-cadasters. volume on the archaeology of Medieval Greece This paper will present the various approaches that (Lock & Sandars 1996), but Boeotia desperately needs the Boeotia Project is currently taking to study rural a locally-organized project, perhaps through schools, communities in Medieval and Post-Medieval Boeo- to record traditional houses by photography, draw- tia. The accompanying ceramic analysis will be ings and interviews before they are all demolished to presented by Miss Joanita Vroom in her separate make way for more spacious modem houses. contribution to the Bruges Conference. Secondly, we have a range of graphic sources, beginning with artistic representations such as an The traditional and primary source for studying the icon representing the townscape of Thebes (one of archaeology of Medieval and Post-Medieval Boeotia, the two major towns of the region) at the turn of the a large agricultural province (Fig. 1) in Central Greece, 16th-17th centuries, and including photographs from has been the surviving monuments across the count- the last century oflocal villages and their inhabitants ryside, such as the Middle Byzantine church at Slai- - but also other regional personalities such as the pou (modem Orchomenos). A useful map and gazet- notorious Dilessi bandits whose like made much of teer of such monuments and of excavated medieval the rural areas ofBoeotia insecure in the third quarter sites in the region has been published by Koder and of the 19th century. Of especial importance for Boe- Hild (1976) as Volume 1 Hellas und Thessalia ofthe otian village history are the numerous maps, often Austrian Byzantine Atlas Project. In an early phase of linked to the descriptions of both Western and East- our Medieval Boeotia Project our Frankish specialist em Travellers, and commencing in the 17th century. Peter Lock published a study (1986) of the best- One of the most helpful of these for tracing deserted preserved Frankish towers ofBoeotia; recently he has villages is the Atlas de la Grece of 1852, drawn up by published the first modern textbook on Frankish the French Army, which marks both contemporary Greece ( 1995). Figure 2 shows the location of the villages and the location of many abandoned villages. major pre-Ottoman medieval monuments in Boeotia A third source is that of official archives. Apart together with medieval settlements (open circles) from state censuses of the Greek state from the late studied by the Boeotia Project or recorded in medie- 19th century onwards, and the limited records of val archives. Byzantine and Frankish times for Boeotia, the most Monuments that still lack both study and conserv- important archives are those of the Ottoman Empire. ation include Post-Medieval water-mills, of which a Our project Ottoman specialist Machiel Kiel (Kiel, in group of three datable to the 16th century from docu- press) has provided us with the tax reports for some mentary sources and surface finds has been recorded 200 villages in Boeotia, as well as for its towns of during our intensive field survey of the Valley of the Thebes and Livadhia, from 1466-1687, together with Muses (Bintliff 1996b). Our project has also made a fragments from the 18th century. I have been able to beginning with localised study of traditional domes- localize some 160 of these villages (Fig. 4 ), shown 21 N '--< N ~ to EUBOEA [ 6i ~ " 0 4 6 12 16Km ATTICA Fig. 1. - Location map of the modern province of Boeotia, Central Greece, with temporaty towns and villages. Modern villages in So ut- West and North- West Boeotia mentioned in the text are underlined. The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece BYZANTINE-FRANKIS,..H BO_ OTLA ~ -==== ........... 0 Castle -====- / ., -=- Gjln Vundre: ...., ~Tower '§¥Et 0 e Church I . =I• ~~~~!~:'· 0 B Sotllomont Bishop ---=- \ 0 ::::~; ' \" Salgoneua~ EU:OIAN ~"" ~·'s_•~-·--~~~~~-~v 0 o SJ!tal ~•Dramlel RutamUea • Harm en a c) o• M.Harmena- .o THESES o Andrltoa . .t..oe . . . • Panayia Neochorl B Muataphe.doa ~ • Bra tal Klobucar lno Plgadl 8 Stanlatee • I I 0• Erlmokaatro 0• I • o0 Archondlkl -Tallzeo£. I o Kakoal 0 oA• Kleldl 0 I I _,_ .87 Bubokao~- OoKokla o..___ _~_ ___j10 km GULF OF CORINTH Fig. 2. - Distribution of the major pre-Ottoman medieval monuments in Boeotia, together with medieval settlements (circles) studied by the Boeotia Project or recorded in medieval archives. Fig. 3. - The traditional peasant house in post-medieval Boeotia: the Makrinari or long-house. From Stedman 1996. 23 J.L. Bintliff ~- - 1Bokrakao/ 1 1 Lakroktu • Buboka _ ..... - - 0 Kruyekuki _ aleei Buzurg e 8 1 • Kokla K. - Skourte. A.Trladh•aKokla S. GULF OF CORINTH Fig. 4. -Hitherto-located villages listed in the Ottoman Imperial archive census lists for Boeotia, 1466-1687. EXISTING DESERTED • VILLAGES 0 Ill 0 .A 6 Hoykal/ GULF OF CORINTH ---Koata Rabduea - - Fig. 5.- Locatable villages listed in the Ottoman census archives, showing current status (deserted, sit!! occupied), and ethnicity in Early Ottoman records (Albanian, Greek, unknown). Urban Muslim population not shown. 24 The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece U! E > (j) (\J 0! E (\J > c > Fig. 6.- The Valley of the Muses (west of modern Palaiopanagia village, S. W. Boeotia), archaeological sites discovered through field survey identified by sample grids. The largest in north-centre of the Valley is the medieval village of Panagia/site VM4 (1 1 ha). 25 J.L. Bintliff Valley of the Muses Fig. 7. - Overall potte1y density Overall Pottery Density by fie!dwalking transect and and Site Sampling Grids identified sites (open or black grids) in the Valley of the Muses. N A The shading scheme used to represent the overall pottery density ranges from a minimum white to a maximum grey 0 1500 3000 Meters ~~~~~------~ here; only half of these are still inhabited (Figure 5 their sample grids; one of the two largest is the shows the ethnicity in the Ottoman records, where medieval village of Panagia/ Site VM4 in the right known, and the villages still occupied today). Those upper centre of the picture (11 ha). The density of that are deserted offer excellent opportunities for the pottery across the entire surveyed landscape is shown study of the development of houses and of pottery by grey-scale shades in Figure 7 and mainly reflects assemblages, especially as often their date of found- agricultural manuring in Greco-Roman times. ation and desertion can be estimated approximately. Detailed study of particular periods such as the The fourth major approach is through field survey Early to Middle Byzantine era will begin by using archaeology; the Boeotia Project has been carrying maps of sites datable to this phase (cf. Figures 8 & 9, out surface survey since 1978 both in south-west for the South-West survey block which includes the Boeotia, from a base in the village of Mavrommati, Valley of the Muses), which give an overview of the and in the far north around the villages ofPavlo and density and distribution of population. More inform- Loutsi (Fig. 1) (Bintliff & Snodgrass 1988a & b; Bint- ation comes through intensive study of particular liff 1991, 1995, 1996a, b, c). Such work involves village or farm sites. Some of the key villages with teams walking every field at close intervals, counting plentiful surface ceramics and archival references are and collecting pottery fragments found on the sur- shown on Figure 2: Neochori, Harmena and Archon- face. Where concentrations of potsherds or freshly- tiki. ploughed up scatters are seen, a grid is placed across Some medieval and post-medieval settlements the area so that the site- whether farm, village, ceme- provide little for surface survey; the deserted village tery or sanctuary, can be measured for its size and of Palaeomazi, for example (in the mountains bet- date. After many square kilometres of countryside ween Palaiopanagia and Evangelistria in South-West have been covered in this fashion as completely as Boeotia), is under pasture and shows almost no sur- possible, we can produce maps of past settlement and face pottery. Only a road cutting allowed us to ob- other kinds of site. In figure 6 we see the Valley of serve medieval occupation material. In contrast the the Muses (west ofPalaiopanagia, South-West Boe- dramatic drying of Lake Ilike in the centre of the otia), with the archaeological sites identified through province ofBoeotia during the late 1980's and the 26 The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece • 0 (i) Definite Probable Possible occupation occupation occupation •? I i"' I e EARLY BYZANTINE I D \ \ 1111MIDDLE BYZANTINE \ \ 41. MIDDLE/LATE BYZANTINE-FRANKISH \ \- ? "BYZANTINE" \ \ 0 1km / .-""""' \ ..... ..... I .,.,. .... L::. ,./ ..... _,_ ( ,. \_, ... ASKRA ,. .... -,......... ........ ..... -"" ? • ..... .... ..... ' \\ I • I I 111141. CD • •III VM21 1111 . 1111 &. \.---, \ I ? • \ , •? PALAEO-THESPIAE;\ b.• . 0 . L::. .PP16 1111 ~--, EAIMOKASTRf> 111141. CD • I I PALAEO- p NEOCHORI • III \'- .... _.... { ........ I I \...._ _.,. /'/ .!""' -~ ,' -- -~ ~ Fig. 8.- Provisional distribution of Early to Middle Byzantine, and Transitional Middle-Late Byzantine (Frankish) sites in the South-West Boeotia survey region. early 1990's exposed a lost Frankish tower and sur- five discrete medieval and post-medieval settlement rounding settlement at Klimmataria (Fig. 1 & 2), sites, each one showing a slightly different range of where our project obtained a permit to plan and pottery; it is possible that the entire sequence here collect ceramics from a site as clean as an excavation. may cover most of the period from Early Byzantine Usually however, medieval and later settlements show to the late 19th century. It is the pottery of such no surface traces beyond the occasional foundations deserted settlement sites that is the richest and least of abandoned longhouses and the generally ubiquit- exploited area ofBoeotian medieval history. ous and abundant surface pottery. The potential and significance ofhighly-intensive Finally I shall mention some of the major con- surface survey can be illustrated through our discov- clusions of the medieval to post-medieval project in ery some 500 m north of the ancient city ofHyettos, Boeotia so far: at the locality ofGjin Vendre (Fig. 2) near Pavlo, of 27 J.L. Bintliff 0~ \ "' e L BYZ I FRANKISH \ \ A FR./EARLY TURKISH \ \ • Definite Probable 0 Possible (!) ,. .,."" occupation occupation occupation . '' A ( A ..... , 6... ...., • ... &.• .. \ .... .... -' ...... \ \ (!) • PALAEO THESPIAE ERIMO~A~T~ \ ' ~.. PP16. .r' .. <D (1)" I .....--, A • / MUSES SANCTUARY 0 • PALAEO-NEOCHORI •., ~ r-~~,_ ~ JiJ. { \ , __ _ / / --------- __, 'J Fig. 9.- Provisional distribution of Late Byzantine (Frankish) and Early Turkish sites in the South- West Boeotia survey region. 1. The map of major Byzantine to Frankish sites for Frankish eras, to the 13th century, remained largely Boeotia as a whole (Fig. 2), and our detailed exam- within the ancient settlement network. ination of the sequence in South-West Boeotia (Fig. 8) and at Gjin Vendre in the North, suggest that there 2. The 14th and early 15th centuries AD appear to was considerable continuity between Greco-Roman have been a disastrous time for Boeotian settlements. settlement patterns (Fig. 10: towns {triangles} and Incessant warfare between the Franks, the Byzantines villages {circles} of ancient Boeotia) and those of the and the encroaching Ottoman state, together with the early to high middle ages. The colonisation of this impact of the Black Death and climatic deterioration, landscape by Slavs in the 6th-7th centuries AD prob- led to the large scale abandonment of most of the ably involved a merging with local populations, often countryside, and a nucleation of population into the on pre-existing settlement sites. Subsequent popul- two regional towns of Thebes and Livadhia and a ation growth through the Middle Byzantine and limited number of large villages. This can be shown 28 The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece / , ........... ............. __ / / / / / HYETTOS.A • ?Oimones --..- ._, ...... -- / / TegyraEII / I CHAERONEA.A ORCHOMENOS.Ii( I / / I I ALEVADEIA \ ''\ Alalkomenai El DelionE~ \ eStephon I KORONEIAA El ?Okalea et I \ ATANAGRA \ THEBESA ?Eilesione I \ eAskra ?Pharai ?Skhedia Ell ?SkolosEII I '' \ El Hippotai ?Donakone ATHESPIAE ?Eteonos/ Skarphe I I / / • ?Leontarne • Eutresis e Erythrai I I ?EIIopia - / ATHISBE e Hysiai I CHORSIAEA PLATAIAA ..---....... I "' / ---- ............... .._..._--_..I Fig. 10. - The distribution of towns (triangles) and villages (circles) in Classical Greek Boeotia. archaeologically through surface survey of several well over 1000 people are recorded for the village by deserted villages but even more clearly from the first the later 16th century. Ottoman census map preserved, that of 1466 (Fig. 11): the Greek villages are notable in their size and 4. The severe decline in Boeotia's fortunes during concentration. During the final half century of Frank- the troubled 17th century is likewise documented both ish rule the Dukes of Athens attempted to recolonize at the province level through census records (Fig. 15, the landscape through encouraging settlement by Al- for 1687 /8), and through the study of deserted village banian clans (Jochalas 1971 ); this was continued sites using surface ceramic distributions. Figure 16 under the first Ottoman authorities; the tiny new shows the contraction, followed by abandonment, of foundations of Albanians seem generally to have the village ofVM4/ Panayia which took place during been settled close to abandoned Byzantine-Frankish the late 17th century. villages. 5. The richness of archive materials and the extra- 3. Under the Pax Ottomanica Boeotian popula- ordinary abundance of surface ceramics of post- tions and economy flourished. This can be shown not Roman date in Boeotia, together with the growing only in the census statistics (Figure 12 compared to recognition of discrete assemblages of ceramics for Figure 11 evidences a generalized population boom each major phase of medieval and post-medieval up to 1570), but also in the surface archaeology of times (the work of Professor John Hayes and Joanita villages studied by the Project. Thus at the village of Vroom), offer an unusual opportunity to bring to- VM4/ Panayia in the Valley of the Muses, the dram- gether historic sources and field archaeology, so that atic expansion of the community between Frankish the development ofboth landscapes and townscapes (Fig. 13) and Early Turkish (Fig. 14) times is clearly in post-Roman Greece are becoming increasingly recorded from the spread of diagnostic surface cera- better understood. Figure 17 provides a comparison mics, mirroring the Ottoman census statistics where between demographic change for 16 Boeotian vil- 29 J.L. Bintliff BOEOTIA IN 1466 EUBOIAN GULF Spata/Sipahll&rO Andrlha Boreure LalokaD 0 0 SkymalariD 0 Mavrommatl Yorgl THESES Panaya.KunlaO Q?Poravanka Slamadl OomenlkoQ? I 0 Zogra Kobill a KlobuCIIf I Atehondilea Bala 0 ?Q Golundlye KelmendiQ 0 Andre lvlu Orallu 0 luta I Kino• SalaD 0 Parapungl QUia Aabduu I Kaparell\0 r-, 1 0 1eakrakui/Lakroku ~ L--' 0 Kruyekukl Saln~zuroO ~la KeblrO OTTOMAN ARCHIVE - 30 31 -50 51 - 134 135- 199 200+ LEVADEIA THEBES 'Albanian• village Muslim 51 0 I 0 Greek 164 Greek 467 • l "Greek" village FAMILIES Unknown ethnic A Fig. 11. - Population and ethnicity in Boeotia in Fig. 12.- Population and ethnicity in Boeotia 1466, after Ottoman census records. in 1570, after Ottoman census records. EUBOIAN GULF L. Copals Platanakl~ 0 MurlkiG, _ ====- - Lavdlye/Lavda Klrnlal __ · ~GHCI/ Ver&dil Kapandi'HI 0 '. ~~ 0 1 1 Oramlal ~----~-------'0 km GULF OF CORINTH OTTOMAN ARCHIVE I - 30 31 - 00 51 - 134 135 - 190 200+ LEVADEIA THEBES Muslim 210 'Albanian' village 0 0 'Greek' village Unknown ethnic ""'"" !: lA Greek 542 Greek 1497 30 The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece Site Vm4 (f) Fig. 13.- The occupation swface of the deserted medieval village of VM4 in Frankish times, based on surface sherds. !Grab Sample= 8 Sherds N 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Meters A Site Vm4 (If-et) Fig. 14.- The occupation suiface ofthe deserted medieval village of VM4 in Early Turkish times, based on surface sherds. IGrab Sample = 34 Sherds N 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Meters A 31 J.L. Bintliff BOEOTIA IN 1687/8 Ayo. Nikola/Kamba~ I -- Kapreno. Peraci/Yeradji __ ,Kirnlai 0 Lavda/Lavdlyo 1 A I Oramiai ~-J Spat a/ SipahilerD Andrltu. 0 Beroaare D r 0-; Andonl Konda~ _ ~ +Beluaa "(jQ ?DPoravank111 I • Kukur9isecud-====:... Panaya I Kaznla ODara 0 likores I ~~lochori ,• ,. TalizeO Archondiha B. Archondltaa itJSam,.arlq I D 1---1 1Koklnaria Likorea 0 Luta KlobucarD Kakooi/Kaatorya Baltu 0 0 Halka Bardti Loa ha O? Parapungi D ___ Buru. GULF OF CORINTH OTTOMAN ARCHIVE 1 - 30 31 - 50 51 - 134 135 - 199 200+ LEVADEIA THESES "Albanian' village 0 D ? Jews Greek 35 654 "Greek" village FAMILIES Unknown e1hnic Fig.15.- Population and ethnicity in Boeotia in 1687- 8, after Ottoman census records. Site Vm4 (t) Fig. 16. - The occupation surface of the deserted medieval village ofVM4 in Later Turkish times, based on suiface sherds. N I Grab Sample = 4 Sherds t\ 32 The Archaeological Investigation of Deserted Medieval and Post-Medieval Villages in Greece The demographic development of Boeotla as reflected 3000 In the number of households of 16 Boeotla vlll111ges II] Households 2000 VI .... '1:1 0 .c CIJ VI :::1 0 =1000 1466 1506 1570 1642 1688 1800 1879 1896 Early Turkish Late T wtish Early Modern (1460-1640) ( 1640-1800) 40 Boeotia Survey D possible E3 probable rn:l certain 30 20 VI ......, Ill VI ....0 ....1:: 10 :::1 0 c.! EByz MByz M/LByz-F LByz/F F-T T T-Mod C7th-9th ClOth-12th 1204-1400 AD 1400-1600 AD !600-1800 AD Cl 9th -early 20th Periods Settlement trends of the Early Byzantine (EByz), Middle Byzantine (MByz), La1e Byzantine/Frankish (LByzJF). Late Fmnkish-Early Turkish (F-T). Late Turkish (T), and Late Turkish-Early Modern Period (T-M) Fig. 17. - The comparison between demographic change for 16 Boeotian villages from the 15'h-J9'h centuries (based on research by Dr. M. Kiel) and the statistics of settlement numbers over time based on archaeological field survey in S. W. lages from the 15th-19th centuries, based on Dr. Bibliography Kiel 's Ottoman archive research, and the statistics of settlement numbers over time based on the Project's BINTLIFF J.L. 1991: The Roman countryside in surface field survey evidence (collated by Dr. K. Central Greece: observations and theories from Sbonias). the Boeotia Survey (1978-1987), in: G. BARKER 33 J.L. Bintliff & J. LLOYD (eds.), Roman Landscapes. Archaeo- British Archaeological Reports S40 1, Oxford, logical Survey in the Mediterranean Region, 175-217. London, British School at Rome, 122-132. BINTLIFF J.L. & SNODGRASS A.M. 1988b: Mediter- BINTLIFF J. L. 1995: The two transitions: Current ranean survey and the city, Antiquity 62, 57-71. research on the origins of the traditional village in JOCHALAS T. 1971: Ober die Einwanderung der Central Greece, in: J.L. BINTLIFF & H. HAMEROW Albaner in Griechenland, Beitrage zur Kenntnis (eds.), Europe Between Late Antiquity and the Sudosteuropas und des nahen Orients 13, 89-106. Middle Ages, Oxford, Tempus Reparatum, 111- KODER J. & HILD F. 1976: Hellas und Thessalia, 130. Wien, Osterreichische Akademie der Wissen- BINTLIFF J.L. 1996a: The Frankish countryside in schaften. central Greece: The evidence from archaeological KIEL M. In press: The rise and decline of Turkish field survey, in: P. LOCK & G.D.R. SANDERS Boeotia, 15th-19th century, in: J.L. BINTLIFF (eds.), The Archaeology of Medieval Greece, (ed.), Recent Developments in the History and Oxford, 1-18. Archaeology of Central Greece, Oxford, Tempus BINTLIFF J.L. 1996b: The archaeological survey of Reparatum. the Valley of the Muses and its significance for LOCK P. 1986: The Frankish towers of Central Greece, Boeotian history, in: A. HURST & A. SCHACHTER Annual of the British School at Athens 81, 101- (eds.),LaMontagne des Muses, Geneva, 193-224. 123. BINTLIFF J.L. 1996c: The two transitions: Current LOCK P. 1995: The Franks in the Aegean, 1204-1500, research on the origins of the traditional village in London. Central Greece, in: Epetiris tis Eterias Viotikon LOCK P. & SANDERS G.D.R. (Eds.) 1996: The Meleton, B 'Diethnes Synedrio Viotikon Meleton, Archaeology of Medieval Greece, Oxford. Livadhia, Athens, Society for Boeotian Studies, STEDMAN N. 1996: Land-use and settlement in post- 605-614. medieval central Greece: An interim discussion, BINTLIFF J.L. & SNODGRASS A.M. 1988a: The end of in: P. LOCK & G.D.R. SANDERS (Eds.), The the Roman countryside: A view from the East, in: Archaeology of Medieval Greece, Oxford, 179- R.F.J. JONES et al. (eds.), First Millennium Papers. 192. Western Europe in the First Millennium A.D., Prof. Dr. John Bintliff Archaeology Department Durham University Science Site South Road Durham DHI 3LE UK 34 Rural Settlement in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge !997' Conference- Volume 6 Giovanni Di Stefano Villaggi tardo bizantini degli Iblei: primo medioevo siciliano La cuspide sud-orientale della Sicilia, fra i1 VII e ed emplekton all 'intemo. E lo spessore di questa l'VIII sec. d.C., e caratterizzata da un insediamento muratura, certe volte considerevole, su cui si basa la rurale sparso di tipo fortificato, cioe da veri e propri statica dell 'elevato dell' edificio. "Kastellia", e da un incastellamento, a "Kastra", dif- Sicuramente la copertura di queste fattorie bizan- fuso negli speroni rocciosi, alla confluenza delle tine con tegole cotte, striate sulla superficie, che grandi vallate fluviali. Equesto il tipico popolamento dovevano essere sostenute da una intelaiatura lignea, che nell 'Isola precede la conquista araba e il feno- a doppio spiovente. meno dell'insediamento rupestre: i cronisti che scri- Gli edifici avevano quasi sempre un solo corpo vono intomo al 750 d.C. (Ibn al-Atir, An-Nuwayri) edilizio centralizzato, di forma quadrata, trapezoidale descrivano uno scenario di villaggi di fattorie-forti- o rettangolare, molto allungata. In molti casi e pro- ficate diffuse ed insediate nell'altopiano. Nel secolo babile che la fattoria aperta su un cortile era anche scorso, soprattutto, i resti di questi villaggi erano ben recintata con un solido muro e con veri e proprie torri visibili sull 'altopiano ibleo e Paolo Orsi documento di avvistamento sulla campagna o di difesa. Avvolte vari ruderi di case. sono presenti dei siloi, per la conservazione delle der- In questa area estato ora possibile non solo effet- rate alimentari. L'edificio era diviso intemamente, da tuare un primo inventario dei dati archeologici sche- vari tramezzi in muratura, in tre o quattro ambienti, dati ma anche elaborare dei computi statistici sulla spesso giustiapposti e non comunicanti fra di loro. distribuzione delle segnalazioni. Tuttavia, occorrera, Tra le fattorie sono spesso note grandi cisteme ancora, acquisire altre conoscenze sul territorio per ipogeiche comuni, ma anche vere e proprie opere tentare una sintesi completa ed articolata delle ten- idrauliche (cisteme multiple, canali, etc.), come nella denze di distribuzione ed occupazione dell'area in valle di Buttino, a Centopozzi. epoca proto-araba. Piccoli edifici religiosi sono spesso noti in questi La tecnica edilizia impiegata nella costruzione di agglomerati: si tratta di architetture certe volte mol to queste fattorie-fortificate e molto singolare: grandi e modeste (con navatine precedute da esonartece) o di pesanti blocchi di calcare appena sbozzati, di forma vere e proprie chiese di grande impegno costruttivo parallelepipeda, grossolanamente messi in opera a con ambienti a cupola voltati, come aS. Croce Came- piu filari sovrapposti. La pezzatura di questi blocchi rma. di calcare dipende spesso dalla possibilita di sfaldare, Probabilmente, una concentrazione "urbanistica" in maniera regolare, il soprassuolo roccioso circa- eindividuabile in questi villaggi solamente in pros- stante. Ma, ovviamente l'impiego massiccio di grandi simita degli edifici religiosi. Ma spesso si tratta di blocchi e per lo piu costante nelle strutture portanti semplici orientamenti delle singole fattorie che nelle dell' edificio, in modo da risolvere con soluzioni sem- adiacenze delle chiese rimangono costanti. Per il plici ma efficaci i problemi statici di questa archi- resto l'immagine complessiva di questi edifici epro- tettura privata. Cantonali, architravi, piedritti di porte prio quella di un agglomerato di fattorie disposte in e finestre sono, infatti, messi in opera in unica solu- maniera disorganica, senza un apparente coordina- zione con ortostati molto solidi e massicci. Tra mento spaziale fra i singoli complessi. Ogni unita 1' altro, 1'assenza costante di legamenti cementizi in edilizia appare piuttosto autosufficiente pur se sfrutta questi edifici ha probabilmente accentuato 1'uso e la alcune attrezzature comuni. diffusione di questa tecnica "megalitica". Non si Questi villaggi rurali sono per lo piu diffusi sono ravvisati, tra 1'altro, neanche mattoni. Sola- nell 'altopiano calcareo, fra Ragusa e Siracusa, si a a mente blocchi di calcare accostati, messi in opera ridosso della costa, sulle propaggini dei pendii completamente a secco, sovrapposti in maniera quasi rocciosi, che sulla sommita montuosa degli Iblei, in incoerente avvolte con un doppio paramento litico, relazione, ancora, con la viabilita tardo-romana che 35 G. Di Stefano ~HtntV•H• · ..... $""'~ ) J~ ~COM!SO ~ CISTERNAZZI e 1'-J.GUS~ • SCROFAHI BUTTINO o IIFAL Cl CASSERO TRABACCIIE POZZIII EIIHIGLIU~~~ M I >-IOOICA -~p~~~~!\~ '"'\ kela t!Uf•tt ' ' .. w.. Fig. 1.- Carta dell'area degli Jblei. tagliava la cuspide sud-orientale della Sicilia, da Agri- Queste fattorie richiamano, per le tecniche mega- gento a Siracusa, e in relazione alla viabilita minore, ai litche e per le forme tipologiche, alcune fattorie forti- tratturi, fra 1'intemo e la costa. ficate della cirenaica. Non e improbabile che nella distribuzione nel Lungo la costa meridionale della Sicilia gli insedia- territorio di questi agglomerati abbiano avuto un ruolo menti tardo-bizantini si concentrano in prossimita indifferente sia una mutata condizione climatica degli approdi, soprattutto vicino Punta Secca, dove e registrata proprio alla fine del mondo-antico che una molto attivo l'ancoraggio di Kaukana. Si conoscono diversa economia. circa 25 edifici, distribuiti lungo la fascia costiera di Un inaridimento, costante, in tutto il bacino medi- 300 metri, per lo piu attribuiti cronologicamente fra la terraneo e, infatti, ben attestato e registrato, probabil- seconda meta del quarto e il VII sec. d.C. mente dalle varie strutture idrauliche note. L'intenso Gli edifici sorsero su un'area mai prima antro- popolamento rurale dell' altopiano puo, tra 1'altro, indi- pizzata, pertanto la conformazione urbanistica dell' ziare monoculture specializzate (la viticultura nelle abitato non ricalca precedenti impianti ellenistici o di fasce paralitaranee e nei pendii collinari degli Iblei, la eta romana, dando luogo ad un aggregato dalla forma cerialicultura nell 'altopiano ). alquanto inaspettata e inconsueta rispetto alla rego- larita, tradizionale, della citta classiche e romane. 36 Villaggi tardo bizantini degli Iblei: prima medioevo siciliano 0 10 30 ~Omt. scala 1: 1000 Fig. 2.- Cont. da Pianicelle (dis. Gianni Giacchi) . . I, _, . , .. ' Fig. 3.- Cont. da Costa (dis. Gianni Giacchi). 0'--~---=::Sm t . I N 37 G. Di Stefano L' appellativo di chorion, con cui I' abitato app are Bibliografia ricordato ne lie fonti, corrisponde filologicamente, ad un insieme di case e terreni agricoh. BEJIOR G. 1986: Gli insediamenti della Sicilia E stata possibile, una lettura dell 'impianto: sicu- romana: distribuzione, tipologia e sviluppo da un ramente gli edifici 22 e 18 sono due complessi edilizi primo inventario dei dati archeologici, in: religiosi. Rispettivamente, si tratta di un vero e pro- GIARDINA A. (a cura di), Societa romana e impero prio convento, sede di una comunita eremitica, iso- tardoantico. Ill (Le merci e gli insediamenti), lata geograficamente in una piccola isoletta costiera, Bari, 463-519. e di una chiesetta cimiteriale a tre navate. Ma nonos- Dr STEFANO G. 1985: La Regione camarinese in eta tante tutto, pen), la visione dell 'insieme urbano con- romana, Modica. ferma ed acuisce l'aspetto d'isolamento delle singole Dr STEFANO G. 1994: Distribuzione e tipologia degli unita, peraltro raramente aggregate. insediamenti di eta repubblicana ed imperiale Proprio in prossimita dell a chiesetta gli edifici 17, sull 'altopiano Ibleo, in: Le ravitaillement en ble 7, 8 e 2, tutti molto vicini, appaiono raggruppati e in de Rome et des centres urbains des debuts de la qualche modo in comunicazione con uno spazio Republique jusqu 'au Haunt Empire. Actes du attorno all a chiesa. Pure 1'edificio 19, tra I' altro ap- Colloque International de Naples (1 991), Napoli- parso no una abitazione, ma un edificio pubblico (un Roma, 237-242. bazar o una locanda?) sembra in qualche modo gra- FALL! CO A. M. 1971, Villaggi tardoantichi e bizantini vitare proprio in questo baricentro comune. della Sicilia orientale noti all'Orsi e loro attuale Forse la dimensione degli edifici e in relazione consistenza, in: Atti If Congr. Naz. Archeologia all 'uso degli spazi circostanti: un muro a doppio Cristiana (1969), Roma, 177-183. semicerchio, il n° 2, con una cisterna in prossimita MESSINA A. 1993: Tre edifici del medioevo siciliano, dell'edificio 12, e forse una recinzione, 0 una siste- Sicilia Archeologica XXVI (82), 61. mazione a terrazze del terreno o il limite di una MOLINARI A. 1994: Il popolamento rurale in Sicilia proprieta agricola, di un 'orto o, piuttosto, un recinto tra V e XIII secolo: alcuni spunti di riflessione, in: per gli animali. Negli edifici piu complessi, gli FRANCOVICH R. & NOYE G. (a cura di), La storia ambienti si articolano su ali laterali attorno ad un dell'alto Medioevo italiano (VI-X secolo) alia cortile, chiuso verso I' esterno, di forma semicirco- luce dell'archeologia. Convegno Intern. Siena lare, da quale si accede, per mezzo di larghe scale in 1992, Firenze, 361-377. muratura, al piano superiore ORSI P. 1931: Epigrafe cristiana di Palazzolo Acreide Proprio in queste unita edilizie piu complesse (Acrae): Contributi alla storia dell'altipiano sono riscontrabili lunghe file di grandi ambienti, · acrennse nell'antichita, Rivista di Archeologia forse dei veri e propri magazzini aperti a sud, su ampi Cristiana VIII, 287-299. cortili. Avvolte sono giustapposte nella stessa unita REBUFFAT R. 1988: Les fermiers du desert, in: parti funzionali distinte. L 'Africa romana. Atti V Conv. di studio Sassari Appare logico ipotizzare, anche in ragione di 1987, Sassari, 33-68. queste differenziazioni formali e funzionali, I' esis- SODINI J.P. 1993: La contribution de l'archeologie a tenza di vari gruppi sociah: contadini e forse com- la connaisance dum onde byzantin (IV-VII siecle ), mercianti. Dumbarton Oaks Papers 47, 139-184. Peril mediterraneo centrale I 'importanza di Kau- TATE G. 1992: Les campagnes de la Syrie du Nord du kana per lo studio dell 'habitat urbano bizantino, non !le au VIle siecle, Inst. franc;:ais d' Arch. du Proche- appare affatto inferiore ai coevi abitati dell' Africa e Orient 133, Paris. del medio-oriente. Anzi, e sorprendente sia l'affinita WILSON R.J .A. 1990: Sicily under the Roman "urbanistica", che delle singole tecniche edilizie, Empire. The archeology of a Roman Province, proprio con i coevi villaggi dell a Siria del nord, dell' Warminster. area palestinese della Transgiordania, o del limes libico e tunisino. In modo particolare si puo richia- mare l'abitato di Ghirza o i villaggi di Behyo, Quatua e Refeda. Dott. Giovanni Di Stefano via B. Croce 6 97100 Ragusa Italia 38 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Andre Bazzana, Jolwny De Jl;feu/emeester & Andre Jl;fatthys Quelques aspects du peuplement medh~val du Vane de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) Depuis quelques annees, les recherches d'archeo- developper 1' etude du peuplement medieval du Valle logie medievale realisees dans la Peninsule iberique de Ricote, noyau geographique et administratif im- s 'orientent pour la plupart d'entre elles vers une appro- p !ante sur le moyen Segura; 1'expression recouvre, che globale des territoires amenages et exploites par apres la conquete chretienne du XIIIe siecle, les terri- l'homme: aux problemes d'une nature difficile, ou la toires d' Abanin, Blanca, Ojos, Ricote et Villanueva montagne est partout presente et ou I' eau vitale est mal de Rio Segura 1• Comme no us le verrons plus loin, le distribuee, s'ajoutent le vaste probleme historique de territoire de Ricote couvrait egalement, a 1'origine, la confrontation de deux societes que la religion diffe- celui de Cieza; et c 'est en epoque islamique deja, que rencie mais qui s'opposent surtout quand on examine 1'ensemble primitif de Ricote fut partage en deux les bases sociales et socio-economiques qui les carac- territoires castraux: Riqut et Siyasa. Sur un territoire terisent. Deux evenements majeurs marquent les relativement vaste, qui mesure un peu plus de 800km 2, regions d'al-Andalus au cours du Moyen Age: c'est, le hisn 2 primitif de Ricote associe des sites ruraux, d'une part, l'essor rapide et decisif d'une societe for- composes de hameaux et de villages, et des sites tement orientalisee, dans sa culture comme dans ses defensifs parmi lesquels figure peut-etre le premier pratiques quotidiennes -et le developpement de l'hy- Siyasa; les terroirs montrent la presence, des la haute draulique agraire en fait, a !'evidence, partie-, d'autre epoque, d'une complexe organisation d'hydraulique part, les mutations lentes ou brutales selon les cas qui agraire. Dans cette micro-region, s'est done develop- suivent le choc d'une conquete feodale deja largement pee une etude des structures conservees a travers deux entamee au Xle siecle (1085, prise de Tolede) mais qui epoques du peuplement: celle correspondant a la s'impose en deux temps, dans la premiere moitie du presence musulmane puis mudejare et celle corres- XIIIe siecle (1238, prise de Valence) puis a !'extreme pondant aux mutations de 1' epoque chretienne. fin du XVe siecle (1492, prise de Grenade). S 'agissant du territoire primitif de Ricote- inclu- La recherche, dont on presente ici quelques resul- ant I' actuelle zone de Siydsa- on tentera done, dans tats recents, s'inscrit dans le contexte de cette appro- les pages suivantes, de donner une description des che des societes andalouses et se place a lajonction de donnees archeologiques qui ont pu, a ce jour, etre deux axes thematiques refletant chacun une problema- recueillies, puis de presenter une premiere et encore tique historique specifique: !'etude des territoires, corn- tres incomplete etude du territoire de Cieza, en insis- me mode d'organisation et de mise en valeur des pay- tant -car c' est la I' objet de recherches recentes- sur sages mediterraneens, et !'analyse des structures irri- la vallee du Rio Segura et les terres irriguees qui la guees qui contribuent a fayonner ces paysages et a leur jalonnent. donner leur originalite technologique et ecologique. C' est la collaboration -scientifique, economique et technique- engagee depuis plusieurs annees entre 1 Le fleuve, la montagne et l'homme la Region wallonne, la Region autonome de Murcie, la Casa de Vehizquez (Madrid) et !'Unite Mixte de Dans la zone de Cieza I Ricote, le Rio Segura Recherche 5648 du C.N.R.S. (Lyon) qui a permis de passe a travers un paysage de montagne mediterra- Rodriguez Llopis 1988,26-27. Sur la signification de valle rocheux ou des fortifications medievales controlent la voie de ou de va/1, voir, s'agissant de la region voisine de Valence, passage; clans cet espace, les principaux noyaux du peuplement Bazzana 1992, 159-162. Le valle de Ricote forme, lui aussi, un (entre autres, les villes et les villages actuels) se rassemblent ensemble geographiquement coherent, un espace naturellement sous un nom unique qui correspond sans doute a celui de la delimite par un encadrement montagneux qui suit le f1euve structure castrale primitive. Segura et qui se referme, au nord et au sud, par deux goulots 2 hisn (pi. husun ): une fortification et son territoire castral. 39 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys neenne, paysage fort accidente, parseme, dans la village depasse 1'approche archeologique et rend vallee, de buttes temoins. Le fleuve est encastre entre difficile !'application de celle-ci en dehors des ele- les sierras. Dans le paysage, apparaissent divers ele- ments purement materiels et geographiques" 5 . Des ments physiques visibles, comme les chateaux, les lors, que peut done faire 1'archeologue, sinon se limi- hameaux, etc ... , d'autres elements venant de l'arche- ter a demontrer !'existence d'un habitat -plus que ologie agraire: parcellaires anciens, sites particuliers, d'un "village"- et des poles d'attraction que sont, dans comme le grenier d' Abanin. Les structures hydrau- le monde chretien, l'eglise et le chateau, et a dater les liques font naturellement partie des elements archeo- evolutions perceptibles? En terre d 'Islam, la pro- logiques que 1'on peut reconnaitre dans le paysage blematique reste globalement la meme, accordee rural: sources amenagees, barrages, canaux d 'irriga- cependant, dans le cadre d 'al-Andalus, aux caracteres tion, machines hydrauliques, etc., marquent non seu- d'une societe non feodale: ainsi, "chateau" sera pris lement le developpement historique des systemes non dans son sens de residence fortifiee privee, mais d'irrigation agraire mais aussi I' evolution de !'usage dans celui de hisn, c 'est-a-dire de fortification (par- des terres dans 1'agriculture regionale; 1' examen fois simple refuge) contr6lant un territoire castral archeographique de ces elements permet en meme organise et exploite par la communaute rurale. temps certaines interpretations chronologiques. D'au- tres donnees sont plus discretes, ainsi les informa- tions exploitables sur les limites des territoires anciens B. Les grandes unites du pays age qu'il faut chercher dans une assez longue histoire. S 'agissant des paysages, on distingue nettement les terres de regadio du fond de vallee formant la A. Peuplement et territoire huerta -un veritable jardin dans lequel les arbres fruitiers dominent- tandis que, plus haut, sur les Dans le monde rural medieval, le village peut etre terres de secano, ou terres d'agriculture seche, se defini comme le regroupement d 'hommes et de fem- cultivaient traditionnellement les cereales et la vigne. mes au sein d'un habitat qu'ils implantent, autour de Prise dans le sens transversal, au Moyen Age la certaines polarites qui sont principalement le chateau vallee se structure du fleuve a la ligne des cretes par et 1' edifice religieux3 . Si ce demier est, le plus souvent, la succession des elements suivants: zones humides le plus ancien, on ne dispose malheureusement que de fond de vallee, terres de regadio, les terres irri- tres rarement de renseignements sur la date de son guees, ligne des acequias islamiques, habitats, terres apparition; en general, il faut attendre la creation de de secano (d'extension relativement faible), patu- 1' autre point d' ancrage du village qu' est le chateau rages de versants et de montagne, monte et garrigues. pour qu'on soit assure de !'existence du village qui, Ce sont la, presente d 'une autre maniere les trois normalement, l'accompagne: c'est, en effet, la mise en elements habituels du systeme agraire andalous 6 , et place des cadres de pouvoir -done de la structure batie en general mediterraneen: qui en abrite les detenteurs ou les representants- qui les terres de parcours -vastes terrains de paturage marque habituellement la demiere etape du processus recouvrant les zones montagneuses, vers lesquelles de fixation du peuplement. C'est du moins la le sche- conduisaient les drailles et qui produisent le bois pour ma le plus commun, celui que des fouilles archeo- la construction et les chantiers navals, le sparte et logiques recentes viennent en partie remettre en cause; divers produits d'alimentation; il arrive, en effet, que des groupements d'hommes les terroirs de secano, domaine de la "culture soient anterieurs a la creation du premier edifice seche"' de 1' arboriculture et des cereales; religieux et du chateau. Sans doute, les realites sont- enfin les terroirs de regadio, ou les techniques de elles differentes en milieu chretien -ot1l'eglise parois- la petite hydraulique agraire permirent une exploi- siale est edifiee sous le contr6le des autorites reli- tation intensive des huertas et I 'introduction de gieuses ou la'iques- et en milieu islamique: la, !'emer- cultures d'origine orientale 7 . gence de la mosquee se revele plus spontanee. Pour sa part, 1'implantation du peuplement se Pour 1' archeologue qui analyse prioritairement les dessine schematiquement comme la juxtaposition vestiges materiels, il est tres difficile d'identifier le processus "d'encellulement" -pour employer later- minologie de Robert FossierC qui conduit au village: Pour le monde rural chretien, voir les developpements que pour que le village existe veritablement, il faut, au- consacre acette notion J.-M. Pesez 1992. Fossier 1992, 207-208. dela des aspects materiels analysables, que s 'y eta- Verhulst 1992, 10. blisse un "etat d'esprit villageois"; or, on sait bien, Perez Picazo & Lemeunier s.d., 67-68. avec Adriaan Verhulst, que la "definition large du Bolens 1990, 9-29. 40 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) Fig. 1.- Localisation du Va/le de Ricote. 0 - - 2lan I ... I ,. I ) ,, / r \ I I_ 1 ' I I/ \I / / I I r I ,/" ..... ---" Rlcote• Ojos • •Ulea ,--'~:~nueva de Rio Segura _ /'_1' ___ ,.., ..... • Archena ... I I I ( I ( ) I r' d'une serie de grandes cellules, composees chacune de guet et de refuge, d'ou doit etre donnee l'alertes de trois unites 8 : aux pasteurs, aux agriculteurs et aux defenseur du le centre comporte le chateau et un noyau de chateau. peuplement generalement fortifie, et appele en epo- Le Valle de Ricote comprend un site archeolo- que chretienne villa: ce terme renvoie non seulement gique tres particulier et unique, pour 1'instant, clans le a la realite materielle du chateau, mais surtout a la monde hispano-musulman: au contact de la zone de capacite defensive de la population, protegee par son regadio et au sommet du Cabezo de la Cobertera enceinte; celle-ci enveloppe un habitat fortifie mais, (butte temoin en bordure du fleuve), la vallee con- surtout, une societe consciente de sa cohesion et de serve en effet, les vestiges d 'un grenier forti fie du plus en plus independante du noyau castral; type des agadirs berberes 9 . Dans son ensemble, ce une zone etroite de culture est pratiquement limi- site du Cabezo ne presente guere de ressemblances tee aux secteurs de regadio; clans la huerta de Cieza, avec les autres sites islamiques etudies jusqu, a ce abandonnee au XIIIe siecle mais tres vite repeuplee, jour; les plus proches seraient cependant ces corn- les chretiens ne furent cependant pas en mesure de cultiver de nouveau toutes les terres abandonnees; un enorme territoire est, enfin, le domaine d'une Bazzana, Cressier & Guichard 1988. agriculture pratiquee temporairement et, surtout, des Pour les fouilles et leur interpretation ethno-archeologique recoltes naturelles; cette zone est parsemee de tours voir De Meulemeester & Matthys 1995. 41 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys partiments de plan cane adosses a 1'enceinte du 2 Riqiit, le hisn et le territoire Monte Marient ou visibles sur le site castral de Ux6 10 • C'est moins par recours a la documentation medie- La huerta du Rio Segura, entre Cieza, au nord, et vale que par reference aux comparaisons ethnogra- Ulea, au sud, est protegee et surtout controlee par phiques avec les greniers maghrebins que l'on peut quatre chateaux qui dominent la vallee depuis leurs expliquer ces vestiges. Au Maghreb, le grenier col- cretes rocheuses (fig.l). Au sud de la ville actuelle de lectif fortifie est ne d'une climatologie irreguliere Cieza, le fleuve passe a travers un goulot qui est pouvant entra1ner mauvaises recoltes et disette, aux- surveille par le chateau de Cieza. A environ 2500m quels s'ajoutait la continuelle menace du pillage: en aval du meandre, le Segura passe a nouveau a eloigne de I 'habitat quotidien, 1'agadir ou grenier travers un goulot, plus etroit encore que celui de collectif, est ainsi un edifice ou les Berberes emma- Cieza. Sur la crete qui surplombe le fleuve, rive gasinent recoltes et autres biens; c 'est souvent, aussi, gauche, fut implante le chateau de Blanca. Le village une forteresse situee en un lieu escarpe. Il semble que musulman se developpa au pied du chateau et sur sa les conditions naturelles et l'economie du pays aient pente septentrionale. A hauteur du village d'Ulea, a impose la necessite de stocker et que s'y soit ajoutee environ 6km en aval de Blanca, la vallee du Segura celle de parer aux ravages de la guerre; de la seraient s 'ouvre assez largement et la fin du trace encaisse du nes les greniers collectifs dont la presence suppose fleuve est controlee par les chateaux de Ricote, rive des communautes suffisamment organisees et egali- droite, et celui d'Ulea I Oj6s, rive gauche un peu en taires, ou le pouvoir appartient aux chefs de families avaJI 2. Plus loin, le controle est assure par le chateau dans le cadre de la tribu, de la fraction ou du village. d'Archena. Faut-il supposer la presence dans la vallee du Rio Segura, d'une telle societe, tirant ses traditions de celles des "republiques berberes"? Meme si la richesse A. Le chateau de la huerta devait reduire les risques de mauvaise recolte, l'insecurite de la premiere moitie du XIIIe S 'agissant du site de Ricote, plusieurs elements siecle etait suffisante pour conduire a proteger dans peuvent etre reunis. D' abord, la localite fortifiee arabe un agadir les biens des familles. est deja mentionnee a la fin du IXe siecle, a 1' occa- L 'habitat -groupe ou disperse, mais non forti fie- sion d 'une campagne des troupes omeyyades dans la des utilisateurs de 1, agadir eta it probablement situe kura de Tudmir, alors en rebellion contre Cordoue 13 ; entre regadio et secano, mais necessairement dans la ce tres ancien texte, sur lequel nous reviendrons, vallee, entre les noyaux actuels d' Abaran et Blanca, montre en effet !'importance du site et pose le pro- distants seulement de 3km. Le probleme fondamental bleme des limites de son territoire et de son organi- du site d'Abanin reste celui de son origine, vrai- sation. Veritable nid d'aigle de la Sierra de Ricote, le semblablement almohade, de cet etablissement chateau est construit sur une crete rocheuse de forme original: "Le grenier fortifie nalt de la coi'ncidence allongee, presque perpendiculaire a la vallee du Rio d'une certaine economie rurale et de la guene, que Segura, que le site domine d'une hauteur d'environ celle-ci so it effective ou seulement a 1'etat de menace 350m. Il controle a la fois le village de Ricote, situe permanente" 11 ; le grenier du Cabezo de la Cobertera dans une petite vallee laterale et la vallee du Segura conceme done bien une population agricole locale - ou sont etablies les prises d'eau destinees aux irriga- et voisine- confrontee au probleme de sa defense et tions locales. Le texte d'Ibn Hayyan, que nous men- de sa survie, face a une menace reelle ou imaginaire. tionnions plus haut, eclaire !'organisation spatiale du La ceramique paralt dater ce grenier de la premiere site. Ce hisn de Ricote est, en effet, un de ceux pour moitie du XIIIe siecle; il fut abandonne au moment lesquels on possede une mention tres ancienne; de la conquete chretienne ou, au plus tard, de la comme Tijola, a Almeria, Ricote (ou Riqllt) est signale rebellion mudejare de 1264. Le site, en ruine, fut des 896, date a laquelle le site est attaque par 1, armee partiellement reoccupe vers le milieu du XVe siecle: emirale. On decouvre acette occasion qu'il est con- archeologiquement parlant, cette nouvelle phase stitue d'une double structure emboltee: une qasaba marque le repeuplement du Valle de Ricote par des ou fortification installee au sommet du relief, et une mudejars venant du nord, de Hellin. zoned 'habitat et de refuge dont on sa it peu de choses 10 11 Monte Marinet: Bazzana 1990, 248, 370; Bazzana & Jacques-Meunie 1951, 185. 12 Pour !'instant, seuls les chateaux de Cieza, Blanca et Ricote Guichard 1988, 18; Bazzana 1992, 261; Ux6: Bazzana, CRESSIER & Guichard 1988, 212-216, 256; Bazzana 1990, 248; ont fait l'objet d 'une prospection et de !eves topographiques. 13 Carrnona Gonzalez 1990, 27. Bazzana 1992, 260. 42 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) I I / \ \ \ ' ( J ) J / ( .) ./ 0 - - 2km Fig. 2. - Les territoires primitifs de Cieza et de Ricote. sinon qu'elle dispose d'une enceinte defensive, ou siecle, puis, vers la fin de 1'epoque islamique, le hizdm 14; ce double niveau de fortifications atteste chateau joue encore un role important clans les !'existence d'un noyau important de peuplement, rebellions anti-almohades ( 1228-1241) -entre autres complete peut-etre par celui qui s'installe a l'exte- celle que dirige Ibn Hud- puis clans la revolte mude- rieur de 1'enceinte. Par la suite, les textes arabes ne jare anti-castillane de 1264-1266: ce fut, ace moment, sont pas tres prolixes et le meme site apparait sous le demier bastion musulman de la region; il fut des noms divers -al-Sukur = Ricote 15 , Wadi Riqut = ensuite abandonne. Rio Ricote 16- sans qu'on apprenne rien de plus a son propos. Le plan simplifie qui en a ete etabli montre comment les constructeurs ont adapte le chateau au B. Les limites territoriales terrain nature!, dont il epouse etroitement la forme; on distingue bien aussi la division spatiale du site en Il est difficile de delimiter avec certitude les deux parties, qui constituent d'une part un secteur territoires anciens puisqu'on ne peut pas toujours defensif, de superficie restreinte mais a forte valeur tenir compte des limites communales actuelles. Les militaire et strategique, d 'autre part une assez vaste limites territoriales d' epoque islamique n 'ont pas basse-cour a double fonction d'habitat et de refuge; des trouvailles ceramiques de surface attestent une occupation au Xle siecle. Ces caracteres font du cha- 14 Ibid.; voir Bazzana, Cressier & Guichard 1988, 55. teau de Ricote un exemple classique parmi les forti- IS Bazzana, Cressier & Guichard 1988, 67. fications musulmanes d'al-Andalus 17 . Ricote est de 16 Guichard, 1990/91. nouveau mentionne clans les textes a partir du XIIe 17 Voir, Bazzana, Cressier & Guichard 1988, passim. 43 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys toujours ete conservees et les centres du peuplement actuelle reflete apparemment une situation ancienne. chretien (medieval ou modeme) correspondent sou- Ainsi, la limite communale entre Cieza et Abad.n suit vent a des rearrangements du territoire castral arabe un trace plus ou mains rectiligne, determine sur la dont les terroirs ont ete repartis de fas:on plus egali- rive droite du Segura par une ligne de crete et sur la taire entre les differentes aldeas dependantes de la rive gauche par la Rambla del Moro 21 . En revanche, villa qui fonctionne comme chef-lieu 18 ; pour le Valle ce n'est que dans sa partie septentrionale que la limite de Ricote, il s'agit de la villa du meme nom. On sait entre Blanca et Abaran suit une ligne naturelle de cependant que, dans al-Andalus, les communautes crete; ensuite, depuis les hauteurs de la Sierra de la islamiques dum onde rural s 'organisaient dans le cadre Pilajusqu'au fleuve, elle para1t mains rationnelle: sur d'un territoire qui regroupait des terres de categories la rive droite, elle s'approche d'abord du pied du et de qualites complementaires, quelques noyaux de Cabezo de la Cobertera, avant de partager ce site de peuplement et un chateau -le hisn-, centre et sym- grenier fortifie en deux, puis elle presente un trace bole de la communaute, et qui pouvait etre utilise tres artificiel qui, sans doute, reflete le partage, en comme refuge en cas de guerres ou de difficultes. epoque chretienne d'un territoire villageois plus Comment retrouver les limites des anciens terri- ancien. Les autres limites communales entre Abaran toires? Les limites actuelles ne sont utilisables que si I Blanca d'une part, Ricote d'autre part, suivent a des documents contemporains de la conquete chre- nouveau une ligne de crete, ce qui correspond a un tienne peuvent demontrer qu' elles correspondent aux schema tout a fait habitue! qui pourrait remonter au anciennes: c'est tres souvent le cas a Valence mais on IXe siecle. Dans le reste du Valle de Ricote, le village ne peut generaliser les resultats qui y ont ete obte- de Oj6s semble aussi etre ne d'une amputation du nus19; meme la localisation actuelle d'un centre de territoire d'Ulea: les deux centres, eloignes seulement peuplement de 1'importance de Cieza est contestable, de quelque 1500m, sont separes, sur la rive gauche, dans la mesure ou elle repond a des mutations his- par une ligne de crete qui passe -elle aussi et de ma- toriques recentes. Quant aux unites territoriales, tres niere tout a fait anormale- a travers le site du chateau differentes les unes des autres par leurs dimensions d'Ulea! Ajoutons que !'on peut remarquer, dans le spatiales 20 , il existe des exemples aussi bien de fortes Valle de Ricote, que les habitats situes pres du fleuve modifications comme de conservation de ce qui s 'etendaient, a I' origine, sur les deux rives: Abaran I existait avant la conquete. Dans quelques zones d'al- Blanca et Oj6s I Ulea. L'actuel Ricote ne touche le Andalus, on a pu demontrer le mode d 'organisation fleuve que sur 200m a peine, au pied du relief sur et de distribution spatiale des territoires castraux: lequel fut implante le chateau. Pour 1'instant, 1'ana- !'observation concrete du terrain comme une lecture lyse des limites communales actuelles permet de pen- attentive de la documentation ecrite le permettent et, ser que, en epoque islamique, mais en un moment non si les textes arabes ne mentionnent que le nom du determine, la vallee du Rio Segura faisait partie d'un chateau, les documents chretiens sont, sur ce point, seul hisn 22 , deja mentionne ala fin du IXe siecle 23 ; au beaucoup plus precis. nord se trouvait 1'actuel territoire de Cieza, au sud Dans la vallee moyenne du Segura, le val de celui du Valle de Ricote 24 , dont faisait partie les Ricote montre une organisation complexe qui semble, territoires actuels de Ricote, Aban'm, Blanca, Oj6s et a partir d'un territoire unique, eclater en plusieurs Ulea, separes seulement a 1'epoque chretienne cellules juxtaposees: Abanl.n I Blanca, Oj6s I Ulea et Ricote proprement dit; au contraire, un peu plus au nord, le territoire de Cieza para1t avoir conserve ses C. L 'etude du regadio limites anciennes et passe, sans modification pro- fonde de structure, a 1'ordre militaire de Santiago. Dans tout le Sud-Est espagnol, 1'irrigation est elle Entre les seigneuries de Cieza et de Ricote, cette une necessite geographique? I! semble que non. En limite eta it la me me a 1, epoque mudejare et la limite effet, si nous laissons de cote le secteur semi-deser- 18 Guichard 1983, 87-93. toires castraux valenciens". 19 Bazzana 1992, 221 donne des exemples ou les limites terri- 21 Rambla: lit torrentiel aecoulement sporadique; voir Herin, toriales restent inchangees; lorsqu'il y a des modifications, elles s.d., 13. 22 Bazzana 1992, 223; plusieurs exemples, que fournit la zone sont de trois sortes: I. amputation du territoire musulman pour la creation de nouvelles entites, 2. distribution entre plusieurs situee au Nord de Valence, conquise par le roi Jaimel entre 1234 seigneuries des terres d'un hisn, 3. parfois, le regroupement de et 123 8, montrent comment les nouveaux conquerants ont plusieurs husun. conservees les limites territoriales anciennes au moment ou 20 Voir l'exemple du Shark ai-Andalus, ou apparaissent de commence le processus de feodalisation de la region. 23 Carrnona Gonzalez 1990,27. nombreux husun: BAZZANA 1992, 287-307; Guichard 1990/91, 24 document 43, "Donnees comparees sur quelques castra et terri- Ibid. 44 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Yalle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) tique du Sud de la region valencienne (avec Orihuela "boom" hydraulique, qui commence vers 1480. Les et Elche), le milieu nature! permettait pendant le grands reseaux de regadio qui s 'organisent alors Moyen Age la culture de quelques arbres xerophiles s'etendent al'echelle de toute une region et sont assez -figuiers, oliviers, caroubiers- ou de plantes qui differents des microsystemes qu 'avaient mis en place achevent de murir au debut de l'ete (orge et ble par les Musulmans. exemple). Ceci signifie clairement que le regadio est un fait culture!. Le resultat de differentes recherches menees aussi a) Problemes de methodologie bien en Espagne qu'au Portugal ou au Maroc, montre que, au Moyen Age, les agriculteurs islamiques utili- Une autre difficulte, latente mais bien reelle, des saient simultanement quatre modeles technologiques recherches sur les irrigations medievales est la rarete pour recuperer de 1'eau; il s'agit d'irrigations qui uti- des documents les concernant; 1' epoque chretienne lisent: fournit cependant -principalement a partir du XVe - soit les sources alimentant des bassins, comme les siecle- une documentation exploitable, qui montre marges des Baleares qui d'ailleurs, rappellent des un developpement rapide apartir de I' etablissement systemes semblables trouves au Yemen 25 ; de la paix en 149229 , et qui permet de mieux con- - so it des puits dont 1'eau est tiree a1' aide d'un reci- na1:tre I 'histoire sociale des epoques anterieures. La pient attache a une simple corde ou a un balancier, rarete est quasi to tale pour 1' epoque islamique ou les systeme mediterraneen par excellence, repandu aussi geographes pas plus que les chroniqueurs ne se dans toute !'Europe du Sud-Est26 ; livrent jamais a une description precise des espaces - soit les roues elevatoires, comme la noria (de agraires et de leurs modes de mise en valeur. On I' arabe nd 'ura) avec sa roue verticale installee sur un cherchera vainement des textes arabes relatifs aux canal ou sur la riviere elle-meme, ou la sdniya (arabe, regadios de Cieza ou de Ricote, mais on pourra en catalan cenia ou sinia), roue a double tambour mobiliser quelques informations, d' ordre general, sur supportant des cordes auxquelles sont attaches les I' existence meme des reseaux et sur leur fonction- godets de terre cuite 27 ; nement, dans la litterature agronomique etudiee par soit, en fin, les divers systemes d' acequias ou Lucie Bolens30 , ou dans les recueils (seule trace ecrite canaux qui transportent 1' eau deviee d'une riviere par d'un droit coutumier, essentiellement oral) de con- un barrage, ou de qanats' sortes de galeries a pente sultations juridiques31 • legere, ventilees par des puits verticaux alignes 28 • Comment, dans ces conditions, men er 1'enquete et tenter de restituer une cartographie des structures Selon les travaux les plus recents, le grand deve- d'irrigation d'epoque islamique? La methodologie loppement du regadio se situe en pleine epoque employee s'appuie sur les methodes de travail de islamique, vers les IXe et Xe siecles; puis, apres le "1 'archeologie extensive" et privilegie done les pro- XIIIe siecle et en epoque chretienne, Valence et spections de terrain, 1' analyse de photographies Murcie connaissent une nouvelle phase d'expansion; aeriennes 32 et la modelisation des resultats obtenus une autre se place a la fin du Moyen Age, si impor- lors des etudes de cas les plus productives (celles qui tante que certains auteurs ont parle d'un veritable concernent le debut de l'epoque chretienne). Deux observations restent afaire. La premiere concerne les travaux hydrauliques -captage de 1' eau par barrages, 25 Pirenne 1977. deviations, canaux et micro-systemes de conduits- 26 Voir un exemple medieval dans Butzer et alii 1985, 492- qui, une fois construits, marquent definitivement le 493 et fig.?; id., 495-496 et fig. I!. paysage, introduisant ce que Miquel Barcel6 33 appelle 27 Voir Colin 1932, 22-60; Colin 1933, 156-157; Torres Bal- le "principe de rigidite", veritable "loi" qui interdit basl940, 192-208; Torres Balbas 1942, 461-469; Schioler 1962, 480-486; Schioler 1973; Bazzana & Montmessin, sous presse. les modifications de detail ou les transformations 28 Bertrand & Cressier1985, 115-135; Bertrand & Cressier partielles de la structuration de l'espace agraire: a 1986, 569-5 80; Barcel6 et alii, 1986. Cieza, Abaran I Blanca ou Ricote, certains elements 29 Voir Rodriguez Llopis 1988; Lemeunier, sous presse. 30 du systeme hydraulique islamique (Xe-XIIIe siecles) Bolens 1974; Bolens 1981; Bolens 1989, 71-87; Bolens 1990. res tent reconnaissables a travers celui de I' epoque 31 M. de Epalsa 1988; V. Lagardere 1991. chretienne (XVe et XVIe siecle, principalement); ni 32 Vol americain de l'annee 1956, vols plus recents et de la conquete feodale du XIIIe siecle ni les phases suc- meilleure qualite de "Hacienda" vers 1974, puis de IRYDA. cessives de depeuplement et repeuplement des XIVe- 33 Barcel6 1989. XVe siecles n' ont pu effacer les traces des epoques 34 Communication de M. Barcel6 au Castrum5 a Murcie (Castrum5. Archeologie des espaces agraires, Madrid-Rome, anterieures. Enfin, il convient de bien connaitre les sous presse). principes elementaires qui regissent le fonctionne- 45 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys ment des espaces irrigues clans 1'Islam medievaP 4 . nes. Dans une des vallees laterales importantes, for- Toute possibilite d' acces a 1'eau est mise a profit et mee par la Rambla de Benito, cette acequia court au les conditions technologiques sont des plus simples: sommet d'un aqueduc qui traverse une petite vallee elles ne requierent aucun investissement majeur, ni laterale; une analyse de la ma<;onnerie de briques et n' imposent le recours a un specialiste de 1'hydrau- des modes de mise en reuvre indique qu'il fut con- lique; elles sont le fruit d'un savoir paysan, d'une struite a la fin du XVe siecle ou clans la premiere tradition transmise a travers les siecles, a laquelle se moitie du XVIe siecle, c'est-a-dire au moment d'une mele cependant la connaissance theorique des prin- nouvelle colonisation du Valle de Ricote; il servait a cipes de base du nivellement et des ecoulements par irriguer de nouveaux terrains plus eloignes du fleuve. gravite; I 'un des moyens les plus simples -en meme Des deux cotes du fleuve, les canaux principaux sui- temps que le plus commun et le plus repandu- vent la limite entre les terres les plus basses et les consiste, en amont des terrains a irriguer, a deriver en premieres collines, au relief plus accidente; ainsi, sur partie, grace a un barrage, les eaux du fleuve vers la la rive gauche, on voit le canal contoumer systema- bouche d'entree d'un canal d'irrigation: la pente tiquement les petites hauteurs sur lesquelles -sous naturelle du fleuve etant plus forte que celle du canal, forme de batiments isoles ou de petits hameaux- est le gain en altitude est suffisant pour amener l'eau, a implante 1'habitat. Au sud d' Abaran, 1'Acequia de travers un ensemble de canaux ramifies souvent con- Blanca est prolongee par 1'Acequia de Abaran, qui struits en terre, vers les champs, ou des systemes peu suit les premieres pentes sur lesquelles est installee la sophistiques mais efficaces de vannes et d 'obturations vieille ville d' Abaran et ses extensions plus recentes; temporaires permettent 1'irrigation des parcelles. le canal dessert encore un moulin avant de rejoindre le f!euve. Il est presque certain que ces acequias sont, au moins pour une partie de leur trace, d'origine b) Le systeme actuellement visible arabe 37 . Des deux cotes du Rio Segura, les canaux franchissent le goulot de Blanca. Rive droite, la Char- On distingue trois secteurs principaux, que 1'on raca irrigue encore quelques terres agricoles avant de decrira sommairement avant de detailler celui du rejoindre la riviere. Rive gauche, 1'Acequia de Blanca territoire actuel de Cieza. passe sous la ville actuelle: le trace tortueux de la rue - Le premier tron<;on dessert la huerta de Cieza; il principale --qui sert de limite entre la partie d'origine se developpe sur les deux rives du fleuve, les pre- arabe et la partie chretienne de la villa de Blanca- mieres "prises" d' eau etant situees a une dizaine de correspond au trace de 1' acequia qui suit la limite kilometres a l'Ouest de la ville. On retrouve encore, entre les hauteurs situees au pied du chateau ou se aussi bien sur la photographie aerienne que sur le trouvait 1'habitat islamique, et les terres basses, occu- terrain, la boucle d'une ancienne acequia, vraisem- pees seulement apres la conquete. Le canal rejoint le blablement d'epoque islamique, qui circonscrit les fleuve en aval de la ville de Blanca. terrains bordant le meandre juste en amont de Cieza. - Le troisieme tron<;on est constitue par les canaux Sur la rive gauche comme sur la rive droite, les eaux de Ricote-Oj6s-Ulea. Au pied du chateau de Ricote, canalisees rejoignent le Segura en aval de Cieza, qui ainsi domine et controle les prises d 'eau, un bar- juste avant la limite territoriale qui la separe rage alimentait deux canaux, un de chaque cote du d 'Abanin: frontiere, en epoque islamique, entre les fleuve; il est recouvert par 1'amenagement modeme hisn/s de Siyasa et d' Abanin. de la centrale electrique, qui ferme aujourd 'hui le - Le deuxieme tron<;on conceme le territoire de goulot de Ricote. On ne reconnait dans ce secteur Blanca I Abanl.n. Deux acequias principales prennent qu'un seul trace de canal principal, avec, sur la rive leurs eaux, respectivement rive gauche et rive droite, gauche, une seule noria; on constatera d 'ailleurs que a la limite du territoire avec Cieza et parcourent la la vallee n'est pas tres large a cet endroit et ne pre- huerta jusqu'a la petite ville de Blanca. Sur la rive sente pas non plus de vallees laterales, ce qui rend gauche, I' Acequia de Blanca a son origine a la prise inutile la construction d' acequias supplementaires. dite "del Menju", sur 1' embouchure de la Rambla del Le parcellaire y a ete fortement modifie, mais la pre- Moro; au long de son cours, elle est aujourd'hui equi- sence, sur le trace actuel, d'irrigations d'epoque mu- pee de trois norias, celle de Don Garcia, la Principale sulmane parait assuree. Comme a Blanca, les deux et celle de F emandez 35 . La tradition orale locale 36 date l'etat actuel de la noria de Don Garcia du XIXe siecle, mais fait remonter sa construction a 1' epoque 35 Martinez Soler & Banegas Ortiz 1994. d 'Isabelle la Catholique a la fin du XVe siecle; les 36 Note en novembre 1994 aupres d'un huertano. autres sont plus recentes. Sur la rive droite, 1'Acequia 37 Compte tenu de la topographie du terrain, ils n'ont pu etre de Charraca, conserve deux norias, toutes deux moder- modifies ou deplaces. 46 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) [A) • Boom hydraullque • et ~poque moderne [B) Epoque chr~tlenne (raccordements) [C) Epoque lslamlque 0 500m Fig. 3.- Interpretation- apartir d'une photo aerienne- du secteur irrigue du moyen Segura en amont de la vi/le de Cieza. Les acequias des differentes epoques (A, Bet C) et le parcellaire en lamelles des premiers terrains irrigues (C); 1. localisation d 'une eventuelle noria irriguant les terres situees en amont; 2. passage en tunnel du canal. canaux depassent le goulot d'Ulea I Oj6s. Sur la rive - le reseau de developpement actuel ou sub-actuel, gauche, 1' acequia passe sous les maisons d 'Ulea pour qui utilise des eaux "extemes" provenant des nappes a alimenter un moulin situe 1' extremite orientale du phreatiques (remontees par pompes electriques) ou village; puis elle rejoint le Segura. Sur la rive droite des adductions artificielles (par tuyaux souterrains et en revanche, 1' acequia poursuit son cours vers la ville tunnels) venant d'autres bassins hydrauliques (sur- de Villanueva del Rio Segura, puis en aval de celle- tout celui du Tage), ci. La presence d'une autre acequia entre le fleuve et - le reseau modeme, decrit par les textes chretiens le canal venant de Ricote I Oj6s permet de considerer et dont le trace remonte a plusieurs epoques mais celui-ci comme plus recent. De toute fayon, clans cette principalement aux XV e-XVIe siecles 38 , partie du val de Ricote, la longueur des acequias - enfin le reseau d'epoque islamique, dont nous signale des amenagements d'epoque chretienne. allons tenter de retrouver quelques portions et d' en a Plusieurs problemes se posent l'examen des sys- comprendre le fonctionnement. temes hydrauliques du Valle de Ricote. Ils sont anciens, mais sont-ils medievaux ou antiques? Les phases chro- nologiques de leur mise en place, peuvent-elles etre 3 Le reseau hydraulique de Cieza I Ricote etablies et qu'avait-il avant le premier reseau? Com- ment ces systemes se sont-ils maintenus atravers les On sait que 1'hydraulique, qui fait partie des con- siecles et quelle confiance peut-on faire aux obser- naissances agronomiques, a ete etudiee et divulguee vations realisees aujourd'hui sur des structures aussi par les agronomes andalous 39 ; les donnees que pro- fragiles? La reponse a cette demiere question releve cure cette documentation peuvent etre completees de la reflexion methodologique: on sait que, tout au par quelques textes juridiques40 qui, de favon partielle long des epoques modeme et contemporaine, les et occasionnelle, expliquent les modes habituels canaux ont du etre repares, voire reconstruits; leurs traces cependant sont restes les memes. 38 Pour 1'observateur d 'aujourd 'hui, trois systemes se Communication personnelle de Guy Lemeunier. 39 Bolens 1981. superposent, les plus recents venant reutiliser des 40 Glick 1970; de Epalsa 1988, 13-19; Barcel6 1989, VIII-L; portions, conservees ou remodelees selon un trace Bolens 1989, 71-87; Lagardere 1991, 83-122; Lagardere 1992, identique: 213-225. 47 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys d'usage et de gestion de !'eau. Cependant, une autre demarche prend appui sur les methodes de travail de categorie documentaire facilite la comprehension du ce que I'on appelle "I 'archeologie extensive"42 , c 'est- fonctionnement des systemes islamiques: depuis quel- a-dire que sont privilegiees les prospections au sol, ques annees, c'est l'archeologie qui montre !'organi- I' analyse de photographies aeriennes et un essai de sation spatiale et les caracteres technologiques de modelisation des resultats obtenus a partir des etudes I'hydraulique agraire andalouse 41 . de cas les plus productives; la carte permet la repre- sentation et la mise en evidence des informations recueillies mais c'est la photographie aerienne verti- A. Problbnatique gemirale cale (avec, par exemple, des agrandissements au 11 5000) que se trouve etre le document de base de la On sait que, pour anciens qu'ils soient, les travaux recherche: elle nous procure, en effet, les indices qui hydrauliques s' inscrivent dans les paysages et lais- permettent de diriger et d'orienter les prospections, et sent des traces qui peuvent traverser les siecles. Dans foumit quelques donnees de chronologie relative la huerta de Murcie comme dans la partie basse du eclairant !'evolution du paysage. Le mode de raison- cours du Segura (entre Orihuela et la mer), plusieurs nement, a partir des traces revelees par les cliches etudes ont ete effectuees recemment. Certes, I' arche- aeriens recents -qui revelent souvent, on le sait, une ologie hydraulique de la huerta murcienne propre- realite disparue- tente de remonter aux siecles ante- ment dite reste, en bonne partie, a faire; toutefois, on rieurs afin de retrouver, dans la mesure du possible, commence a disposer d'informations concemant les I' etat medieval des structures etudiees; un principe de axes principaux de la structuration du paysage agraire. base est que le trace des installations hydrauliques S'il est impossible, par manque de donnees, de poser agraires repond a une veritable "loi" qui interdit les globalement le probleme des espaces agricoles de modifications et les transformations partielles: dans toute une region, on peut en revanche proposer de la majorite des cas, le paysage reste dans l'etat ou il nouvelles problematiques a propos des regadios me- etait au debut, seulement touche par les mutations dievaux, de leurs origines et de leurs phases d) evo- majeures qui sont, dans notre exemple de Cieza I lution. Abanin, la conquete feodale du XIIIe siecle ou les phases successives de depeuplement I repeuplement des XIVe-XVe siecles. B. Considerations methodologiques Ce type de recherche suppose quelques difficultes C. Les sources chretiennes nous eclairent sur les methodologiques. La premiere resulte directement regadios du bas Moyen Age des realites du terrain prospecte. I! s'agit d'abord de zones de vallee densement occupees et avec de nom- Les travaux recents des geographes, tout comme breuses constructions. Ensuite, la huerta connait une ceux des historiens de I' epoque modeme ont mis au mise en culture dans laquelle orangers et citronniers jour !'organisation spatiale et territoriale des rega- dominent largement; la prospection de tels vergers, dios ciezans. Mais le probleme subsiste de savoir peu ou pas laboures s'avere difficile. De plus, il s'agit quelles sont les modifications d'epoque chretienne et d' etudes urgentes puisque les destructions actuelles, quel etait le premier regadio musulman. dues a I' extension urbaine, a la reorganisation des axes Pendant I' epoque chretienne, la premiere evolu- de circulation et, surtout, a I' amenagement, depuis tion que I' on constate met en evidence, se Ion G. les annees quatre-vingt de nouveaux canaux d'irriga- Lemeunier, une forte extension des perimetres irri- tion, arrachent ou effacent toutes traces des anciens gues et une consolidation des infrastructures 43 ; le systemes; seul le trace, laisse plus ou moins intact, meme auteur pen se que, avant, c 'est-a-dire a la fin de subsiste. l'epoque islamique, l'economie agricole de Madlna Une autre difficulte, latente mais bien reelle a Siyasa reposait sur la mise en valeur d 'un regadio I'heure de rassembler des informations sur les irri- alimente par les eaux du Segura, grace au canal "de gations medievales, est la rarete de la documentation ecrite: rarete relative pour I' epoque chretienne, rarete quasi totale pour l'epoque islamique. Comment, done, 41 Voir, par exemple, Kirchner & Navarro 1994, 159-182. faire cette enquete et tenter une reconstitution theo- rique des structures d'irrigation d'epoque islamique? Voir, comme synthese rapide des problemes poses par les techniques de regadfo et de maltrise de !'eau au Moyen Age, La methodologie suivie est simple mais i1 est bon de Bazzana 1994, 317-335. la preciser, ne serait-ce que pour que le lecteur en 42 Bazzana & Guichard 1988. saisisse les possibilites mais aussi les limites. La 43 Lemeunier, s.p. 48 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) 1'Andelma" (aujourd'hui appele Acequia de Lander- '- .. ........_ \ ma); sur la rive gauche, quelques hameaux exploi- \ ) taient les eaux provenant des sources de Ascoy, d'El Ojo et de Bolvax 44 . Anterieures a la realisation de prospections archeologiques, ces idees ne sont pas fausses et mettent bien en relation -et avec raison-la \ . trace hypothettque (epoque C) vie de la madina islamique et !'existence d'un sys- micro-strig~tions (parcelbire teme elabore d'irrigation. I1 convient cependant de completer et, surtout, nuancer ces affirmations: on D mis en place en cpoque is la mique) [C) Epoque lslamlque verra plus loin qu 'il n' existait pas un seul regadio, au pied des pentes descendant de Siyasa, mais que plusieurs zones basses, dans les meandres du Segura etaient aussi utilisees clans un systeme original et complexe qui dessinait, tout au long du fleuve, une sorte de cha\'ne de terres irriguees; de meme, il faudra imaginer qu'on ne peut penser, pour l'epoque ante- rieure au milieu du XIIIe siecle, a !'existence d'une seule -et longue, evidemment- acequia sur la rive droite; de meme que pour la rive gauche, il ne s'agis- sait pas d'un canal unique mais d'un succession de plusieurs canaux, courts et charges chacun d'irriguer un espace de petites dimensions. [B) Epoque chretlenne (raccordements) Le "boom hydraulique" commence vers 1'annee 1480 et se prolonge pendant un peu plus d'un siecle; apres la construction de la Acequia del Homo, dans la premiere moitie du XVIe siecle, on peut considerer que le systeme est pratiquement acheve: il ne va pas se modifier ensuite sauf quand viennent a se deve- lopper -mais seulement dans notre XXe siecle- de nouveaux moyens techniques (puits profonds, pom- pes electriques, transvases, etc.). Apres la conquete chretienne, les seigneurs castil- lans avaient interet non seulement a repeupler les territoires conquis (ou, au moins, a essayer de main- tenir sur place les populations musulmanes), mais aussi a mettre en etat de marche le systeme d'irri- gation, base de prosperite economique pour toute la Fig. 4. - Evolution du systeme hydraulique et de region. Pour cela, les seigneurs ne tarderent pas a !'implantation des canaux atravers les phases principales investir pour assurer aterme une croissance de leurs du developpement du reseau des acequias. revenus: quand, en 1483, le Commandeur de l'Ordre de Santiago signe avec les mudejares de Hellin une charte de repeuplement du village d' Abaran, illeur provenaient de ces sources que l'on trouvait princi- promet de reparer et d' entretenir les canaux qui pren- palement sur la rive droite; certaines auraient ete nent de 1'eau dans le fleuve. mises en etat de production par les agriculteurs musul- mans; quelques vestiges, dont parlent certains docu- ments, etaient encore visibles et fonctionnels aux D. Le regadio medieval de Cieza XVe et XVIe siecles; ce type d'amenagements susci- tait alors une grande surprise: on les disait "construits L'etude des structures de la petite hydraulique avec une technique incroyable". Peu de traces de agraire qui apparaissent sur le territoire de Cieza mon- 1'utilisation des sources se conservent; en revanche il tre 1'existence de sources naturelles exploitees depuis reste possible d'etudier les traces des canaux et d'en les premiers siecles du Moyen Age: elles se trouvent tirer quelques elements chronologiques. associees a quelques petits noyaux d'habitat situes sur les pentes de la vallee mais assez loin du fleuve; 44 en epoque islamique, une partie des eaux d'irrigation Ibid. 49 A. Bazzana, I. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys a) Structuration et chronologie cher deux epoques distinctes (1 'une etant plus recente que !'autre): les acequias hautes correspondraient On est conduit a distinguer trois phases chronolo- alors a 1'epoque A -la plus proche d' auj ourd 'hui dont giques: une phase A, qui correspond au developpement les donnees historiques indiquent une construction se du systeme des canaux durant le "boom hydraulique" situant aux XVe et XVIe siecles; les acequias basses du XVIe siecle; une phase B, caracterisee par les pre- a une epoque B ou C, anterieure a la precedente et mieres reparations d'epoque chretienne; enfin, une qu' il n' est pas illogique, si 1'on tient compte de ce phase C, qui correspond au reseau d'epoque islamique. que 1'on sa it des irrigations musulmanes de Cieza, de L' examen des photos aeriennes et la prospection au sol situer avant la conquete chretienne. De toute maniere, montrent 1' existence, sur les deux rives du Segura, les acequias hautes, dont les prises sont installees en d'un double reseau d' acequias. Apartir des premieres amont de ce1les qui alimentent les acequias basses, "prises", situees a 1'Ouest de la ville, il faudrait dis- ne peuvent etre que posterieures a 1'epoque islami- tinguer deux series de canaux (epoques A et B). que; la presence meme de ces acequias hautes est en - Au Nord du Segura, sur la rive gauche, une ace- contradiction complete avec ce que l'on sait du droit quia suit la limite entre les terres basses, disposees le islamique des eaux: les traditions juridiques inter- long du fleuve, et les premieres pentes des collines disent que l'on s'approprie les eaux d'un fleuve (ou voisines qui offrent un relief plus accidente (epoque d'un canal) au-dessus d'un barrage deja existant, car B); le trace de cette acequia presente une particularite ce serait un veritable vol de 1'eau a ceux qui y etaient sur laquelle on devra s'interroger: pourquoi, a plu- insta11es les premiers 45 . sieurs reprises, s'eloigne-t-elle du fleuve -ce qui per- Sur la rive droite, un canal "ancien", c'est-a-dire met d' irriguer une zone assez vaste- pour ensuite se d'epoque B ou C et appelee Acequia Landerma -il rapprocher de nouveau du lit du Segura, comment si figure clans les textes medievaux sous le nom de elle essayait de le rejoindre? En realite, elle s'en "Canal de 1'Andelma"46- parcourt les terres plus pres eloigne une nouvelle fois afin d'alimenter une nou- du fleuve; il est, pour ainsi dire, double quelques velle zone irriguee. Une autre acequia -dite "Del metres plus ha ut par la Acequia Nueva; entre le "vieux Homo", du nom d 'un ham eau proche de la prise canal" et le fleuve, le parcellaire, vu sur les photos (construite en 1600)- prend ses eaux a trois kilo- aeriennes, presente une disposition caracteristique en metres en amont du premier canal et se trouve situee micro-strigations paralleles ou en leger eventail. C'est sur les premieres pentes des collines qui bordent la ce que l'on remarque bien, parmi d'autres exemples, vallee (epoque A); elle presente un parcours plus avec les parce11es situees clans le meandre de la rive tourmente qui lui permet de penetrer toutes les petites gauche, en aval de la ville: la, cependant, une double depressions ou vallees laterales, ou de bonnes terres orientation des parce1les pourrait signal er un essai de sont disponibles: la surface irriguee est des lors beau- restructuration realise a une epoque inconnue. Une coup plus ample; elle acheve son cours clans le fleuve, rapide prospection au sol montre que ces parce11es au lieu-dit "Del Menju". avaient initialement une largeur moyenne d'environ - Au Sud, sur la rive droite, apparait la meme dis- 7m. Sur l'une comme sur !'autre rive, les eaux cana- position spatiale de deux acequias distinctes: il s' agit lisees retournent au Segura en aval de Cieza, juste de la Acequia Landerma ( ou canal "de 1'Andelma", avant d'arriver ala limite territoriale qui separe cette clans la documentation medievale) et de la Acequia ville du territoire d 'Abanin: limite ou frontiere mi- Nueva; elle sont separees par des distances variables neure d'epoque islamique tardive, entre les chateaux selon les cas (parfois seulement quelques dizaines de de Siyasa et de Blanca. metres); le differentiel d'altitude etant de l'ordre de S'agissant des acequias basses, l'examen des quelques metres, ce qui est bien suffisant pour aug- photos aeriennes revele un phenomene particulier: menter sensiblement 1'espace irrigue. les canaux suivent un trace presentant quelques ano- I1 s'agit done d'une double serie de deux canaux malies; en completant notre information par des don- qui apparait sur la carte, sur les photos aeriennes et nees de terrain, cinq series d'elements apparaissent. sur le terrain. I1 est clair que nous devons regrouper On a deja note que le canal de 1'Andelma, en un typologiquement, d'une part les deux acequias les trace date de l'epoque B, semblait dessiner, a partir plus proches du fleuve (acequias basses), d'autre part de la prise Del Menju, une courbe de grande ampleur; les deux autres, implantees sur les pentes des collines a la fin de cette courbe, il se rapprochait du fleuve, (acequias hautes); il convient d'interpreter cette dou- passant a peine a quelques metres du lit actuel. ble realite en fonction du "principe de rigidite" dont nous avons parle et selon lequell 'une comme 1'autre repondent a des logiques differentes. Si l'on veut 45 Bolens 1989; Lagardere 1991 et 1992. 46 conna'itre leurs dates de construction, il faut recher- Lemeunier, s.p. 50 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) I1 parait clair, d'autre part, que ceci ne se produit du canal et/ou du lit du fleuve. Evidemment, ne n'est pas de maniere accidentelle mais que, au contraire, se qu 'entre la Acequia de 1'Andelma et le Segura, ou- repete sur les deux rives du fleuve, le long des deux d'une maniere plus generate- clans les secteurs situes acequias basses seulement: celles-ci quittent le Segura entre les acequias d'epoque Bet le fleuve que l'on pour, ensuite, s' en approcher une nouvelle fois avant peut faire ces observations; au contraire, le parcel- de s' eloigner de nouveau. Ainsi, elles dessinent une laire est totalement different entre, par exemple, la serie de festons, qui delimitent des superficies varia- Acequia de Landerma et la Acequia Nueva: la, il bles. s' organise selon une maille carree qui correspond a - Aucun indice de ce type n' apparalt au long des un parcellaire plus recent (epoque B, avec modifi- acequias hautes qui, de leur cote, presentent un trace cations en epoque A). Parfois cependant, cette maille paraissant dependre beaucoup plus (et peut-etre uni- vient recouvrir des zones theoriquement inclues clans quement) du relief: clans ce cas, c'est la presence plus le systeme de regadio ancien (c 'est-a-dire irrigue a ou moins pregnante des col lines et c 'est la vigueur partir des acequias les plus anciennes): ceci indique des pentes qui conditionnent 1' emplacement du canal que, bien que le canal primitif ait conserve son trace par rapport au fleuve. anterieur ( d'epoque C), le parcellaire lui a ete reorga- - Un feston se termine toujours avant qu 'un autre ne nise et redistribue, peut-etre apres une phase d' aban- commence a se developper. Que se passe-t-il done don et de ruine des structures de distribution de !'eau; clans ce secteur de la vallee? Ce que suggerent !'ana- clans 1'histoire de la region, c 'est la periode fin XIIIe lyse des documents cartographiques et photographi- siecle - XIVe siecle qui correspond le mieux a ce ques anterieurs aux recents travaux de regularisation moment. du Segura et ce que confirment les prospections D'une maniere generate, clans les systemes d'irri- archeologiques, c 'est que no us sommes la en pre- gation d'al-Andalus et comme on a pu !'observer sence de vestiges tenus mais, bien reels d'une clans le cas de Siyasa, il n 'y a pas de canal unique, ancienne organisation hydraulique. apte a repartir les eaux sur 1' ensemble du territoire - Ainsi, juste en aval de la ville actuelle de Cieza, castral; au contraire, apparait une sorte de succession le canal appele aujourd'hui Acequia Landerma s'in- de petites unites separees les unes des autres par des terrompait, durant une phase primitive (d'epoque espaces non irrigues: chacune dispose de sa propre C?), pour retourner au fleuve; alors, c 'est un autre prise d'eau. De plus, ces micro-irrigations se distri- prise d'eau, situee plus en aval, qui permettait le buent tout au long de la vallee, ou 1'on voit se des- developpement d'un nouveau canal qui se develop- siner une chaine de zones vertes, bien delimitees par pait ensuite vers le Sud-Est. 11 se passait la meme les acequias; le droit islamique con forte 1' existence chose rive gauche, ou, anterieurement aux phases A ce ces petites unites -entites fermees entre la prise et et B, la acequia arrivant de l'Ouest s'interrompait l'exutoire- qui, s'agissant d'un fleuve comme le juste avant d'arriver a Cieza, pour reprendre plus loin Segura, disposent de la quantite d'eau necessaire. son cours, la ou le canal actuel prend le nom de Enfin, en relation topographique directe avec le rega- Acequia Marcelino: sur la photo aerienne comme sur dio ainsi etabli, existe un habitat d'epoque islamique, le terrain, on remarque encore la presence d'une ample situe a cote de la zone irriguee et a quelques metres courbe que dessine une ancienne acequia, vraisem- au-dessus du canal majeur; c'est ce qui a deja ete mis blablement edifiee en epoque islamique. Elle vient en evidence clans la petite vallee du Rio Albaida, a delimiter les terres qui bordent le meandre situe en Valence 48 ou le mode le est parfaitement clair puisque amont de Cieza; la prise est aujourd'hui detruite mais achaque zone de regadio correspond un habitat actuel on peut encore en retrouver des vestiges; le debouche ou une alqueria medievale, aujourd'hui abandonnee. du canal reste, lui, bien visible. Sur tous ces espaces, delimites par les acequias dont nous venons de par! er, se developpent des champs b) Conclusions: vers une archeologie agraire du cultives (jardins irrigues) qui presentent une distribu- Valle del Segura tion parcellaire caracteristique, au moins clans la Pen- insule iberique et au Maghreb, de 1' epoque islami- Dans cette premiere approche du probleme des que 47 : parcelles etroites et allongees, qui forment des irrigations medievales de Cieza, nos conclusions sont, micro-strigations souvent disposees en eventail; ces a !'evidence, provisoires. Nous avons pose, a partir parcelles se disposent perpendiculairement au trace de 1' exemple du Valle de Ricote, un certain nombre de problemes, mais toutes les reponses n' ont pas encore ete trouvees; nous esperons qu'il sera possible 47 Guy 1977; Bazzana et alii 1986. d 'all er plus loin clans 1'interpretation des vestiges de 48 Bazzana 1986, 15-28. structures agraires medievales mais cela suppose 51 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys d'autres etudes de cas, dans le cadre d'un travail qui interdit aux paysans de prendre de I 'eau en amont d 'equipe. I! convient aussi de rester bien conscient du d 'un canal deja existant. Ainsi, chaque proprietaire fait que, pour I' instant, si la problematique est claire, ou communaute doit elaborer son propre systeme les reponses ne sont que partielles et que, pour pro- d'irrigation avec sa propre prise d'eau et son propre gresser, il conviendra d'approfondir la reflexion exutoire a la riviere. Les canaux secondaires a leur methodologique. tour divisent le terrain en parcelles de largeur reduite Cependant, telle qu 'elle a ete menee -pendant une (quelque 7m). On peut pens er que 1'origine de ce trop courte periode et avec des moyens limites- mode d 'amenagement est liee aux capacites techni- 1' enquete realisee foumit des renseignements utiles et ques des constructeurs, c'est-a-dire les paysans eux- enrichit la reflexion qu'il convient de mener sur les memes: il s'agit d'ouvrages simples, qui ne necessi- terroirs et les structures agraires du Moyen Age isla- tent guere de connaissances techniques; les canaux mique. Deja, !'etude des regadios de Cieza -et le peuvent meme etre simplement creuses dans la terre; meme resultat pourrait etre obtenu en prolongeant la quant aux prises d'eau, elles font appel a la mise en recherche plus en amont, sur le territoire de Calas- reuvre de materiaux facilement accessibles -le bois parra- montre bien la difference entre les deux types (pieux, fascines, branchages divers) et la pierre (galets de societes -musulmane d'abord, puis chretienne- de riviere, blocaille, graviers, etc.)- qui composent qui se succedent dans ce monde rural du moyen une ma9onnerie bien adaptee ason usage. La fragilite Segura. En epoque chretienne, le fonctionnement des en est evidente, mais il n' est pas question de tenter de communautes rurales s'inscrit dans le cadre d'une !utter contre les violentes inondations mediterraneen- societe feodale: aussi trouve-t-on de nombreuses tra- nes et, a Murcie comme dans le Maghreb actuel, on ces de !'intervention des pouvoirs d'Etat -ou, avec reconstruit periodiquement les ouvrages hydrauliques les Ordres militaires, semi-etatiques- et des autorites que les eaux ont pu detruire. locales, dans le contra le et 1'etitretien, mais aussi Deux problemes restent aapprofondir: d'une part, dans la construction des prises et des acequias aban- celui de ]'organisation agraire de ces regions en epo- donnees. De la conquete du milieu du XIIIe siecle que antique (principalement romaine et romaine tar- jusqu'a nos jours, les acequias sont conyues pour dive) et au moment du premier developpement du constituer un systeme continu se developpant sur une peuplement medieval, pendant les premiers siecles distance moyenne (qui peut atteindre, dans le cas du du Moyen Age, d'autre part celui de la chronologie Valle de Ricote, plus de 1Olan de longueur). Il est precise de l'amenagement des reseaux medievaux: il clair que, si I' on engage des travaux sur de longue s'agit sans doute du Xe siecle, moment privilegie de distance, il fa ut aussi en vi sager I' aide de techniciens la "revolution agricole" selon L. Bolens. et d' ouvriers specialises, aptes a calculer les pentes et Le reseau des acequias musulmanes fut herite - les gabarits, a construire des canaux en materiaux mais sans doute dans un etat d'abandon et de de- resistants, a edifier eventuellement des aqueducs etc. struction (partielle) assez generalise- par les Chre- L' intervention de I 'Etat est, des lors, quasiment neces- tiens. La remise en bonnes conditions de production saire49. n'intervient pas avant la fin du Moyen Age: seule la Au contraire, dans le cadre de petites commu- conquete de Grenade par les Rois Catholiques, en nautes rurales semi-independantes -fonctionnant sur 1492, supprime definitivement les menaces que fai- les modes d'une societe tributaire, ou les responsabi- sait planer le tout proche royaume nasride sur les lites sont collectives-, les canaux d'epoque islamique terres murciennes. Dans la huerta de Cieza, pendant s 'organisent sur de courtes distances et se succedent, le XVe siecle, avant meme que se manifeste le "boom en chapelet, le long du fleuve ou s'etendent les zones hydraulique" -qui s 'initie vers 1480 et se poursuit irriguees en forme d'amande s'effilant la ou se trou- pendant tout le XVIe siecle- s 'organise en une suc- vait, en amont la prise d'eau, en avall'exutoire per- cession de terres irriguees ou se developpe une mettant un retour au fleuve des eaux non utilisees. Le vegetation verdoyante; la remise en etat de la vallee chapelet des terroirs irrigues disposes le long du impose le recours a des techniques lourdes et cou- fleuve est a I 'echelle du village (aldea, alqueria) ou, teuses, la recherche d, investissements reguliers et mieux, du hameau de quelques maisons, qui s'in- prolonges, ce qui, dans la majorite des cas, impose stalle a proximite meme des terres mises en culture et une intervention de I 'Etat. Les irrigations murciennes qui reclament tous les soins; le systeme est, de plus, d, epoque islamique etaient d 'une tout autre nature: en accord avec le droit des eaux en pays islamique, leur origine n'etait ni technique ni politique, mais sociale. I! s'agissait, jusqu'au XIIIe siecle, d'une hydraulique sans hydrauliciens, sans specialiste en 49 Voir l'exemple bien connu de la Acequia Real del Jucar, a hydraulique ni manieurs de capitaux; elle correspon- Valence. dait a la mise en valeur de terres irriguees -selon 52 Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) quelques precedes elabores et complexes, mais uti- darax (Almeria): les anciens reseaux de Ragol, lisant des techniques simples- par de petites commu- Melanges de la Casa de Velcizquez XXI, 115-135. nautes campagnardes. BERTRAND M. & CRESSIER P 1986: Antiguos siste- mas de irrigaci6n en el Valle de Andarax, Arqueo- logia medieval espaiiola, I Congreso, Ill, Sara- Bibliographie gosse, 569-580. BOLENS L. 1974: Les methodes culturales au Moyen BARCEL6 M. 1989: El disefio de espacios irrigados Age d'apres les traites d'agronomie andalous: en al-Andalus", in: El agua en zonas ciridas: traditions et techniques, Geneve. arqueologia e historia, Almeria, VIII-L. BOLENS.L. 1981: Agronomes andalous du Moyen BARCELO M., CARBONERO M.A., MARTi R. & Age, Geneve. ROSSELLO-BORDOY G. 1986: Les aigiies cerea- BOLENS L. 1989: L'irrigation en al-Andalus: une des. Els qanat(s) de l 'ilia de Mallorca, Palma de societe en mutation, analyse des sources juridi- Majorque. ques, in: El agua en zonas ciridas: arqueologia e BAZZANA A. 1986: Terroirs et peuplement au Moyen historia, Almeria, 71-87. Age dans l'Espagne musulmane: une etude de cas BOLENS L 1990: La revolution agricole andalouse au dans la vallee du Rio Albaida (Valencia), Photo- XIe siecle, in: L 'Andalousie du quotidien au interpretation. Images aeriennes et spatiales 84/ sacre. XIe-XIIIe siecles, Collected Studies Series 3, 15-28. 337, Aldershot-Hampshire, 9-29 = Studia Islamica, BAZZANA A.et alii 1986: Photo-interpretation. XL VII, 1978, 121-141. Images aeriennes et spatiales, numero special, n° BUTZER K.W. & E., MATEU J.F. & KRAU P. 1985: 84-2 et 84-3. Irrigation Agrosystems in Eastern Spain: Roman BAZZANA A. 1990: Maisons rurales du Shark Al-An- or Islamic origins?, Annals of the Association of dalus. Essai de typologie, in: BERMUDEZ LOPEZ J. American Geographers 75, n° 4, 479-509. & BAZZANA A., La casa hispano-musulmana. CARMONA GONZALEZ A. 1990: Recorrido por la Aportaciones de la arqueologia - La maison Geografia Hist6rica, in: Guia Islamica de la Region hispano-musulmane. Apports de l' archeologie, de Murcia, Colecci6n Ibn Al' Arabi, Consegeria Publicaciones del Patronato de la Alhambra y de Cultura, Educaci6n y Turismo, Murcia, 13-29. Generalife, Granada, 247-267 et 370-372. COLrN G.S. 1932: La noria marocaine et les machines BAZZANA A 1992: Maisons d'al-Andalus. Habitat hydrauliques clans le monde arabe, Hesperis, XIV, medieval et structures du peuplement dans l 'Es- 22-60. pagne orientate, Collection de la Casa de Velaz- COLIN G.S. 1933: L'origine des norias de Fes, quez n° 37, Madrid. Hesperis XV, 156-157. BAZZANA A. 1994: La pequefia hidraulica agricola en DE EPALSA M. 1988: El agua en el derecho musul- al-Andalus, in: Ciencias de la naturaleza en al- man, in: Agua y poblamiento musulmcin I Aigua i Andalus, Ill- Textos y estudios, Madrid (C.S.I.C.), poblament musulma, Benissa, 13-19. 317-335. DE MEULEMEESTER J. & MATTHYS A. 1995: Un BAZZANA A., CRESSIER P. & GUICHARD P. 1988: Les grenier collectif fortifie hispano-musulman: Le chateaux ruraux d 'al-Andalus. Histoire et arche- Cabezo de la Cobertera (Vallee du Rio Segura/ ologie des husun du Sud-Est de l 'Espagne, Murcie). Bilan provisoire d'une appproche ethno- Collection de la Casa de Velazquez n° 19, Madrid. archeologique, in: Ethno-archeologie mediterra- BAZZANA A. & GUICHARD P. 1988: Archeologie neenne- Madrid 1991, Publications de la Casa de extensive clans la region valencienne (Espagne), Velazquez, Madrid, 181-196. in: NOYE GH. (ed.), Castrum 2. Structures de FosSIER R. 1992: Villages et villageois, in: Villages l 'habitat et occupation du sol dans les pays medi- et vi!lageois au Moyen Age, Paris, 207-214. terraneens: les methodes et l 'apport del' archeo- GLICK Th. 1970: Irrigation and society in medieval logie extensive, Collection de 1'. Ecole Franyaise Valencia, Harward-Massasuchetts. de Rome 105 - Publications de la Casa de Velaz- GUICHARD P. 1983: Orient et Occident: peuplement quez, serie archeologie IX, Rome-Madrid, 3-28. et societe, Castrum I. Habitats fortifies et organi- BAZZANA A. & MONTMESSrN Y. sous presse: Na'ura sation de 1'espace en Mediterranee medievale, et saniya clans l'hydraulique agricole d'al-Andalus, Lyon, Travaux de la Maison de 1'Orient 4, 87-93. in: La maftrise de l 'eau au Moyen Age dans la GUICHARD P. 1990/91: Les Musulmans de Valence et Peninsule iberique et au Maghreb al-Aqsa, Madrid. la Reconquete (XIe-XIIIe siecles), Damas, Institut BERTRAND M. & CRESSIER P 1985: Irrigation en fran9ais d'etudes arabes, 2 vols. amenagement du terroir clans la vallee de 1'An- GUY M. 1977: Manuel de photo-interpretation, Paris. 53 A. Bazzana, J. De Meulemeester & A. Matthys HERIN s.d.: Les huertas de Murcie. Les hommes, la PEREZ PICAZO M.T. & LEMEUNIER G. s.d.: Els terre et I 'eau dans I 'Espagne arride, Aix-en- estudis d 'historia agraria a la regia murciana: I' estat Provence. de la qilesti6, Estudis d 'historia agraria 4, 63-84. JACQUES-MEUNIE Dj. 1951: Greniers-Citadelles au PESEZ J.-M. 1992: Archeologie de la maison pay- Maroc, Publications de 1'Institut des Hautes Etudes sanne, in: Villages et villageois au Moyen Age, Marocaines LII, 2 vol., Paris. Paris, 181-192. K!RCHNER H. & NAVARRO C. 1994: Objetivos, meto- PIRENNE J. 1977: La maftrise de I' eau en Arabie du dos y pnictica de la Arqueologia hidraulica, in: Sud antique. Six types de monuments techniques, Arqueologia y territorio medieval, I, Aetas del Memoires de 1'Academie des Inscriptions et Belles coloquio "Problemas en arqueologia medieval", Lettres II, Paris. Jaen, 159-182. RODRIGUEZ LLOPIS M. 1988: Sefiorios y feudalismo LAGARDERE V. 1991: Droit des eaux et des installa- en el Reino de Murcia, Murcia. tions hydrauliques au Maghreb et en Andalus aux SCHI0LER Th. 1962: Las norias ibericas, Revista de dia- XIe et XIIe siecles, dans le Mi'yar d'al-Wansha- lectologia y tradiciones populares XVIII, 480-486. risi, Cahiers de Tunisie XXXVII-XXXVIII, n° SCHI0LER Th. 1973: Roman and islamic water-lifting 145-148, 83-122. wheels, Biblioteca Universitatis Hauniensis 28, LAGARDERE V. 1992: Agriculture et irrigation dans Copenhague, Odense University Press. le district (iqlim) de Velez-Malaga. Droit des eaux TORRES BALBAS L. 1942: La Albolafia de Cordoba y et appareils hydrauliques, Cahiers de civilisation la gran noria toledana, Al-Andalus VII, 461-469. medievale XXXV, n° 3, 213-225. TORRES BALBAS L. 1940, Las norias fluviales en LEMEUNIER G. sous presse: L'irrigation aMurcie au Espafia, Al-Andalus V, 192-208 (= Obra dispersa debut de 1'epoque moderne, Castrum5. Archeo- I, Madrid, 1981, 209-222). logie des espaces agraires, Madrid-Rome. VERHULST A. 1992: Villages et villageois au Moyen MARTINEZ SOLER J.J. & BANEGAS 0RTIZ J. 1994: Age, in: Villages et villageois au Moyen Age, Las norias de Abarim, Aban1n. Paris, 9-13. Andre Bazzana Directeur de recherche au C.N.R.S. Unite mixte de recherche 5648 (Lyon) France Johnny De Meulemeester Service des Sites et Monuments nationaux Luxembourg UMR 5648 (Lyon) Andre Matthys Inspecteur-general de la Division du Patrimoine Ministere de la Region wallonne Namur Belgique 54 Rural Settlement in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Christopher Dyer Recent developments and future prospects in research into English medieval rural settlements The Medieval Settlement Research Group has The broader view of settlement study involves recently issued a new policy statement on all aspects contributions from the practitioners of a variety of of rural medieval settlements, which includes recom- disciplines, not just archaeologists, geographers and mendations for conservation and presentation of sites, historians, but also environmental scientists, place- but its main concern is to define research priorities. name scholars, architectural historians, small finds This paper is designed to expand on the points made and pottery specialists and many others. As well as in that outline of policy. It reviews recent work and striving to make use of every variety of evidence, advocates future developments, reflecting the think- multidisciplinary study also involves bringing to the ing behind the Group's formulation of policy, though subject approaches deriving from other subjects, such inevitably it will be coloured by the individual inter- as anthropology. We only need to consider the recent ests of its author. work on the distinction between public and private The policy statement reflects the ever broadening space within houses and villages to appreciate the conception of settlement studies, which in the view insights that settlement study can provide into men- of the Group should encompass a wide range of sites tality. The full implications of settlement planning and landscapes, not just every type ofhabitation (vil- for reconstructing the mindset of medieval people, lages, hamlets, farms, seignorial residences etc.), but which can in the twelfth century, for example, be also the associated boundaries, fields, water control linked with other evidence for a new rationality and systems, woods, pastures, communications etc. Al- orderliness in government and religion, is another though the Group is concerned to focus attention on example of the potential of settlement studies to con- the medieval period, it recognizes that medieval tribute to intellectual and cultural history. occupation of a place was often an episode within a This paper is divided into four sections. The first much longer period of use of the land, stretching back two are concerned with defining the distribution of into prehistory and extending into modem times. In hamlets and farmsteads, and with the analysis of the recent past both survey and excavation has been regional differences in settlements and landscapes. concentrated on deserted settlements, and there are The third deals with new insights into the lives of good reasons for this because these sites provide for settlements and their inhabitants, including their late the researcher invaluable opportunities to explore a medieval decline. And finally research techniques, time capsule of medieval rural occupation, undisturb- both methods for gathering evidence and for devel- ed and unpolluted by modem features. Deserted sites oping interpretations will be discussed. are also more likely to be threatened at the present time with total destruction, making rescue excavation necessary. We are now facing up to the archaeolog- 1 Understanding dispersed settlement ical potential of all settlements, not just the villages which have suffered heavy shrinkage, or the hamlets Most people in medieval England, in common that have dwindled down to a single farm, but also with much of the population of continental Europe, the still inhabited places, even villages which are lived in dispersed settlements rather than nucleated now as fully occupied as they were in the high middle villages. This is true of the overwhelming majority in ages. The archaeological contexts in such places may the period before c. 850, as our sample of excavated have been damaged by modem activity, but they sites is heavily weighted in favour of small hamlets have the advantage of providing evidence about and isolated farms. The predominance of small and settlements which survived, and therefore represent scattered settlement is still the case in the period after the successful majority of places which escaped the formation of villages, because in the thirteenth desertion. and fourteenth centuries the areas of dispersal in- 55 C. Dyer eluded most of the west of the country, but more parishes, and this plotting of pottery scatters is often important the south-east, from the Wash to the Chan- combined with documentary research (Davison 1990). nel, where population densities were especially high. Another approach, for which a pilot study has been We still do not !mow enough about the relation- conducted in Hampshire, involves the use of existing ship between the early medieval dispersed settle- archaeological and historical data and the gathering ments and those of the later middle ages, but there are of information about both nucleated and dispersed sufficient examples to suggest an overall discon- settlements from the detailed maps of the early nine- tinuity. Most !mown hamlets and farms of the pre- teenth century (MSRG 1995, 7-10). Parallel studies Conquest period were abandoned within that period, have been proceeding in Wales and Scotland, notably and many of the late medieval dispersed settlements a survey of remains of houses and shielings on the seem no older than the villages- their earliest phase Black Mountain in Carmarthenshire (MSRG 1994, of occupation seems to lie between the eleventh and 19), and various projects in the Scottish highlands, thirteenth centuries. This is not to support the older including the plotting of 'medieval or later' settle- interpretation of the dispersed settlements as part of ments from early maps ( MSRG 1994, 7-11 ). the process of internal colonisation in the twelfth and A-ll of these are welcome initiatives, but the long- thirteenth centuries, because we no longer believe term goal must be the assembly of data for whole that vast areas of wood and waste were occupied for counties which will enable us for the first time to see the first time at that late date. It seems more plausible the totality of the medieval settlements. This means to argue that the settlement pattern everywhere went using a combination of evidence, as no single source through a great upheaval in the tenth, eleventh and of information will be adequate. Earthworks must be twelfth centuries, which led to a general creation of recorded both from aerial photography and detailed new settlements, not just in those regions which were ground level observation, as the remains of a single heading towards 'villagisation', but also in those farmstead will often escape detection from the air. developing a scattered pattern ofhamlets (Dyer 1996). Field walking is essential for detecting the many sites Such generalisations are however premature, be- damaged by ploughing. And the documentary research cause not enough basic research has been done on must include, as well as early maps and county wide dispersed settlements to draw conclusions even for records such as tax records, the more detailed local individual regions, let alone the whole country. The archival material which is likely to mention individ- listing of medieval settlement sites in our basic ual farms and groups of cottages. The documents are sources of information, the county Sites and Monu- especially valuable for establishing whether the ments Records (SMRs), is patchy and incomplete. existing settlements, most of which will not have Their recording of 'deserted medieval villages' is early architectural evidence, are of medieval origin. often very full, though there is sometimes a tendency Only when a larger sample of the country has been to describe any site with earthworks of abandoned surveyed in this way will it be possible to classify the settlement as a 'deserted medieval village'. For the various types of hamlet by their plan forms, which pre-Conquest period the SMRs usually contain a are as varied as village plans, and, like the villages, complete record of finds, including any indications of include both irregular and regular layouts. We will settlement. But the only type of later medieval isol- also be in a better position to make judgements about ated settlement which is listed systematically is the the chronology, origins, development and abandon- moated site, which is of course a valuable source of ment of dispersed settlements. Such work will also information, but means that thousands of unmoated allow comparisons to be made between regions. One farmsteads are omitted. suspects that the present statement that, for example, Gradually local and regional survey projects are Kent and Lancashire both have dispersed settlements beginning to gather the data. Very thorough work on will need to be reformulated once we have learned upland landscapes, such as Bodmin Moor in Corn- more about the details of the distribution and form of wall (Johnson & Rose 1994) has produced a com- their hamlets and farmsteads, as in every other respect plete catalogue of sites, and in parts of the lowlands the landscape and history of those counties are dif- of the county earthworks of abandoned farms and ferent. We ought to be able also to observe the rela- hamlets have been systematically recorded (MSRG tionship between the dispersed settlements and their 1994, 33). In Suffolk, a county previously thought to fields and other resources. At present only a limited be devoid of earthwork remains of deserted settle- number of such sites have been properly excavated. ments, evidence has been collected through an Earth- Once their overall distribution has been plotted, it work Reconnaissance Survey (MSRG 1995, 39-40). should be easier to make decisions about the pre- Norfolk has long been the scene of research into servation of threatened sites, and their excavation in settlements through intensive field walking of whole advance of development. 56 Recent developments and future prospects in research into English medieval rural settlements 2 Regional differences in settlement and land- villages some seem more dispersed than others, scapes notably the polyfocal village which has a number of nuclei only loosely connected together. Similarly The Monuments Protection Programme of Eng- among the hamlets some seem more village-like than lish Heritage encountered a real problem in dealing others, notably the various 'rows' arranged along a with medieval rural settlements because they were so road or on the edge of a green which, with a little numerous, and presented so many difficulties in expansion or infilling could be turned into villages deciding which sites were 'important' enough to merit (Wrathmell 1994). The rows in particular often have preservation. Accordingly a research project has been a regular layout, making them resemble even more defining regional patterns so that individual sites can closely both towns and larger villages. Detailed sur- be judged in relation to rationally defined regions vey work, and documentary study, throws up indica- (MSRG 1994, 12-17). The maps that have been pro- tions even in districts where the nucleated village duced, whatever their initial purpose, are of course of seems to have reigned supreme of isolated hamlets or significance for settlement studies in general. They farms, sometimes on the edges of village territories are based on nineteenth-century maps, so they con- (Taylor 1995). Some may be survivals of earlier dis- tain some data deriving from modem industrialisa- persed patterns, others may be new foundations of tion, and will be influenced by rural depopulation in the twelfth or thirteenth centuries. late medieval and modem times, but they are reflec- Perhaps further research into these intermediate ting primarily the underlying patterns deriving from forms will help to resolve the still open questions the great formative period of rural settlement bet- about the local divergences between nucleated and ween c.900 and 1200 or 1250. They indicate the non-nucleated settlements. There is general agree- major regional differences, such as the 'central pro- ment that the period of village formation (c.900- vince' cutting across the country from Northumber- 1200) coincided with that of the origins of 'midland' land to Dorset, in which nucleated villages predom- field systems, the early phases of urbanisation, the inated, and more subtle variations between much proliferation of small parishes, and changes in the smaller districts. Workers in each locality might wish structure of estates and forms oflordship. Thereafter to revise its detailed conclusions, as would appar- the consensus breaks down. Chronology remains a ently be the case for example in the counties of problem, with some researchers emphasising the late central southern England discussed in a recent volume ninth century or even earlier, whereas others point to (Aston & Lewis 1994). Nonetheless it is valuable to the many village excavations which have produced have consistently applied criteria being used to no dating evidence before the twelfth century. define regional differences over the whole country. Discussion of the role of estates and lordship has The same type of source material, nineteenth- been given greater precision with the suggestion that century maps, have been used on a study of four east peasant settlers were gathered on the 'inland' attach- midland counties, though here the data has been map- ed to the manor houses of pre-Conquest estates (Faith ped alongside distributions of population, farming 1992). The association between the fragmentation of systems, and archaeological sites derived from Sites the primeval estates and village formation has been and Monuments Records (Lewis, Mitchell-Fox & made doubtful by the growing body of evidence that Dyer 1997). The comparison between indicators of smaller territorial units existed within the great estates, pre-medieval activity, soil types, population density, and that some large estates were being put together at agricultural systems, lordship and other variables has the time that they were supposedly breaking down been used to sharpen the basis of the discussion ofthe (Hadley 1996). The idea that villages were born out explanation of the origin and development of dif- of the need to reorganise farming systems at a time of ferent settlement forms, above all between nucleated expansion and marketing opportunities remains villages and dispersed settlements, and that debate attractive. Villages are closely associated with regular will no doubt continue. field systems which seem to have emerged by the Perhaps we exaggerate the differences between tenth century, and there is a logical connection bet- settlements and landscapes. We are accustomed to use ween compact groupings of habitations and the effic- a shorthand classification of 'nucleation' and 'dis- ient exploitation of open fields (Fox 1992). However, persal', though it has always been recognised that in the scientific evidence does not seem to show any some areas dispersed settlements cluster into hamlets great expansion in cultivation or signs of environ- of varying size, and that in others most people lived mental stress at this period (Murphy 1994; Bourdil- in single farms. There seem to be many intermediate lon 1994). forms which blur the distinction between the broad Explanatory models in this field as in others are categories. Among the various types of nucleated moving away from heavy determinism towards an 57 C. Dyer emphasis on mentality and choice. The catastrophe ned towns and nucleated villages were emerging at theory, that villages were formed at a moment of about the same time- was this a simultaneous devel- crisis when earlier methods of farming collapsed, or opment, or did villages imitate urban forms? In the when new lordship or state power imposed them- twelfth and thirteenth centuries both villages and selves on a previously loosely organised countryside, towns were planned and replanned, and sometimes is being replaced by the assumption that changes the distinction between a market village and a market happened gradually through some evolutionary pro- town with an agrarian dimension in its economy is cess. The social history of the period could be seen as difficult to draw. one in which ties of kinship declined in importance, Within the settlements, although relatively few and when the protective role of the community, peasant houses have been excavated recently, work encouraged by the state, played a more important part continues on their interpretation. Their origin in the in people's lives. The village, especially in its more Germanic or Romano-British building traditions has regularly planned form, was the material embodi- formed a dimension in the debate on the size and ment of community, and expressed an idea about how character of the Anglo-Saxon migrations (Hamerow people should live and organise themselves. Villages 1993). In the late medieval period there have been developed alongside one another through imitation of useful dialogues between excavating archaeologists models, and the form of settlement helped to define, and architectural historians, which began with Wrath- along with many other features of daily life, the mell 's reinterpretation of the Wharram Percy peasant various regional cultures. For example, the great regul- houses. The discussion should continue with more arity ofDorset settlements resulted in a uniformity of certainty now that precise dates of standing buildings the tofts in each village, and from one village to have been established, and they can be seen to be another (Taylor 1994). securely medieval, and indeed in one pocket of Berk- Discussion about village origins was advanced by shire/Oxfordshire small buildings in the cruck tradi- a well-organised but brief conference session at tion can be taken back to the decades around 1300 Leicester in 1992 (Fox 1992), but we have lacked (Vernacular Architecture 1990, 47; 1992, 58) debates on this issue- more the statement of different Standing buildings rather than excavated struc- positions, which sometimes ignore the existence of tures have been used to investigate the use of domes- contrary opinions. Perhaps more direct exchanges of tic space, and to interpret the buildings and changes view will develop in the future. in their form in relation to changing perceptions of privacy and social distinctions within the household (Johnson 1993). More work needs to be done of this 3 Life of settlements, and their development and type using published house plans and records of the decline distribution of artefacts. One insight into the social use of dwellings has come from the study of temp- Although so much thought and speculation has orarily occupied shielings, which with the help of been devoted to the problems of settlement origins, historical accounts of more recent transhumance the great bulk of our evidence relates to the funct- allows us to visualise the movement of young people ioning and development of settlements, and indeed out of the household to create a distinctively transient some of the most innovative work has been done in society on the summer pastures (Herring 1996). this field. Regrettably historians of peasant society, who have Changes in the shape and size of villages was one access to documentary evidence for families and of the themes of settlement research in the 1970s, but households which can sometimes reveal such resid- this field of enquiry has been advanced with the ential arrangements as the provision of cottages for application of techniques of plan analysis. Both the children who were unable to inherit the main deserted and surviving villages can be shown to have holding, do not relate their findings to the material experienced replanning, the addition of planned or evidence (Razi 1993 ). irregular extensions, the provision of greens or mark- Environmental studies, for long focused on urban et places, or the infilling of such open spaces, as well sites, are beginning to make a real contribution to as more conventional shrinkage or migration (Ever- rural settlement studies. The preliminary conclusions son, Taylor & Dunn 1991 ). A specific problem has are now available on the animal bones from West been drawing the frontier between villages and small Cotton (Northamptonshire), a hamlet site occupied towns, and this was the subject of a conference in mainly in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries which urban and rural specialists exchanged views, (Albarella & Davis 1994). They shed light on rubbish and established a remarkable amount of agreement disposal, which contrasts with the pits or collective (MSRG 1993, 7-14 ). In the pre-Conquest period plan- tips used in towns, as food bones seem to have been 58 Recent developments and future prospects in research into English medieval rural settlements left in the open to be gnawed by an apparently size- relatively poor agricultural land, such as the Kentish able population of dogs. Comparison between bone weald or the forests of Staffordshire. Thanks to new assemblages from late medieval rural settlements and work on the hinterland of London, and on the region- those from high status sites such as castles, and from al links of provincial towns such as Exeter, we can towns, reveal some of the characteristics of the appreciate the involvement of the inhabitants of rural peasant diet, which contained relatively little game, settlements, such as those on the Devon uplands and a relatively low percentage of pork, and a high pro- West Cotton (Northamptonshire) in the supply of portion of mutton (Albarella & Davis 1996). There is urban markets (Campbell, Galloway, Keene & Mur- a growing body of information about animal hus- phy 1993; Kowaleski 1995). bandry and breeding, from the responses to the The commercial influences on production have market for animal products as early as the eighth left relatively little trace in the material culture of century, to the development of larger animals at the rural sites. It is rather in the evidence for consump- end of the medieval period. tion that the archaeological evidence for commercial- Botanical studies from the early middle ages con- isation is most striking. Excavators have always ap- tinue to add to the data on the extent of cultivated preciated that pottery and small finds originated land, which points to considerable regional varia- outside the village, and the widespread distribution of tions, but which supports in general the idea that the Ipswich ware and Thetford-type ware in East Anglia migration period in some parts of the country involv- shows that rural consumers were obtaining the ed no great upheaval in the agricultural economy products of urban industries in the seventh to tenth (Rackham 1994; Fenton-Thomas 1992). New inform- centuries. In the later middle ages we can begin to ation about the types of cereals grown, such as the reconstruct the mechanics by which peasants travel- spread of free-threshing varieties of wheat, has im- led to small town markets to acquire commodities plications for farming systems which we have yet to supplied from more remote points of manufacture. take fully into account (Campbell1994) Some ofbest Now we appreciate that a wider range of goods than botanical evidence for the later middle ages has come was previously supposed were acquired by exchange from excavations of moated sites, and there is a -not just the sea fish of which bones are found on wealth of data from sites such as Wood Hall (North inland rural sites, but also some of the meat repres- Yorkshire ) relating to the local environment and the ented by finds of animal bones. Building materials, specific activities carried out on the site (MSRG especially timber, are likely to have been bought in 1995, 36-38). Settlement archaeologists, like those many cases, and craft specialists such as carpenters involved in the Wood Hall project, are aware of the would often have been hired from outside the village. rieed to make the fullest use of environmental data in The decline of rural settlements in the later middle their interpretations, rather than regarding the speci- ages can be interpreted also in the context of market alist reports on bones and pollen as mere appendages relations. This was not a matter just of reduced de- to the main task of recording structures and contexts. mand for grain and the increasing market for animal We expect to gain much more from environmental products, but also shifts in the land market, which led studies in the future, both through the accumulation to the engrossing of holdings and amalgamation of of new data, and from developing a dialogue between tofts. The frontiers between private and public space scholars primarily concerned with settlements and were being renegotiated as village communities and those with expertise in analysing botanical and bone their common fields were converted into farms (Dyer evidence. 1997). A major trend in historical thinking in recent The causes of the abandonment of rural settle- years has been to highlight the effects of commer- ments at the end of the middle ages has been discus- cialisation, on society as a whole, but in particular on sed for many years, but that does not mean that the the peasantry (Britnell 1993). In the early middle problem has been resolved. The shift away from ages agricultural systems were devised in order to give deterministic explanations ofvillage creation applies a surplus of animal products, presumably in response to the study of desertion as well. The new emphasis to market demand, and this could have been an ingre- on dispersed settlements requires more work on their dient in the emergence of divergent forms of fields varied history of desertion, shrinkage and survival. and settlements in the tenth to twelfth centuries. The The complexity of their history at the end of the growth of more specialised regional farming systems middle ages is suggested by growing evidence that helps to explain the extension of settlement on past- new settlements were being created even when the oral uplands or wetlands, especially in the thirteenth population of the whole country was shrinking or at century. The involvement of the rural population in least stagnant (e.g. Fox 1996). industries made settlements viable in places with 59 C. Dyer 4 Research methods Bibliography As the age of large scale research excavations ALBARELLA U. & DAVIS S.J.M. 1994: The Saxon and seems to recede, we need to reassert their value. Large medieval animal bones excavated 1985-1989 scale excavations in the last decade have not indic- from West Cotton, Northamptonshire, English ated any diminishing of returns: for example West Heritage, Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report, Heslerton (North Yorkshire) has shown that large London. village type settlements can be found before the ninth ALBARELLA U. & DAVIS S.J.M. 1996: Mammals and century; W estbury/Tattenhoe (Buckinghamshire) rev- birds from Launceston Castle, Cornwall: decline ealed the growth and decline of midland hamlets; a in status and the rise of agriculture, Circaea 12 , market village with distinctive features was excav- 1-156. ated at Dassett Southend (Warwickshire); and West ASTON M. & LEWIS C. (ed)1994: The medieval land- Cotton, as well as producing important environ- scape ofWessex, Oxbow monograph 46, Oxford. mental evidence, threw new light on the relationship BoURDILLON J. 1994: The animal provisioning of between manor houses and peasant settlements. Southampton, in: Rackham (ed) 1994. There is still scope also for thematic studies con- BRITNELL R.H. 1993: The commercialisation of centrating on types of site over a large area, like the English society 1000-1500,Cambridge. search for earthwork remains of rural settlements in CAMPBELL B., GALLOWAY J., KEENED. & MURPHY East Anglia or Cornwall, or identifying agricultural M. 1993: A medieval capital and its grain supply, buildings, such as the late medieval sheepcotes of the Hist. Geog. Research Ser. 30. Cotswold Hills which are also being found in other CAMPBELL G. 1994: The preliminary archaeobotan- parts of the country (Dyer 1995), or the documentary ical results from Anglo-Saxon West Cotton and research into the distribution of places with distinc- Raunds, in: Rackham (ed) 1994, 65-82. tive names like the places called 'hide', suggesting DA VISON A. 1990: The evolution of settlement in the survival of small units of land and occupation even three parishes in south-east Norfolk~ East Anglian within village dominated regions (MSRG 1995, 19). Archaeol. 49. The future development of the subject will be well DYER C. 1995: Sheepcotes: evidence for medieval served by large scale survey projects, such as those sheep farming, Medieval Archaeology 39, 136-164. designed to identify dispersed settlements advocated DYER C. 1996: Rural settlements in medieval War- above, and those concentrated on specific regions wickshire, Trans. Birmingham and Warwicks. like the fenland survey (Silvester 1993) and the valu- Archaeol. Soc. 100, 117-132. able work on the reclaimed wetlands of the Severn DYER C. 1997: Peasants and farmers: rural settle- estuary and Somerset which has revealed the remark- ments and landscapes in an age of transition, in: able achievements of Roman drainage schemes, their D. Gaimster & P. Stamper (eds), Age of transi- decay in the post Roman period, and the early medie- tion, Oxford. val programme of drainage and recolonisation (MSRG EVERSON P.L., TA YLOR C. C. & DUNN C.J. 1991: 1994, 18; Rippon 1994). Change and continuity: rural settlements in The most fruitful results are still most likely to north-west Lincolnshire, Royal Comm. on Hist. come from the intensive study of carefully selected Monuments, London. slices of landscape - large parishes or groups of par- FAITH R. 1992: Estates, demesnes and the village, in: ishes, which coincide with medieval administrative Fox (ed.) 1992. and agricultural units. These should ideally be sub- FENTON-THOMAS C. 1992: Pollen analysis as an aid jected to multi-disciplinary research involving teams to the reconstruction of patterns of land use and of specialists, not just in order to recover the maxi- settlement in the Tyne-Tees region during the first mum amount of all kinds of evidence, but also to millenia BC and AD, Durham Archaeol. Journal interrogate that material from every possible per- 8, 51-62. spective, and to bring to it insights deriving from a Fox H. 1992: The agrarian context, in: Fox (ed) wide range of subjects. In that way a lively area of 1992,36-72. enquiry, concerned with a central aspect of the Fox H. (ed) 1992: The origins of the midland village, medieval past, will continue to inform and stimulate Leicester. us into the next millennium. Fox H. 1996: Cellar settlements along the south Devon coastline, in Fox (ed) 1996. Fox H. 1996: Seasonal settlements, Vaughan papers, Leicester. HADLEY D.M. 1996: Multiple estates and the origin 60 Recent developments and future prospects in research into English medieval rural settlements of the manorial structure of the northern Danelaw, RACKHAM J. (ed) 1994: Environment and economy in Journal Hist. Geog. 22,3-15. Anglo-Saxon England, Council for British HAMEROW H. 1994: Migration theory and the migra- Archaeol Res. Report 89. tion period, in: Vyner (ed) 1994, 164-177. RAzr Z. 1993: The myth of the immutable English HERRING P. 1996: Transhumance in medieval Corn- family, Past and Present 140, 3-44. wall, in: Fox (ed) 1996. RIPPON S. 1994: Medieval wetland reclamation in JOHNSON M. 1993: Housing culture. Traditional Somerset, in: Aston & Lewis (ed) 1994,239-253. architecture in an English landscape, London. SILVESTER R. 1993: The Fen land project in retro- JOHNSON N. & ROSE P. 1994: Bodmin Moor: an spect, East Anglian Archaeol. 50, 24-39. archaeological survey. Vol 1 The human land- TA YLOR C.C. 1994: The regular village plan: Dorset scape to c 1800, English Heritage and the Royal revisited and revised, in: Aston & Lewis (ed) Comm. on Hist. Monuments, London. 1994,213-218. KOWALESKI M. 1995: Local markets and regional TA YLOR C. C. 1995: Dispersed settlements in nucleat- trade in medieval Exeter, Cambridge. ed areas, Landscape Hist. 17, 27-33. LEWIS C., MITCHELL-FOX P. & DYER C. 1997: VYNER B. (ed) 1994: Building on the past, Royal Village, hamlet and field. Changing rural settle- Archaeol. Institute, London. ments in central England, Manchester. WRATHMELL S. 1994: Rural settlement in medieval MSRG, Medieval Settlement Research Group Annual England: perspectives and perceptions, in: Vyner Reports. (ed) 1994, 178-194. MURPHY P. 1994: The Anglo-Saxon landscape and rural economy: some results from sites in East Anglia and Essex, in: Rackham (ed) 1994. Christopher Dyer The University of Birmingham School ofHistory Edgbaston Birmingham B 15 2TT UK 61 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Jlllark Gardiner Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England The origin of English villages has exercised hist- what were the particular social and economic con- orians and archaeologists for at least one hundred ditions which produced village settlements in the years. Early studies of the subject were much influen- period after the Norman Conquest. These were issues ced by the German historian, August Meitzen who which archaeology alone could not answer and it argued that the villages were found by Anglo-Saxon encouraged a new approach which integrated settle- incomers and replaced the earlier dispersed pattern of ment studies into a wider analysis of medieval rural Celtic and Roman settlement. He claimed that ham- society. In the most recent work two aspects of lets and isolated farms persisted in those areas villages have been examined. Who was responsible reached late or never occupied by the Anglo-Saxons. for their foundation and planning? And can the varia- This model of settlement development persisted for tion in the distribution and plan of villages be a remarkably long time, mainly because the means explained in terms of regional differences? for its examination were not available. It was not At an early stage in the examination of English until the growth of medieval archaeology during the villages their plans had revealed a degree of regular- late 1950s and 1960s that the view that villages were ity which could not be explained through the process founded within a few generations of the Adventus of gradual development. Many villages had quite Saxonum became less and less credible. Deserted clearly been laid out as discrete settlements from the medieval villages, which were being examined in beginning. With the re-evaluation of the date of the increasing numb\!rS, rarely showed any evidence for formation of villages, it became difficult to deter- underlying 6th-, 7th- or 8th-ce~tury occupation. Many mine a context in which the settlement pattern in a villages indeed showed little signs of activity before parish or vill might have been totally re-organised. It the 12th century. At the same time Anglo-Saxon was no longer possible to imagine that the village had settlements were being discovered on sites which had been planned by a successful Anglo-Saxon warrior not been occupied by later medieval villages. for his followers. In the north of England, where By the late 1970s a new orthodoxy was arising, planned villages have been most extensively studied, and was summarised in Christopher Taylor's study, it was suggested that the new settlements were establ- Village and Farmstead (Taylor 1983). He took a long ished after the Harrying of the North, the systematic perspective, placing the growth of villages within the devastation of the area in the 11th century by the context of the changing patterns of settlement since Norman army. The dislocation created by this event the end of the last Ice Age. He argued that villages would have allowed villages to have been created on were not age-old settlements, but the results of part- new sites according to systematic plans. That context icular economic and social circumstances which led now seems less likely since planned villages have to their formation in large numbers, mainly in the also been found in southern England where there was period 1100 to 1300. The periods before and after no comparable devastation. Even in the north, the were marked by greater numbers of dispersed settle- effects of the Norman armies are now believed to ments. That realisation opened new perspectives on have been less than was once thought. the study of the medieval village. Firstly, it allowed The underlying assumption, that planned works villages to be seen as one of a range of rural settle- must necessarily be the results of seigneurial action, ment types, which included on the one hand hamlets has not passed without comment. Were decisions and isolated farmsteads and, at the other extreme, necessarily made by the lord of the manor or his settlements which were little different from small officials? There are many examples of the commun- towns. Villages were no longer recognised as the ity of the vill acting independently to reorganise the 'standard' type of rural settlement, and other forms as pattern of fields and to maintain bridges. The creation lesser variants. Secondly, it raised questions about and planning of a settlement was therefore likely to 63 M. Gardiner have been well within the capacity and authority of had already developed by the end of the 11th century. such a body (Dyer 1985; Harvey 1989). There were many fewer towns inland, though during The distribution of planned settlements is only the first half of the 13th century new urban centres one aspect in the regional variation in settlement grew up at, for example, East Grinstead and Hail- form which has long been noted. One hundred years sham. In the early 13th century the pattern of settle- ago the historian, Frederic Maitland (1897) published ment in the High W eald beyond these towns was two contrasting maps to illustrate the differences in dispersed. Isolated farmsteads were surrounded by his study of Domesday Book. More systematic work their own fields and there were extensive tracts of on the subject has been undertaken over a long period common land (Brandon 1969). by Brian Roberts (e.g. Roberts 1987; Roberts & Wrathmell 1995) who has sought to classify the settlement forms and identify regional types. Roberts' Permissive settlements work, which is primarily descriptive, now offers a tool which has yet to be employed to interpret the Village development took place in the Weald variation in settlement form. However, a recent study mainly during the second half of the 13th century. of settlement in four counties in the East Midlands by Trade in the interior of the Weald was the stimulus scholars at Birmingham has sought to integrate the for settlement growth and villages grew up particul- study of settlement form into a wider understanding arly at the sites of markets. The sequence here was of medieval society (Lewis, Mitchell-Fox & Dyer the reverse of that commonly found in medieval 1996). England: trading places developed at unoccupied sites A fundamental problem faced by historians study- and subsequently attracted permanent settlement. ing village origins is that the process of settlement The village of Mayfield exemplifies that pattern. nucleation happened so early that it is rarely recorded Work probably began on the construction of the in documentary sources. Detailed local records sur- archbishop of Canterbury's palace at Mayfield short- vive in large numbers from the mid-13th century, but ly after 1260. The palace was certainly built before by then most English villages had already been 1279, and was further enlarged in c.131 0 (Davis et al. established. It is useful to turn to those few areas of 1969, 10). It cannot be coincidental that a market England where village formation occurred at a very charter was granted in 1261. The market may not late date to gain an insight into settlement change. have flourished immediately for no rents from stalls The process in these places may be recorded in docu- are recorded in a survey of c.l285 survey (Calendar mentary sources, although it cannot be claimed that of Charter Rolls 2, 38; Redwood & Wilson 1958,47- they are representative of village formation more 60). The earliest evidence for a settlement on the site generally. The fact that villages developed late of comes from a list of 1389. A fire that year swept itself means that they are likely to be atypical. Never- through the village, and damaged the church and theless, these areas may provide some insights into buildings on 85 'shop-places'. The list shows that the nature of settlement nucleation, a process which most tenants held more than one shop-place and it is otherwise poorly understood. seems probable that the small plots, originally laid out for stalls, had been grouped together to create larger areas for more substantial buildings. In the Settlement development in yhe Sussex High mid-15th century cottages occupied two shop-places Weald and bigger houses stood on the former sites of three or more stalls (Cooper 1869, 16-7; LPL ED 2068, The Wealden district of south-east England is an 1900, 1080; ESRO AMS 5512, ff. 5v., Sr., lOr., etc.). area of poor soils and relatively late settlement. It still The site, though adequate for the original stalls set remains one of the most heavily wooded areas in the out in front of the church and along the street, was country, because the soils are generally unsuitable for inconvenient for a village (fig. 2). The palace and arable agriculture and in some parts too barren even church on the north side of the High Street limited for good pasture. The Weald can be sub-divided into growth; the buildings in front of the churchyard still the High Weald which has the poorest soils and an occupy cramped sites. In the 15th century barns and outer fringe of clay lands known as the Low Weald. gardens belonging to those houses lay on the opposite Historically, the most wealthy areas of the South- side ofthe road in 'forelands' on the south side ofthe East lay towards coastal fringe. The major towns were street. The land here falls sharply to the south, either situated on the larger rivers or had developed restricting the scope for development and as result around ports which served both coastal trade and the plan of the village was linear. stretching along the trade with Continental Europe. Most of these towns edge of the high ground. 64 Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England N 0 less than 50 Towns [t] 50 • 99 e Villages • 100. 149 • Other places 150 and above 0 km 10 0 Without a market e With a market The allocation of the Mayfield rents to 'shop- fields (LPL ED 1900; ESRO AMS 5512, ff. 34r.- places' clearly indicates the village developed from 53r.). an unoccupied site to become a centre of trade and The development ofTicehurst village a few miles subsequently grew into a settlement. Wadhurst, which to the east along the same road was very similar. lay in the same manor as Mayfield, had a similar pat- Early 17th-century maps show a market-place parti- tern of development, though it did not reach the size ally infilled with permanent buildings and a market of its neighbour. Wadhurst was granted a market hall. There were further houses on the west side of charter in 1253 and stallage for a market and fair was the market-place and, as at Wadhurst, a number of recorded in the c.1285 rental, though there is no evi- cottages were squeezed in on the north and west sides dence for a nucleated settlement at that date (Calen- of the churchyard (ESRO SAS/COlD 2; ESRO TD/E dar of Charter Rolls 1, 432; Redwood & Wilson 2; ESRO ACC 4683; fig. 4). A rental ofHammerden 1958, 30-47). A triangular market-place in front of of c.l295 mentions a piece of land in the market- the church is clearly identifiable on early 19th- place measuring 52 by 13 feet (15.8 by 4 m), a forge century maps, though by then it was largely infilled and two other houses. Charters of about the same date by permanent buildings (fig. 3). A timber-framed granting land to Hastings Priory mentioned two fur- market hall, which survived until it was demolished ther houses close to the church. A century later Tice- in the mid-19th century, also stood within the hurst was described as a villa and there were anum- market-place, suggesting a settlement of some pre- ber of houses and cottages there which by 1499 had tension. A survey of 1498 records that some of the increased to 11 cottages, one shop and some other 'shop-places' within the market-place were occupied plots of land (HMAG Priory Ch. 3-6, 13; ESRO SAS/ by houses; other dwellings lay immediately in front CO/B 71, 72). of the churchyard. Here too the stalls, which had Not all such trading places were so successful. occupied these plots, had been superseded by houses. Wartling was granted a weekly market at a compar- The largest building plots lay on the land to the south atively late date, 13 37, and the first reference to of the market-place. These do not seem to have been shops occurs in the court rolls of that year. An planned, regular plots, but had expanded from street account of 1340-1 records rents of 3s. and unpaid frontage backwards and into the existing pattern of rents of 14d. and 15d from two other stalls (Calendar 65 M. Gardiner of Charter Rolls 4, 431; BL Add. Rolls 32722, developing commercial activity is considered further 32601 ). Later 14th-century court rolls show that the below. It was evidently not the intention of the lords shops, a forge and a stable stood around a market- of Mayfield, Wadhurst, Ticehurst, Wartling and place close to the church, though there is no evidence Heathfield to found settlements beside their chur- of any houses. The shops were little more than booths ches. They did not lay out regular plots of a size and did not provide accommodation. The largest suitable for houses. The settlements which subse- measured 14 by 10 feet (4.2 m by 3 m). Shops of 7 quently emerged were fitted in the restricted spaces feet by 5 feet (2.1 m by 1.5 m) and 6 feet by 4 feet available around or at the site of the market. These ( 1.8 m by 1.2 m) are also mentioned. The shops were villages, excepting Wartling where no permanent permanent structures for a thief gained access to one occupation was established, may be described as through the window of the door of the building. permissive settlements. Their development from Seven shops are listed in the rental of 1366. From the market sites was evidently not hindered, even if it 1370s onwards the demand was strong and new sites was not actively facilitated their lords. were let for shops and the lord was able to charge The attitude of lords to the development of per- increased rents (BL Add. Rolls 32641, 32642, m. 1r., missive settlements is well illustrated by the village 32692, m. 13v., 32695, 31508, 32693, 32712, m. 2r.; of Rotherfield. It was situated near on the top of the ESRO SHE 7/16; BL Add. Rolls 32691, 32697, hill around the crossing point of three routes in the 32700). centre of an area of demesne. The tenements 'on the Mayfield, Wadhurst, Ticehurst and Wartling hill' as they are described in a survey of 1346/7 then developed initially as places of trade around a comprised 34 plots of land with buildings. The lord market-place. The first three were on the main ridge- ofRotherfield made small areas ofland available for top routes through the W eald; Wartling was on a road the development of the village, but very few of the leading northwards across the marshes to the upland. plots were more than a rood or two (0.1-0.2 ha) in The village of Heathfield by contrast had no regular extent. A plan of the manor of 1597 suggests that pattern of shop-places, acquired a market charter buildings in the village lay in three areas: to the north comparatively late and was apparently not situated of the church on the opposite side of the road, to its on any major roads. In spite of these disadvantages, east around the road junction and to its west. The Heathfield developed as a place of both manufacture tenements to the north of the church and those on the and trade. The first extant rental attributed to east side of the junction appear to have been cut out 1253X62 mentions four shops, one of which lay next ofthe demesne (Brandon 1969, 149; ESRO SAS/LB to the churchyard. Two of the shops were constructed 34; ESRO GIL 32; fig. 5). The earliest surviving on former farmland. The rental evidently lists the ten- court rolls of the 1450s mention one rood (0.1 ha) of ants in a broadly topographical order, for others in the leased demesne land near the junction which, ac- same part of the document, Adam de Ecclesia and cording to a later annotation, was occupied by house, Robert Vicar, bear names suggesting their proximity barn and orchard. Other buildings in the village were to the church. Other tenants mentioned in that part of constructed on land named Courtmede, on the former the rental include Geoffrey Chaloner, Geoffrey rabbit warren and on land taken from the highway. Weaver (Textor) who had one house, Nicholas Weaver Shops were situated close to the churchyard ac- with one house and 1Y:z acres (0.6 ha) and Godfrey cording to a rental of c.1500 (ESRO SAS/Aber 84; Mercer who may have lived nearby. It seems prob- ESRO SAS/Aber 68). able at this date that most of these surnames were not hereditary, and can be taken to indicate livelihood (McKinley 1988, 56-8, 60-1 ). Heathfield, therefore, Planned Settlements was probably a settlement of textile workers and mer- chants. The village was not granted a market charter The planned settlements in the Weald, unlike the until 1316, when there was an already well-establish- permissive villages, were intended from the outset to ed trading centre (Calendar of Charter Rolls 3, 306; provide housing as well as a site of trade. Their tene- Peckham 1925, 97; WSRO Ep. Vl/1/3, f. 47r.). ments were larger and the villages occupied less None of the villages considered above may be restricted locations. Trade was foremost in the minds described as planned settlements in the sense the term of the founders of planned settlements, as the early is generally used. Seigneurial planning, insofar as it grants of market charters or the urban attributes sug- occurred at all, was limited to regularising the plots gest. For example, the plan ofBurwash clearly points used for the market stalls and to purchasing market to its planned character. The village has a linear plan charters. Whether these actions initiated the markets and stands astride a major ridge-top route through the or merely served to encourage the growth of already Weald (fig. 6). A series of tenements ran back from 66 Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England 1582 1610 3•430 N 0 t I00 metres Fig. 4. 0 I 00 yards 67 M. Gardiner the street frontages to a rear boundaries parallel with the 1290s take the history of the settlement back to the road. A market charter was granted in 1252 when the late 13th century. No settlement, however, is the manor of Burwash was in the king's hands and mentioned in charters of the 1240s recording the there was certainly a village here in 13 29, when acquisition of land by Battle Abbey. It seems that the seven houses in the villa ofBurwash were granted to Battle part of the settlement had been formed during the manor of Woodknoll. There were at least eight the second half of the 13th century out of part of the stalls in the market-place in 1423 (Calendar of Close demesne field called Blakelond. The plan of the west Rolls 1251-3, 82; Peckham 1946, 354; BL Lans- side of Sedlescombe Street in the manor of Brick1e- downe MS. 269, f. 90v.; ESRO ASH 198). Burwash hurst is less well documented, but its less regular plan was a demesne manor of the lord of the Rape of suggests it may have developed organically, taking Hastings and by the early 13th century was the centre advantage of the activity on the opposite side of the of its administration. The size of the planned settle- road (PRO E315/57, ff. 14r.-14v.; PRO E315/56, ff. ment suggests that it was intended to be a small town, 5v.-8r.; LIL Hale MS. 87, ff. 56v.-58v.; HEH BA vol. but, if so, it failed to achieve an appropriate level of 5, nos. 162, 163, 174; ESRO FRE 520/ii). prosperity. The development of the villages ofRobertsbridge Planned settlements are only found within the and Salehurst is more complex than those already manors of the larger lords, and in particular those considered. It is improbable that there was a signi- belonging to monasteries. Boreham Street was estab- ficant settlement when the Cistercian monks chose lished by Bayham Abbey and Sedlescombe Street by the site ofRobertsbridge for their abbey in c. 1180 for Battle Abbey, while Robertsbridge Abbey founded a they preferred remote locations for their religious village at Robertsbridge itself. Boreham Street was houses. The village is more likely to have developed probably the place indicated as a settlement on the after the monastery was relocated to Elham in the road between Lewes and Winchelsea on the 'Gough' Rother valley to the east (D'Elboux 1944, 7, 124). A Map attributed to c.1360 (Parsons 1958,2, 16, n. 1). grant of a market and fair was made in 1225 during The origins of the village may date to 1251 when the Henry Ill's stay at the monastery, but was cancelled abbey was granted a market and Midsummer fair, the following month, because it was said to have however, that right had not been exercised when it threatened existing markets in the neighbourhood. confirmed in 13 25 (Calendar of Charter Rolls 3, 479; It cannot be a coincidence that Salehurst and Calendar of Patent Rolls 1324-27, 176). A probable Robertsbridge were granted, or in the case of the starting date of the settlement is suggested by a series latter, regranted, market charters in the same year, of charters from the 1270s recording grants of land 1253, for the two grew up as rival settlements on the between half acre and two acres (0.2 to 0.8 ha) in opposite banks and two separate crossing points over extent to hold 'in free burgage' (BL Cotton MS Otho the Rather valley (Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum, 2, Aii, nos 378-81). If the grants in free burgage signif- 14, 16; Placita de Quo Warrante, 759; Calendar of ied the ambition of the abbot, then he was to be Patent Rolls 1461-7, 408; Calendar of Charter Rolls disappointed for there is no evidence that the settle- 1, 416; cf. Saul 1986, 164-5). The abbot ofRoberts- ment was ever more than a few houses with a chapel. bridge had high expectations of his settlement and A late 13th-century rental lists tenants with the sur- evidently intended to establish a borough. He with- names Baker, Weaver (two) and Skinner, which may drew his tenants from the hundred of Henhurst, indicate occupations (Ray 1931, 174; BL Cotton MS formed his own hundred and created the posts of Otho Aii, ff. 73v., 77v.). constable, ale-conner and street-driver (Rotuli Hun- The east side of the small village Sedlescombe dredorum 2, 217-8). The names of tenants recorded Street lay in the lordship of the abbot of Battle, the in a rental of the 13th or early years of the 14th west in the manor of Bricklehurst. The settlement century included Waiter Textor (Weaver), Henry and was situated on the road to Hastings just north of the Robert Fuller and Henry Tinctor (Dyer) who may bridge over the River Brede. In the mid-16th century have been textile workers. Waiter le Chaper (the the whole settlement comprised about 18 houses Trader), the heirs of Peter Faber (Smith) and Gilbert (Martin & Martin 1979, 71). It may have been a simi- le Tomur (Turner) are also mentioned (ESRO SHE 7I lar size in 1433 when a survey of the Battle portion 3; CKS U1475/M242). Thus by c.1300 Roberts- alone recorded 10 messuages and one garden with a bridge seems to have been a flourishing manufactur- further building. On the east side the holdings were a ing and trading centre. regular size, each measuring one acre or a half, and The development and subsequent decline of the paid rent at the rate of 3s. per acre (0.4 ha). There rival market of Salehurst on the north side of the were a similar number of tenements in c.131 0 and the Rother valley is more difficult to trace. In 1349 its rents of 1s. 6d. and 3s. mentioned in the court rolls in lord, James de Etchingham claimed that the construe- 68 Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England 2262 !•710 N ·ooo Fig. 5. 293 t Rotherfield 2295 8'178 2300 1'604 0 I 00 metres 0 100 yards ( 202 2·613 562 . \ 6·730 587 Fig. 6. tion of a dam across the Rother downstream at Knel- Some Minor Settlements lesjlete had restricted the movement of ships and caused the destruction of his 'market town' of Sale- The settlement at Bodiam was granted a charter hurst (Calendar of Patent Rolls 1348-50, 78). The for a market and fair in 13 83 but failed to become a assertion was perhaps rhetorical, for the village may flourishing centre (Calendar of Charter Rolls 5, 281 ). already have suffered from competition from It was situated on a road leading to a bridge over the Robertsbridge. Whatever the reasons, Salehurst Rother, a crossing point which had been used since declined into a small settlement, while Robertsbridge the Roman period. Four or five long, regularly spaced flourished. tenement boundaries may still be traced in the grass behind the 19th-century houses to the west of the castle and the pattern is also shown on a map of 1672 69 M. Gardiner (ESRO AMS 569113/1; ESRO BAT 4435 (26)). The tant of these were the ridges running from Heathfield settlement is almost entirely surrounded by demesne to Battle and Hastings, and the second from Heath- and was very probably a planned settlement laid out field through Burwash towards Etchingham and by the lord of Bodiam manor. A likely context for beyond. The 'Gough' Map marks the line of a third this is the mid-1380s when Sir Edward Dallingridge road from Hailsham through Boreham Street to obtained a licence to crenellate, began work on Battle and Winchelsea (Pelham 1931, 182-4). The Bodiam Castle, established a nearby water-mill and settlements located away from the major highways obtained his market charter. Dallingridge appears to were seriously disadvantaged. It would have been have invested his profits from the French wars in a difficult for Dallington to the south of the ridge-top model settlement with castle, village, mill and road towards Battle, and Brightling (see below) to the market, but his ambitions were modest with regard to north, to develop into important centres of trade. the village: only a small number of tenements were Some villages succeeded in spite of their location. laid out (Whittick 1993, 122; Taylor, Everson & Heathfield lay some distance from any significant Wilson-North 1990, fig. 4). A final example of a late- highway, but was well situated for local textile work- established settlement is Dallington which did not ing, craft of considerable importance as the number obtain a market charter. The first evidence for offulling mills in the vicinity attests (Gardiner 1996, buildings there is in 13 83 when a grant was made to 134). A location on higher ground above the cros- construct a stall on a piece of land measuring eight sing-point of a stream or river was commonly chosen feet by 10 feet (2.4 by 3.0 m) next to the churchyard. for the site of settlements. The larger centres of A shop place is mentioned there 50 years later. The Robertsbridge, Northbridge Street and Sedlescombe site evidently failed to develop beyond a few stalls Street have already been discussed to which may be (ESRO SHE 7116; BL Add. Roll 32691, m. 5v.; BL added Newenden just over the border in Kent (Gra- Add. Roll. 32716, m. 4v.; ESRO AMS 6270/90/6). ham 1952, 77). Some hamlets in Sussex lay in similar positions. Bodiam and Boreham Street were both located near crossings. The hamlet or small village of The Pattern of Village Development in the Sussex Saltcote Street (Playden) lay either side of the road to Weald the ferry over the channel of the River Rother and a chapel stood just beyond the west end of the Settlements have been divided into two categor- settlement (Johnston 1967). The free tenements paid ies, permissive and planned. Seigneurial action a rent of 4d or a multiple of that sum. The place-name played some part in the growth of almost every settle- suggests that salt extraction was practised and anum- ment, whether passively in permitting encroachment ber of fishing boats were based at the hamlet (Dulley upon the highway or the erection of market stalls, or 1969,42, 56; Sussex Topographical Surveys: Playden more actively in obtaining a market charter or leasing Parish (1993); CKS U47/42/M12). Fishing may also areas of demesne. However, relatively few of the have provided the livelihood for the minor settle- settlements in this area, compared to those in other ments at Northeye and Bulverhythe, both limbs of the parts of England, can be identified as planned. The Cinque Ports (Burleigh 1973, 72; Searle and Ross intention of most lay lords in the Weald was more 1967, 52). The latter place even obtained a market modest, to foster markets within their manors and so charter, though it never developed into a significant to increase their revenue. The consequence was that settlement (Calendar of Charter Rolls 3, 13 7). when those markets grew into permanent settle- Location may also be invoked as the cause of ments, there was often limited scope for expansion. failure of two Wealden markets. Frant was granted a The planned settlements of Robertsbridge, Sedles- market charter in 1296, and when a survey was made combe Street and Bodiam occupied more spacious ofthe manor in 1635 there were a few houses around sites than, for example, the villages ofMayfield and the green, including a smithy and one shop-place Rotherfield where land had to be obtained by (Calendar of Charter Rolls 2, 467). Other houses on encroachment upon the highways or through grants the west side of the green which lay in Rotherfield of demesne. manor are shown on a map made about 40 years The relationship of trading settlements to the road earlier. The location, although on a road northwards system is likely to have been of considerable impor- to Tonbridge, was not propitious. The settlement was tance, although it is difficult to identify the main set amid acidic heathland described as 'waste' in the routes in the Weald, as elsewhere in medieval Eng- mid-14th century and its hinterland was inadequate land. The physical geography of the region dictates to support a market village. Parrock in Hartfield that the ridge-top routes were likely to have been occupied a similar location on the northern slopes of major lines of communication, and the most impor- Ashdown Forest. Pottery, the greater part dated to the 70 Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England 13th and 14th century, and iron slag suggest a pos- argued that many villages developed around the site sible industrial settlement (Tebbutt 1975). Quo War- of a market-place adjoining a church. The churches at ranto proceedings of 1279 record the claim of a Ticehurst and Wadhurst were situated at the side of market charter suggesting the aspiration to establish the market-place, set back from the main road. The an altogether more ambitious settlement, but pro- areas which came to be occupied by the markets must ximity to the town of East Grinstead and the poverty therefore pre-date the foundation of the churches, of the soils in the surrounding area seem to have taking them back before c.11 00 by which time most prevented its development (Placita de Quo War- of the Wealden churches had been established. At ranto, 754). Rotherfield the situation is rather different. The church The villages and hamlets of the Weald may in stood at the eastern end of a clearly defined funnel- some senses be regarded as substitute towns. They shaped area ofland and indeed appears to have been supplied to a limited area those goods which other- founded within it. In all these places the churches wise would have to have been bought at the pre- were evidently secondary to the existing open spaces. dominantly coastal urban centres. This is particularly These open areas or 'focal places' appear to be very apparent by examining the villages and hamlets in ancient and may have served as meeting points or this area (fig. 1). The distribution shows a marked trading places long before churches were established. concentration inland away from the larger towns. Hastings, Winchelsea and Rye in the south-eastern corner of the county evidently dominated trade and Trade, industry and village growth elsewhere manufacturing in their vicinity to such a degree that they prevented the growth of rival markets. The Trade in much of medieval England developed smaller settlements inland served the needs of com- around existing settlements, and in turn encouraged munities beyond easy travelling distance of the their growth. However, Salzman (1928, 207-208) has coastal ports. A number of the planned settlements drawn attention to assemblies (congregationes homi- were seemingly founded with the intention of creat- num) which took place to trade in an informal man- ing urban centres. The urban officials at Roberts- ner. He cited the example of a Sunday gathering in bridge, the tenements held in free burgage at Bore- the late 13th and early 14th century at Crosthwaite ham Street and the plan of Burwash have already church near Derwent Water in Westrnoreland at which been mentioned. The settlement ofLamberhurst over people came together to buy and sell corn, flour, the border in Kent was described as a town in the late peas, beans, flax, yarn, meat and fish. This was not a 13th century, the extent of which was delimited by regularised market because no toll or stallage was two crosses (Placita de Quo Warrante, 364). All paid, nor apparently did it take place at a village. The these effectively were failed towns, though they Crosthwaite gathering must have resembled many flourished as villages with some urban attributes. early markets, which were not regulated, but took The discussion has shown that the period 1250 place spontaneously when people were gathered to- and 1300 was crucial for the development of the gether at church. Sunday was the most common day network of markets and villages in the Weal d. Mar- for markets before the early 13th century when under kets established later generally failed to flourish and ecclesiastical pressure many changed to a weekday their associated settlements did not develop into and moved out of churchyard (Britnell 1993, 84-85). places of any significance. The example of Wart ling The development from congregationes to licens- has already been discussed and Brightling, which lay ed markets and their associated permanent settle- further north, is a further instance. Two stalls are ments may been very much more common than recorded at Brightling in 1422-3, when one was no documentary sources suggest. Unregulated trade on longer tenanted and the other below the churchyard sites without settlement will rarely attract docu- paid a reduced rent. A fair held there in the early 15th mentary notice. The markets of the Sussex Weald century produced a very small toll and was evidently and at Crosthwaite discussed here may be unusual of little commercial significance. It was described in only because they were very late examples which left 14 72 as a vicus or hamlet (ESRO ACC 3612/5, un- some trace in the written record. The pattern in Essex listed roll 5; ESRO ASH 198, 200, 200A; BL Add. seems to have been very similar to the Sussex Weald. Roll 31359). In both counties villages contained many who deriv- The development of villages in the Weald has ed their living from craftwork (Gardiner 1996; Poos been traced from the mid-13th century using docu- 1991, 36-37; Hilton 1977, 172-174). Both had high mentary evidence. There is little written evidence be- density of markets, 5.1 per 100 sq. miles in Essex fore that date, although some conclusions may be compared to 5.5 in the Rape ofHastings at the eastern drawn from analysis of the topography. It has been end of Sussex (Britnell 1981 b, 21 0). The develop- 71 M. Gardiner ment of village settlement has yet to be examined in DAVIS F.N. et al. (eds) 1969: The Register of John Essex, but the present study may be instructive. Pecham, Archbishop of Canterbury 1279-1292 1, The origin of village is unlikely to have a mono- Canterbury and York Society 64, Oxford. causal explanation. The growth of nucleated settle- DULLEY A.J.F. 1969: The early history of the Rye ment took place over a number of centuries as the fishing industry, Sussex Archaeological Collec- economy of England was undergoing very rapid tions 107, 36-64. change. Trade and craftwork were one of the factors DYER C. C. 1985: Power and Conflict in the Medieval which stimulated settlement nucleation. As such the Village, in: D. HOOKE (ed.), Medieval Villages: A historical and topographical evidence from the Review of Current Work, Oxford, 27-32. W eald is informative not merely about the growth of GARDINER M.F. 1996: The geography and peasant villages more generally, but may provide insights rural economy of the eastern Sussex High W eald, into the way towns developed in England at an earlier 1300-1420, Sussex Archaeological Collections date. 133, 125-139. GRAHAM R. 1952: Registrum Roberti Winchelsey, Cantuariensis Archiepiscopi AD 1294-1313 1, References Canterbury and York Society 51, Oxford. HARVEY P.D.A. 1989: Initiative and authority in Unpublished Sources settlement change, in: M. ASTON, D. AUSTIN & BL British Library (London) C.C. DYER (eds), The Rural Settlements of CKS Centre for Kentish Studies (Maidstone) Medieval England, Oxford, 31-43. ESRO East Sussex Record Office (Lewes) HILTON R.H. 1977: Bond Men Made Free: Medieval HMAG Hastings Museum and Art Gallery Peasant Movements and the English Rising of HER Henry E. Huntingdon Library (San Marino, 1381, London. California) JOHNSTON G.D. 1967: Ferries in Sussex [continued], LIL Lincoln's Inn Library (London) Sussex Notes and Queries 16, 307-308. LPL Lambeth Place Library (London) LEWIS C., MITCHELL-FOX P. & DYER C.C. 1996: PRO Public Record Office (London) Village, Hamlet and Field: Changing Medieval WSRO West Sussex Record Office (Chichester) Settlements in Central England, Manchester. Sussex Topographical Surveys: Playden Parish McKINLEY R. 1988: The Surnames of Sussex, (copies in ESRO and the Sussex Archaeological Oxford. Society library, Lewes). MAITLAND F. W. 1897: Domesday Book and Beyond, Cambridge. Printed Sources MARTIN D. & MARTIN B. 1979: A specialised build- BRANDON P.F. 1969: Medieval clearances in the East ing in Sedlescombe, Historic Buildings in Eastern Sussex Weald, Transactions of the Institute of Sussex 1 (iii), 71-72. British Geographers 48, 135-153. PARSONS E.J.S. 1958: The Map of Great Britain BRITNELL R.H. 1981a: Essex markets before 1350, circa A.D. 1360 Known as the Gough Map: An Essex Archaeology and History 13, 15-21. Introduction to the Facsimile, London. BRITNELL R.H. 1981 b: The proliferation of markets PECKHAM W.D. (ed.) 1925: Thirteen Custumals of in England, 1200-1349, Economic History Review the Sussex Manors of the Bishop of Chichester, 2nd series, 34, 209-221. Sussex Record Society 31, Lewes. BRITNELL R.H. 1993: The Commercialisation of PECKHAM W.D. (ed.) 1946: The Chartulary of the English Society 1000-1500, Cambridge. High Church of Chichester, Sussex Record BURLEIGH G.R. 1973: An introduction to deserted Society 46, Lewes. medieval villages in East Sussex, Sussex Archae- PELHAM R.A. 1931: Studies in the Historical Geo- ological Collections 111, 45-83. graphy of Medieval Sussex, Sussex Archaeo- Calendar of Charter Rolls (1903-27), 6 vols, London. logical Collections 72, 156-184. Calendar of Close Rolls (1892- in progress), London. Placita de Quo Warrante, London, 1818. Calendar of Patent Rolls (1891- in progress), Lon- Poos L.R. 1991: A Rural Society after the Black don. Death: Essex 1350-1525, Cambridge. Cooper W.D. 1869: Mayfield, Sussex Archaeological RAY J.E. (ed.) 1931: Sussex Chantry Records, Collections 21, 1-19. Extracted from Documents in the Public Record D'ELBOUX R.H. (ed.) 1944: Survey of the Manor of Office, Sussex Record Society 36, Lewes. Robertsbridge, 1567-70, Sussex Record Society REDWOOD B.C. & WILSON A.E. (eds) 1958: Custwn- 47, Lewes. als of the Sussex Manors of the Archbishop of 72 Trade, Rural Industry and the Origins of Villages: some Evidence from South-East England Canterbwy, Sussex Record Society 57, Lewes. Cellarers of Battle Abbey 12 75-1513, Sussex ROBERTS B.K. 1987: The Making of the English Record Society 65, Lewes. Village, London. TAYLOR C.C. 1983: Village and Farmstead: A His- ROBERTS B.K. & WRATHMELL S. 1995: Terrain and tory of Rural Settlement in England, London. Rural Settlement Mapping: The Methodology and TA YLOR C. C., EVERSON P. & WILSON-NORTH R. Preliminary Results, (report for English Heri- 1900: Bodiam Castle, Sussex, Medieval Archaeo- tage), London. logy 34, 156-157. Rotuli Hundredorum, London, 1812-18. TEBBUTT C.F. 1975: An Abandoned Medieval Indus- Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum, London, 1834. trial Site at Parrock, Hartfield, Sussex Archaeo- SALZMAN L.F. 1928: The legal status of markets, logical Collections 113, 146-151. Cambridge Historical Journal2, 205-12. WHITTICK C.H.C. 1993, Dallingridge's Bay and SAUL N. 1986: Scenes from Provincial Life: Knightly Bodiam Castle Millpond- Elements of a Medie- Families in Sussex 1280-1400, Oxford. val Landscape, Sussex Archaeological Collec- SEARLE E. & Ross B. (eds) 1967: Accounts of the tions 131,119-123. Mark Gardiner Department of Archaeology The Queen's University of Belfast Belfast BTI 1NN Northern Ireland 73 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Carenza Lewis Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight The Royal Commission on the Historical Monu- The methodology devised for the project re- ments of England (RCHME) is widely recognised as quired that the database record for each settlement expert in the detailed field survey of the earthwork should include a range of historical, archaeological remains of medieval settlements, exemplified in pro- and geographical data, which would enable the jects in Northamptonshire and Lincolnshire (RCHME extent of knowledge about each place to be immed- refs). This paper describes work that was carried out iately apparent and its likely character, status and in Hampshire and the Isle ofWight (fig 1) in England type to be assessed. Following completion of the to investigate a new approach to the study and re- database, information on it had to be mapped, anal- cording of medieval settlements within RCHME. ysed and interrogated to produce a descriptive and This paper provides a review of the aims and methods interpretational review placing the evidence in its used and describes some of the results of the work in wider context. One of the strengths of the approach Hampshire and the Isle ofWight. was that it could cover a large area rapidly, so that any county would take just three months to com- plete. Following completion, the database inform- Aims and Principles ation had to be supplied to national and local archaeological record systems so that the inform- In England, a long history of archaeological in- ation could inform managerial and research initi- vestigation into medieval settlement sites, combined atives. A detailed account of the findings also had to with a wealth of documentary evidence and maps be prepared and a summary published in the annual means that a considerable amount of information report of the Medieval Settlement Research Group regarding medieval settlements exists. However, these (MSRG). various strands of evidence have too often remained separate, which has limited their ability to increase our understanding of the nature and evolution of Project methodology settlement in the middle ages. Furthermore, this separation of historical and archaeological evidence A number of different archaeological, architect- has resulted in the omission of many documented ural and documentary sources were used in the pilot, settlements from record systems designed to identify which was conducted by two full-time staff (one and protect historic sites. historical researcher and one archaeological invest- Recent RCHME work in Hampshire and the Isle igator) and one part-time volunteer with no previous ofWight was intended to address these problems by experience who helped with data inputting. Field bringing together and assessing archaeological, hist- assessments were carried out over one week by one orical and geographical evidence for medieval settle- archaeological field investigator. One ofthe benefits ment over a wide area. The approach develops that of the approach used in the Medieval Settlement used in recent Birmingham University research into Project was the speed and economy of effort with medieval settlement in the east midlands (Lewis & which it could produce useful results. Mitchell Fox 1992, 1993; Lewis, Mitchell Fox & Dyer The project comprised six main areas of activity 1996). The approach was firstly to create a database summarised below. 1-3 and 5 were carried out in with a separate record for every known medieval succession, concurrently with 4 (historical research). (410-1540 AD) settlement, and secondly to analyse 6 (analysis) was carried out following completion of and map the database information to identify and 1-5. study patterns in the development and pattern of settlement in the medieval period. 75 C. Lewis I) Historic place-name data input medieval pottery find from within the same settle- ment: rarely is such a place classified anywhere as a The first task undertaken was the entry to the settlement. The archaeological evidence for medieval database of all documented historic places likely to settlements is presently very dispersed and is thus have been settlements in the medieval period (410- almost impossible to identify, retrieve, quantify or 1540 AD). One of the major inadequacies of exist- assess. One aim of the RCHME research was to col- ing heritage records (NMR and SMRs) is that most late and synthesise this disparate information and medieval settlements which are of documented create supplementary records of settlements. Each of medieval date but for which no archaeological evid- these would show the range of evidence for the whole ence has yet been recorded are omitted. One of the settlement, enabling the level of knowledge about aims of the Medieval Settlement Project was to each place to be immediately apparent, and its likely remedy this deficiency. character, status and type to be easily identified. For each place documented before 1540, eight items of information were input to the database as the i) SMRs: first stage of the pilot. These comprised the modem The Hampshire SMR provided a print-out of all place-name, the earliest form or spelling of the name, medieval (410-1540 AD) records classified under the the meaning of the place-name, the date at which the following categories: farm, moat, manor, settlement name was first documented, the national grid refer- site, building material, finds, cruck-framed building, ence (if identifiable, to six figures), the modem hearth, house platforms, occupation hollows, pottery parish and county within which the place lies, and the finds, kilns, sunken-floored buildings, parish church, project database record identification number. This deserted village, shrunken village, village and chapel. created 2,289 records on the database and took 12 It was hoped that this would retrieve all records likely working days to complete. to contain settlement data (the large number of terms Place-name surveys compiled by Kokeritz (1940) which had to be used to recover settlement inform- for the Isle of Wight, and by Gover (unpublished ation illustrates the problem of trying to identify typescript 1960) and Coates (1989) for Hampshire settlement information in existing record systems). provided information for this stage. Modem Ord- The printout (including the descriptive text) was nance Survey maps at 1:50,000 were used to locate searched thoroughly and all information about medie- these places and provide grid references. Some ad- val settlements was collated, synthesised with the ditional grid references were found from 1:25,000 place-name data and input to the database. Ordnance Survey maps. Despite this fairly intensive For the much smaller county of Isle of Wight all effort, not all places could be located: some are only records of early or late medieval date were rapidly named on 1:10,000 maps, others only on older 6" scanned for settlement evidence at the County maps, and others are even more obscure. Limited Archaeological Unit, following which a full print-out time did not allow the examination of any of these of all records found to contain information relevant to maps for missing grid references, consequently c. medieval settlement was provided for detailed 500 historic places on the database still lack complete assessment and entry to the database at NMRC. grid references. ii) NMR: From the NMR a short print-out of all records of 2) Archaeological data medieval date (including both archaeological and architectural records) in Hampshire and the Isle of Four main sources were used to identify the Wight was obtained. This was scanned to identify all physical evidence for medieval settlement in Hamp- evidence indicative of medieval settlement, which shire and the Isle of Wight, namely the Sites and was then collated and added to the database. Monuments Records (SMRs) for each county, the National Monuments Record (NMR) held by RCHME iii) MVRG: and the archive of the Medieval Village Research A printout of the indexed information from the Group (MVRG). All of these records are now at least MVRG (held by RCHME) was used to cross-refer- partially computerised, but have been built up cumul- ence sites which had been recorded by the Medieval atively over a period of time, and in most cases each Village Research Group. The detailed archive in- newly discovered piece of information has been formation (which has not been computerised) was added as a separate record as it comes to light. Thus rapidly reviewed for relevant information regarding a standing medieval building is likely to be recorded extent of earthwork remains. in a separate record to an excavated building or a 76 Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle ofWight Fig.l. Project area RCHME As the aim of the pilot was to identify, review, ded to the database record for that place. Any evid- collate and assess the evidence for medieval secular ence about a site not already on the pilot database was settlement, information about standing domestic added as a separate new record. Approximately 270 buildings of medieval date was included, and in some new settlement sites were added to the project data- cases this provided the only physical evidence to base from evidence contained in the SMRs and NMR. support the documented medieval date of a settle- Any additional information necessary to clarify or sup- ment. The presence of a medieval church was record- port the archaeological evidence was included in the ed as an associated monument, but was not assumed free text memo field. Work collating and synthes- necessarily to indicate the certain presence of a settle- ising the pertinent information from the major exist- ment. Pevsner and Lloyd's survey of the buildings of ing archaeological records took 16.5 working days. Hampshire and the Isle of Wight (Pevsner & Lloyd 1967) was used to establish the date of some chur- ches and other buildings where this information was 3) Nineteenth century settlement form not included in the SMRs or NMR. Information about other types of medieval buildings such as religious With the exception of deserted or very extensively establishments, castles, hospitals etc was only includ- shrunken settlements, historical and archaeological ed if the sites lay within settlements, in which case information reveals little or nothing about the size or they might have affected the status and development layout of medieval settlements. However, an under- of the settlement. standing of the likely morphological form of settle- Any of this information which related to places ment in a region is often crucial in establishing its recorded during the place-name data survey was ad- archaeological potential. For example, a place with a 77 C. Lewis ~: Fig. 2a. ·. . ...... ..-: . i .J.~ ...... ,l Nucleated cluster settlements in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight in 1801 i 10 km. lsoo large documented medieval population which now settlement in 1810 was entered onto the database, exists only as a single building may reasonably be using a simple range of morphological types which posited as the possible site of a deserted medieval vil- included compact/nucleated cluster, regular row, lage if it is in an area where all other surrounding set- interrupted/irregular row, common-edge settlement tlements are nucleated. If, however, all neighbouring and isolated farmstead. These (with the exception of settlements are of dispersed form it is more likely that isolated farmsteads) were subdivided into small, the medieval record of a population under a single medium and large settlements, so that a cluster ofless place name represents an administrative convenience. than 15 houses was classified as a small compact/ In this case it is unlikely that the named place was nucleated cluster, rather than a hamlet, avoiding use ever a large nucleated settlement, but was perhaps of that term which has never been firmly defined. merely the site of the manor house with the peasant/ In the course of the 1810 map survey a number of tenant tofts scattered across the settlement territory. other places were noted which, despite the apparent The source used to characterise the form of the lack of historic place-name evidence for their medie- places recorded in the pilot project was the first val existence, seemed likely on other grounds to have edition 1" Ordnance Survey (OS) map published for formed part of the medieval settlement landscape. A the region by Colonel Mudge in 1810. This was total qf.l93 of these were added (with the standard selected because it was the earliest map which prov- data range of name, parish, NGR etc data) to the data- ided consistent and reliable coverage across the whole base as new records, classified as settlements of post- of the pilot area while also providing an adequate medieval (but not medieval) date. degree of detail. Earlier maps at the County Record Office were of insufficient detail, quality or cover- age. (This OS map also confers an advantage for the 4) Historical Data future in that it covers the whole of England, allowing for consistency across a national project) Most of the historical data examined related to For each historic place recorded on the pilot levels of population, wealth and agricultural develop- database from the place name survey and the ment, but also included simple types of information archaeological records which could be identified on (where available) about the economic and institut- the 1810 OS map (a total of 1,518), the form of the ional status of settlements and also the agrarian 78 Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle ofWight Fig. 2b. . .•. I J.!)g ·+···· Regular street/row settlements in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight in 1801 12 ..5 km . . ~00 ' lOO organisation associated with them. This information ecclesiastical parish to allow the mapping of popul- substantiates the record created from the place-name ation densities across the region. Some additional and archaeological sources, and enables the varying calculations have also been made using the Domes- size and importance of the recorded settlements in day Book data, including the relative proportions of the medieval period to be identified, assessed and demesne and tenant plough teams for each place, and compared locally and regionally. Additional data the numbers of slaves and their ratios to demesne relating to other aspects of settlement such as social ploughs (there has been speculation that this should and manorial structure was also reviewed and pro- be 2: 1, indicating that slaves acted as demesne vided additional background information for the final plough men, but unusually, this is often much higher synthesising report but was not included in the in Hampshire). The data for population, lordship and database because of its less reducible character. ploughs was input to the database. Other information was used to produce county distribution maps and to i) Domesday Book: inform the county report. The time taken processing Domesday Book was used to extract and collate data the Domesday Book data was three weeks. pertaining to settlement for three categories: 1. Tenurial- including the number and size of hold- ii) 13271133411428/ay subsidies: ings and the type of lord (royal, lay or ecclesiastical). The second task was to collect and synthesise data 2. Agrarian and economic resources- including the from the lay subsidies of 1327, 1334 and 1428. The numbers of ploughs (separated into demesne and 1327 subsidy was chosen because it is the earliest tenant) and the extent of other resources including (and appears to be the only) record for Hampshire to meadow and woodland. provide lists of named tax payers for each place. As 3. Population- the number of people recorded at this roll has never been published the original, held in each place according to their various categories. the Public Record Office was examined. The numbers The total of all recorded plough teams and popul- of tax-payers listed for each place were counted and ation, and an adjusted population figure (allowing an the overall tax assessments recorded. The names of the average of 4.5 people per recorded family for all cate- individuals were also scanned for evidence for addit- gories except figures for slaves which were assumed ional contemporary settlement sites or other topogra- to represent individuals) were then calculated for each phical information. These were added to the database. 79 C. Lewis The 1334 subsidy, though only listing the total 5) Field Assessment sums paid by each settlements (rather than listing sums paid by individuals) was included in the pilot 56 sites were selected for field assessment to ascer- because it is one of the few medieval taxation re- tain the presence and extent of earthwork remains of cords providing local evidence surviving for the former settlement. Most of these were historically whole of the country, and will therefore be import- attested sites in dispersed regions, which were reveal- ant for making comparisons within the national ed by the desk-top survey to be particularly poorly project. The published edition of the 1334 data was understood and often classified inaccurately or on used for this (Glasscock 1975). The figures for 1327 inadequate evidence. For example, many sites have and 13 34 were input to the database for each settle- in the past been classified as deserted villages from ment and totalled by ecclesiastical parish to enable historical sources alone, and it is now recognised that the densities of population and taxable wealth to be many places in non-nucleated regions which are mapped across the region. The time taken collecting documented as having taxable populations may have and processing the fourteenth century taxation data been merely the site of the manor within an area of was two weeks. scattered hamlet and farmstead habitation and never The list of parishes with less than ten households existed as nucleated villages: such sites require field in the lay subsidy of 1428 is a useful indicator of verification to establish whether there really is any those settlements which were particularly small after physical evidence for more extensive former settle- the Black Death, particularly in Hampshire where the ment - if none is evident, such sites should not be 13 77 Poll Tax returns are not available. This inform- classified as deserted or shrunken villages. ation was also input to the database. iii) Nomina Villarum: 6) Analysis Data has also been taken from the 1316 Nomina Villarum, providing evidence for the whole county of Following completion of the data collection and the number and type of lords then holding land in database entry, maps were generated from the data- each vill. base using a computerised geographical information system. This facilitates evaluation of the geograph- iv) 1524 lay subsidy ical distribution of various settlement phenomena, The latest taxation records employed were those of such as dispersed and nucleated settlement types, the Lay Subsidy levied in 1524-5 (Sheail 1968). The deserted and shrunken settlements. It is possible to numbers of tax-payers for each place were assessed produce distribution maps of any query carried out on and input to the database and calculated by parish for the database. The potential of this for the study of mapping purposes in one week. medieval settlements is only just beginning to be explored (Lewis & Mitchell Fox 1996, RCHME in v) Settlement status preparation). All collected data was analysed using The identification of evidence relating to the status of the database and maps- these are, independently and settlements in the early or later medieval period together, a very powerful but easily accessible involved trawling a miscellaneous collection of sour- research tool. The following pages provide an indic- ces, in a more speculative search for evidence about ation of the sort of analysis that can be conducted institutional and economic status and agrarian organ- using the project data and maps. isation. Examination of pre-Conquest sources, in- cluding charters and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, allowed identification of Anglo-Saxon royal vills, Results: Medieval settlement in Hampshire and assembly sites and minsters. Post-Conquest sources the Isle of Wight examined include the calendars of royal charter rolls, the Victoria County Histories (VCH 1900-1912) and The project data, available on the database and as Beresford and Finberg's handlist of boroughs (Beres- a series of maps enables a wide range of issues per- ford & Finberg 1973), which has produced a list of taining to the nature and development of the medie- over sixty medieval markets, boroughs and fairs. All val rural landscape to be explored and assessed. Four Hampshire cartularies readily available in print have issues are considered to provide examples of the sort been scanned, principally for evidence of field sys- of assessment that can be carried out using the tems, as well as additional evidence relating to settle- RCHME project data. ment status. Published manorial records have helped illuminate social structure and the agrarian economy. 80 Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle ofWight ~i Fig. 3. . ...... ·. ... . ·.. ... .. .. .- I I I .\!?.() i ·····r··- r Dispersed settlements (Common-edge and interrupted rows) in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight in 1801 10 km. I I soo 1) Settlement pattern to indicate a greater degree of expansion in dispersed, woodland regions than in the nucleated champion A computerised mapping software system was regions. able to provide distribution maps of different settle- The roots of this may lie in the relatively under- ment types in 1810. These showed clearly that exploited nature of woodland!heathland regions in nucleated villages dominated the major river valleys earlier centuries. In the pre-Conquest period, 32% of of the chalkland, and the chalk massif of central all nucleated sites are referred to in documents, but Hampshire (fig 2). Dispersed settlement types are for dispersed settlements the figure is only 8%. very uncommon in these areas (fig 3). In contrast, it Interestingly, however, Domesday Book records sim- is clear that the north, east and south of the region is ilar percentages of both types (26% of all dispersed largely characterised by dispersed settlement; nucle- settlements are recorded there, compared to 28% of ation in these areas is associated with psuedo-urban nucleated settlements), suggesting that woodland function (the presence of a market, etc), or recent regions were 'catching up' fast in the later pre- (nineteenth/twentieth century) expansion. Essentially Conquest centuries. Certainly by 1086, they do not the dispersed regions correspond to the area away appear to have been vast uncharted and unadmin- from the chalk. istered wastelands. Equally, the woodland and heath- It is notable that there is some similarity in the land regions seem to have seen a particularly great distribution of evidence for dispersed settlement and expansion in settlement in the post-Conquest era, an that for settlements documented for the first time observation which is supported by documentary only in the later medieval period (fig 4). The database references to assarting on many of the later medieval confirms this observation: 64% of dispersed settle- manors, including those of the Abbey ofWinchester, ments (interrupted row and common-edge) are docu- whose pipe rolls documents many details of estate mented for the first time post-1 086, whereas for activities. nucleated settlements (clusters and rows) the figure is The correlation of earlier documentary evidence only 40%. Both figures, of course, reflect the expan- with that for the nineteenth century settlement pattern sion in written records in the fourteenth and fifteenth suggests that, while some elements of the later centuries which led to many smaller settlements pattern are of late origin (much of the present settle- being recorded for the first time. But this does seem ment around the Solent, for example, post-dates even 81 C. Lewis Fig. 4. .. . .... . '. .... .·..... .·..... ··.: : . .. . . . ... ... . ... .. . ........ ·.:. ·:.-::.. ·.· .. ~ . .. .. ·.... · ..... ·.·..· \ Settlements in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight documented for the first time post. 1086 25 km. ! 400 ' 500 the early nineteenth century), the post-medieval pat- lages (DMVs). However, in Hampshire and the Isle terns of dispersed and nucleated settlement may in of Wight only five such sites actually have any many cases, give a fair indication of the medieval recorded archaeological evidence for shrinkage. The pattern. Another interesting figure which can be others therefore must be classified, on the basis of noted is that only 18% of common edge settlements known evidence rather than presumed status, simply are named in Domesday Book, while 20% are named as settlements or documented place names. Sites for the first time in the fourteenth century. For inter- whose population fell markedly between 1086 and rupted rows, in contrast, 30% are name din 1086, and 1327 might also be expected to be prime candidates only 8% appear for the first time in the fourteenth for desertion in the later fourteenth and early fifteenth century. While a documentary reference does not, of centuries, and to exhibit evidence for shrinkage. The course, data the origins of the settlement, the differ- recorded population of 10 sites fell from 50% above ence between the two types of dispersed settlement average in 1086 to more than 25% below average in may indicate that common-edge habitation is a later 1327. However, these were all still paying tax in 1524 form of settlement. Only further archaeological in- (albeit with a low average population of 13.5 com- vestigation could confirm of refute this suggestion. pared to 29 overall for the region), and none have recorded evidence for shrinkage or desertion. These sites could usefully be targeted for future 2) Field assessment and identification of deserted field assessment, to ascertain whether or not they have sites any earthwork evidence for contraction. However, in the meantime, it must be suspected that these falls in Few sites which can confidently be classified as population in fact reflect, at least in part, the wide- deserted are known in the region (fig 5). The possib- spread fragmentation of Domesday manors into ility of using historical evidence to identify or predict smaller taxation units in the centuries following the likely deserted sites can be tested using the in- Norman Conquest. Chilcombe, for example had 9 formation recorded on the database. For example 119 churches and a recorded population of c. 213 in 1086: sites are recorded in Domesday Book but omitted the fall to just 4 in 1327 must be due in part to the from 1334lists: those with very limited settlement in break-up of this large estate of the Bishop of Win- 1810 are often classified as deserted medieval vil- chester into smaller taxable units. 82 Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight r-~---- ---~,----- - - - - - - - - - - - ---·---· I ~~ Fig. 5. ,' I .· .. Deserted and shrunken settlement~ in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight 10 km. I lsoo During the project, 56 sites were selected for field early medieval period. For 210 of these the evidence assessment. Most were either isolated farmsteads is purely documentary; and only 39 actually have whose names were documented in the medieval period definite archaeological evidence for settlement. No or sites classified on archaeological record systems archaeological evidence at all is known for early as deserted, in areas of predominantly dispersed medieval settlement from the Isle of Wight. While settlement, for which archaeological evidence was these figures may seem to indicate something of a particularly poor. Field assessment revealed that one dearth of evidence for settlement of this period, the in four had earthwork remains of settlement, but in region does include the sites of Chalton Down (in no case were these extensive or substantial. The south Hampshire) and Cowdery's Down (in north presence of other earthworks, including remains of Hampshire), both of which have been extensively ridge and furrow field systems, at a number of sites excavated (Addyman & Leigh 1973, Cunliffe 1973; suggests that settlement evidence, had it existed, Millet & James 1983). should have been preserved. The absence of large Overall, only a handful of attested early medieval areas of abandoned former settlement suggests that settlement sites were deserted before the Norman the regions where settlement was dispersed in the Conquest - even in the case of early (ie pre-7th nineteenth century were probably, likewise, areas century) Anglo-Saxon sites, most known sites con- generally lacking large nucleated villages in the tinued in occupation in the post-Conquest era. There medieval period. As a substantial proportion of sites are however 21 sites which produced pottery finds visited had previously been classified as deserted, the but which could not be confidently classified as field assessment indicated that extreme caution should settlements, and most of these are from places which be exercised in classifying settlements as deserted on were not flourishing in the later period. These include historical evidence alone. Up Sombome, where seven sherds of (possibly residual) Saxon pottery were recovered from a post- hole; a deserted site in Faccombe parish where 6 3) The early medieval period- shift and success sherds of grass-tempered ware were found in a remote downland situation, similarly sited pits as- Of more than 2, 700 sites recorded in the pilot, sociated with animal bone and Saxon pottery in only 299 have any evidence for occupation in the Romsey Extra parish, and a single sherd found in 83 C. Lewis fields in Farringdon parish. The last 3 are from sites In fact, many early medieval settlements in the which are unoccupied in the post-conquest period, region seem, rather than being abandoned, to have but the slight nature of the archaeological evidence survived and flourished. Examination of the project means that they cannot realistically be classified as data suggests that there is a significant link between early medieval settlements, but as merely as pottery early occupation and enduring success. More than a finds. Other pottery find spots are even less likely to third (12 out of33) of early medieval settlement sites represent settlement: some may be funerary vessels were towns or market villages in the later medieval (such as at Compton and Hucklesbrook Farm (in period and three-quarters (25 out of33) were medium Ellingham, Harbridge and lbsley parish), many others or large settlements in the early nineteenth century. such as at Lymington, Odiham or Barnes High (Isle Overall, 12 of the 50 late medieval towns and market of Wight), are dubious or unprovenanced. However villages have archaeological evidence for early medie- the distribution of such evidence, and other deserted val settlement, and this must suggest that many other early medieval settlement sites does however gener- similar sites may also have Saxon precursors. ally favour the chalk downland and suggests an aban- Even early-established sites which did not become donment of these areas (which were extensively markets seem to have been larger than average. The occupied in the Roman period) during the Anglo- average population for these sites in 1086 was 49 Saxon period. This is supported by excavations at (compared to 25 overall), in 1524 it was 72.5 (com- Chalton and Cowdery's Down, both downland sites pared to 29 for all settlements). Only 5 have evidence which were abandoned by the mid-seventh century. for significant shrinkage or desertion in the later In other areas there is little or no evidence for medieval period (2 are shrunken, 3 deserted). While deserted early medieval settlements. This is particul- large or urban sites are perhaps more likely to have arly significant in east Hampshire and the Avon been excavated, (in advance of development) intro- Valley in west Hampshire which have been subject to ducing a possible bias to the sample, the fact that intensive fieldwalking programmes (Shennan 1985; documented early medieval sites show a similarly Light et a/1994;). The few abandoned early medieval higher than average population of 40 in 1086 sup- sites which have been found in the Avon valley ports the general suggestion of a link between Sax on showed strong continuity with Roman pottery dis- occupation and post-Conquest longevity and prosper- tribution. Most are also close to later medieval settle- ity. Interestingly, 19 out ofthe 33 sites with evidence ments, suggesting a process of gradual shift within for early settlement were also documented in the pre- the densely occupied river valleys. While the down- Conquest period- an unusually good correlation! lands seem to have been abandoned for settlement, elsewhere the assumption, based on present evid- ence, must be that settlement was either very sparse 4) Later medieval settlement- variety in desertion (which seems unlikely), or very conservative, mostly underlying or adjacent to later settlements. This con- In many areas the downland remained devoid of tradicts current orthodoxy, based mostly on work settlement from the early Saxon period onwards. In carried out in the midlands, where it is thought that others, particularly in central and north Hampshire, small dispersed early medieval sites were abandoned settlements such as Hatch near Basingstoke (Fasham in large numbers, probably around the ninth century, et a/1995), were established on downland in the late and replaced by nucleated villages set within regular pre- and early post-Conquest period. open field systems. Few later medieval settlements with conclusive Settlement change in Hampshire seems to have evidence for desertion are known in Hampshire and been of a more limited extent, mainly comprising a the Isle ofWight, but the figures for those which can much earlier (ie pre mid-eighth century) abandon- be identified reveal some interesting patterns. The ment of the downland. Riverine settlement was al- average population for all sites recorded in Domes- ways an enduring.feature of the landscape in Roman, day Book was 25; for settlements which were later Anglo-Saxon and later medieval periods, but down- deserted (excluding Old Highclere, to which we will land settlement was a feature only of particularly return below) it was only 15. In 1327 the average expansive periods, such as the Roman (and the high number of taxpayers for all recorded sites was 16, but medieval, see below). It is of course, quite possible only 9 for later deserted settlements. It seems that a that Hampshire, whose terrain and political history significant number of deserted sites were ones which over the Anglo-Saxon period were both very differ- had always been smaller and poorer than average. ent to the midlands, did indeed have a correspond- However, the data suggests considerable variation in ingly different process of settlement evolution during the progress of depopulation. Lomer, for exampl,e this period. recorded 11 individuals in 1086, 7 in 1327, fewer than 84 Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight ten households in 1428, but still had 6 (8 are listed in Conclusion the second survey) taxpayers in 1524. With early medieval occupation attested by pottery finds and a The RCHME project in Hampshire and the Isle of documentary reference in AD 802, Lomer, although Wight has increased our knowledge and understand- always small, seems to have maintained quite a stable ing of a range of aspects of the historical process of population for most of the middle ages, and must settlement between AD 410-1540 in the project have declined to its 1810 farmstead status in the post- region, which will be of value to those involved in medieval period. Apparently more erratically, West- curating, managing, studying, recording or surveying bury (in East Meon) recorded a reasonable popul- medieval settlement sites. The project has clarified ation of 13 individuals in 1086, contained only one the present extent of knowledge and highlighted a taxpayer in 1327. The population recovered by 1524 number of lacunae which exist in the archaeological to 9, but fell again in the post-medieval and was just evidence, particularly in areas of dispersed settle- a single farm by 1810. ment, thus identifying priorities for future work. Other sites show a different pattern again. Durton The RCHME research has also created consistent, (in Arreton), for example, recorded with 2 occupants standardised records for all known or suspected (but with 2.5 ploughs, a very much higher ratio than medieval settlements which will improve the ability normal) in 1086. Although, unusually, it rose in value of county archaeologists to manage and protect between 1066 and 1086, it lacked a church, had settlement sites. Despite planning legislation, such vanished as an independently taxed unit by 1327, and sites are often particularly threatened by develop- was just a single, unremarkable farmhouse in 1810 ment ranging from modern village infilling to agri- (Winter 1984, 187). Durton has been classified as a cultural building construction, and most are at pres- deserted village by the MVRG and the NMR on the ent excluded from archaeological record systems basis of its disappearance from documentary sources, such as the National Monuments Record (NMR) or but the evidence suggests that it may never have been county Sites and Monuments Records (SMRs) and more than a single farm. Contraction, if it did occur, can thus fail to trigger appropriate mitigatory action. probably dates to the eleventh century or earlier. The corpus of information available as a result of Old Highclere, in contrast again, stands out as the the RCHME project should also benefit the academic site of a probable Saxon minster and with 69 re- community for whom, it is hoped, the database, print- corded inhabitants, had a much larger population outs, maps and report will provide evidence for, and than any other deserted site in 1086. Significantly, its stimuli towards, new research directions. As always, abandonment was not a result of decline: it was the most difficult part of any research is working out forcibly depopulated (or, in effect, relocated to the which questions should be asked of the data. The existing site of (New) Highclere) when a park was preceding pages have outlined a few of those which created in the thirteenth century. Other large settle- have suggested themselves during the project and ments which were later deserted are Merdon and which may stimulate debate, but detailed pursuance Newton. Newton was a borough in the thirteenth cen- of research themes is beyond the scope of the RCHME tury; while Merdon was associated with a castle and project. One of the great merits of this approach, paid the highest sum of all deserted settlements in however, is that the data collected will henceforth be 1334, but was reduced to 9 taxpayers by 1524, and available for anyone to revisit and re-examine. just 2 farmsteads by 1810. The decline of these settle- It is also hoped that the information will be of ments may be related to their commercial failure. interest to the general public, many of whom live in The evidence collected in Hampshire and the Isle the settlements which have been studied. of Wight points to considerable variation in the From a European perspective, it is important to processes by which settlements came to be deserted. note that one of the reasons why the RCHME work It is notable that there is no evidence for the sort of was carried out in southern England was to establish sweeping depopulation seen across vast swathes of whether the methodology developed for the east mid- the midlands. This suggests that depopulation gener- lands would work in a different region - and ultim- ally occurred on a settlement-by-settlement basis, for ately on a national scale. The work in Hampshire and specific site-related reasons, and not as part of a the Isle of Wight has established that it would. widespread, chronologically distinct process involv- Extending the scope of such research beyond the ing rural recession. original east midlands focus allows comparison of a standardised set of information for very different regions which is vitally important if we are to under- stand the interplay of various factors in the evolution of medieval settlement in England. 85 C. Lewis Could such an approach usefully be carried out in report, Medieval Archaeology 17, 1-25. other European countries? RCHME research in FASHAM P., KEEVIL G. & CoE D. 1995: Brighton Hill southern England indicates that the basic principle - South (Hatch Warren), Wessex Archaeology of methodically synthesising and analysing as much Report 7, Wessex Archaeology, Salisbury. as possible of the information pertinent to medieval GLASSCOCK R. 1975: The lay subsidy of 1334, settlement from diverse sources to assess the present Oxford University Press). state of knowledge, create a consistent record and GovER J.E.B. 1960): Hampshire place-names, vols 1 identify priorities for future work - could feasibly and 2, unpublished typescript. and usefully be applied to any European country, all KoKERITZ H. 1940: The Place-Names of the Isle of of which have a historic pre-modern period. Such Wight, University ofUppsala. studies carried out in other European countries would LEWIS C. & MITCHELL FOX P. 1992: Medieval allow evidence and ideas from different countries to settlements in Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire: inform and stimulate each other across the continent, an interim report, Medieval Settlement Research for an era when cultural and territorial boundaries Group Annual Report 7, 15-20. were in almost constant flux, when ideas could travel LEWIS C. & M ITCH ELL Fox P. 1993: Medieval settle- widely, and European integration was less an issue ments in Buckinghamshire and Leicestershire: an than a fact of life. However limited and problematic interim report, Medieval Settlement Research the evidence for medieval settlement might be, assem- Group Annual Report 8, 21-27. bling and assessing it in this manner is one way of LEWIS C. & MITCHELL Fox P. 1996: Settlement in making the most of it, wherever the work is being Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, Medieval carried out. Settlement Research Group Annual Report 10. LEWIS C., MITCHELL Fox P. & DYER C.C. 1996: Village, Hamlet and Field, Manchester University Acknowledgements Press). The work this paper describes is the result of a co- LIGHT A., SCHOFIELD A.J. & SHENNAN S.J. 1994: ordinated effort by several people. First and fore- The middle Avon Valley survey: a study in settle- most, Patrick Mitchell Fox carried out the historical ment history, Proceedings ofthe Hampshire Field research without which the project could not have Club and Archaeological Society 50, 43-101. been attempted and Katharine Moore worked volunt- MILLET M. & JAMES S. 1983: Excavations at Cow- arily data-processing, both with great dedication and dery's Down, Basingstoke, Hampshire, 1978-81, enthusiasm in difficult circumstances. Staff at the Archaeological Journal140, 151-279 county archaeological and record offices for Hamp- PEVSNER N & LLOYD D. 1967 (reprinted 1973): shire and the Isle ofWight were generous in supply- Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, Middlesex, ing information from their records and expert local Penguin. knowledge. In particular I must thank Michael Hughes RCHME (in preparation): Medieval settlement in for his invaluable support, advice and local know- Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. ledge. Also Hampshire County Council who gener- SHEAIL J. 1968: The regional distribution of wealth ously provided a grant to support the project. The in England as indicated in the 1524-5 lay subsidy project owes its greatest debt to everyone who has returns, unpublished PhD thesis, London Uni- worked on medieval settlements in the region and versity. contributed to the store ofknowledge from which the SHENNAN S. 1985: Experiments in the collection and project has drawn. analysis of archaeological survey data: the East Hampshire Survey, Collis, Sheffield. VCH 1900-1912 (reprinted 1973): A history of the References county ofHampshire, vols 1-5, London, Dawsons. BERESFORD M.W. & FINBERG H.P.R. 1973: English medieval boroughs, Newton Abbot, David and Charles. COATES R. 1989: The place-names of Hampshire, Carenza Lewis London, Batsford. RCHME CUNLIFFE B. 1973: Chalton, Hants: Evolution of a National Monuments Record Centre landscape, Antiquaries Journal 53, pt 2, 173-90. Kemble Drive, ADDYMAN P.V. & LEIGH D. 1973: The Anglo-Saxon Swindon SN2 2GZ village at Chalton, Hampshire: second interim UK 86 Rural Settlement in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Terry Barry Recent research in medieval rural nucleated settlement in Ireland Since the last Medieval Europe Conference, some constructed on artificial islands made out of soil, tim- five years ago, there has been continuing research in ber, stones and even from the occupation remains of the field of rural settlement studies in Ireland gener- the settlement itself (Edwards 1990). They often have ally. Although this paper will concentrate on giving their origins in prehistory, but some have important an overview of research on nucleated rural settlement early medieval horizons. One of the most spectacular in the High Middle Ages, that is from the twelfth to later examples is located at Moynagh Lough in County the sixteenth century, it will also briefly examine the Meath, currently being excavated by Bradley. There latest research on the earlier period from the coming was also substantial prehistoric settlement which pre- of Christianity in the fifth century up until the Nor- dated the construction of the crann6g in the first half man invasion of 1169-70. of the seventh century. The crann6g itself had five In the first millennium AD Ireland was dominated occupation layers which lasted from then to the end by a dispersed pattern of rural settlement, the main of the eighth century and revealed evidence for pos- element being the ringfort or defended farmstead of sible workshops which included metalworking. Many the free element in early Irish society. There were at spectacular finds of the period have also been found least 45,000 examples of this settlement form found in these levels, such as some very unusual artefacts all over the Irish countryside, mainly constructed bet- such as two Merovingian glass vessels and a bronze ween 600AD-900AD (Stout 1997). The ringfort itself spatula, which may have been part of a cosmetic set is an annular settlement form delimited by an external (Bradley 1996, 70). ditch with an internal bank, with an average diameter There were also many hundreds of ecclesiastical of 30 metres. In the eastern half of the country where enclosures, not all necessarily of monastic origin, the soil cover is thicker they are often known as raths, many of which have been identified by aerial photo- while in the western, more rocky areas, they are known graphy (Edwards 1990). They are most densely dis- as cashels as their banks are often constructed of dry tributed in a central band stretching from Dublin in stone. Recent research by Stout, using County Offaly the east to Clare on the western coast. As well as as a detailed study area, has shown that ringforts in these we have many examples of early medieval densely settled upland areas were frequently located monasteries ranging from the small isolated exam- more than 2 km away from ecclesiastical sites, while ples like Skellig Michael located on a rock off the marshland zones were dominated by well-defended County Kerry coast, to the larger examples such as ringforts situated in strategic locations (Stout 1996). In Clonmacnoise on the bank of the River Shannon in some cases they are also accompanied by souterrains, County Offaly that arguably grew into some kind of underground passages which were possibly either used town by the eleventh century. for storage or as hiding places for the community There has also been an attempt in recent years to who lived in the ringfort. The chronology of these locate evidence for rural nucleated settlements in pre- enigmatic features is still not fully established al- Norman Ireland. Geographers such as Evans have though there is a secure date for at least one example suggested, based on an interpretation of the early law at Coolcran, County Fermanagh where the oak posts tracts, that these might have been the dwellings of which originally supported a roof of oak planks have those poorer members of early Irish society who lived been dendrochronologically dated to 822+9 AD (Wil- in separate settlements from the free element of that liams 1985). However, this may not be a typical sou- society who inhabited the ringforts (Evans 1964). terrain because the great majority of surviving exam- Research has centred around the 'clachan', which has ples seemed to have been constructed of dry stone. been identified by Proudfoot as 'a cluster of farm Along with the ringforts there were also possibly houses and associated outbuildings usually grouped over 1,200 crann6gs, which were lake dwellings often without any formal plan' (Proudfoot 1959, 110). A 87 T.Barry drain N T ---:: 0 so m Fig. 1. ·Plan of Pipers town Deserted Medieval Village, County Louth. few of these settlements have survived to this day in evidence to show that some of the major prehistoric areas as diverse as Donegal in the north-west, to the monuments such as the hillforts and promontory forts southern tip of Kilkenny in the more prosperous were still being occupied in this period. For instance, south-eastern part of the island. Examples can be the interior of the Iron Age promontory fort at Dun- dated from at least as early as the seventeenth century beg on the Dingle Peninsula was occupied by the in the cartographic sources of the period, but all remains of a dry stone beehive structure which had attempts to prove a medieval origin for them have two tenuous occupation layers that were radiocarbon been fruitless to date. The archaeological excavation dated from the end of the ninth to the beginning of the of the deserted clachan at Murphystown, County eleventh century AD (Barry 1981, 311-317). As well Down, the only example to have been scientifically as these earlier sites which were re-occupied there excavated, produced no conclusive evidence of a were probably also unenclosed dispersed settlements medieval origin for this settlement (Barry 1994, 21 ). existing in this period which are very difficult to To complete the picture of the rural settlement locate because of the non-existence of an identifiable pattern of pre-Norrnan Ireland, there is mounting bank or ditch. 88 Recent research in medieval rural nucleated settlement in Ireland MERCANTILE TOWNS • Major D Lesser SMALL TOWNS A Castle Cores /:,. Ecclesiastical Cores .., Dual Cores .... .. ... RURAL -BOROUGHS o Rura~Boroughs 111 Rura~Castle-Boroughs e Rura~Eccleslastlca~Boroughs A Rural-Boroughs identified from pop. evidence .., Rural-Boroughs identified from payment of sporadic taxations • MARKET VILLAGES 0 80km l!ll2.!::! e Ecclesiastical Towns + Market VIllages Fig. 2.- Distribution map of Anglo-Norman nucleated settlements in Ireland (After Graham 1993). It was undoubtedly·the Anglo-Normans who intro- Wicklow whose wealth and ecclesiastical fame drew duced a full network of nucleated settlements into the a large population concentration around them (Ed- two-thirds of Ireland that they conquered. Before they wards 1990). This hierarchical network of nucleated came in 1169-70 the only nucleated settlements were settlements that the Anglo-Normans introduced into either the ports, mainly located along the east coast of Ireland can best be seen in Graham's map (Fig. 2) the country, which were founded by the Scandinavi- where all types of Anglo-Norman nucleated settle- ans in the tenth and eleventh centuries or some of the ment are shown, from the largest cities to the smallest larger monasteries such as Glendalough in County villages. This paper will concentrate on these vil- 89 T.Barry !ages, but before discussing them further it is impor- 'Pippardeston' were 'burnt by the Irish' during the tant to explain the term 'rural borough' which ap- disorders which were attendant upon the Scottish pears in the legend of the map. This was first used by Bruce Invasion of Ireland (1315-18). Thus it prob- Glasscock in 1970 to identify Anglo-Norman rural ably had its origins earlier in the previous century nucleated settlements in Ireland no larger than con- when the Pipards settled this part of Ireland in the temporary English villages but which were given decades following the Anglo-Norman Invasion borough status in Ireland. These borough charters (Duffy 1997, 99). Obviously the village had shrunk were granted by the great Anglo-Norman nobles in in size during the Middle Ages as today only four order to attract settlers from the overcrowded regions possible house platforms can be identified on the of lowland Britain to settle their relatively under- landscape (Fig. 1). populated colony in Ireland (Glasscock 1970). Because of a general lack of funding only one Despite all the recent large-scale archaeological season was completed, and only one house platform investigation of the Anglo-Norrnan levels of cities was fully excavated as well as one section which was such as Dublin or Waterford there have been few cut through the westerly perimeter bank of the vil- archaeological excavations of Anglo-Norman desert- lage. Excavation of the platform did produce evid- ed nucleated settlements in Ireland, especially of ence for a very tenuous late medieval or post-medie- their villages (Barry 1994). Indeed, between Glass- val house with external dimensions 8 m in length by cock's investigation ofthe deserted manorial village 5.6 m wide. It was divided into two by an internal ofLiathmore, County Tipperary in 1968-9 and that at partition, with the inhabitants living in the western Piperstown in Co. Louth in 1987 there has only been end and the animals on the eastern side of the part- one other archaeological excavation of part of a pos- ition, with a drain to take away their waste. The sible deserted medieval village located beside Bour- medieval finds included 29 sherds of medieval cook- chier's Castle, Lough Gur, County Limerick. Here, ing ware as well as some metal artefacts of the same Cleary excavated two medieval houses and four huts period. The medieval metal finds were a thirteenth which may have also dated to the medieval period, century hunting arrow head as well as a Jews harp of which arguably were part of a village clustered possible medieval date. Two small knife blades, two around the thirteenth-century Fitzgerald Castle which nails and a small horseshoe were also found but they was located under the later Bourchier' s Castle (Cleary were not diagnostic enough to be dated precisely. The 1983). At Liathmore, which has yet to be fully other metal finds were either unidentifiable or were published, Glasscock found the base of a round tower of post-medieval date. Indeed the greatest number of of the earlier monastic site as well as further evidence pottery sherds, over 250 in all, came from the first of seventeenth-century settlement there that Leask half of the eighteenth century when the village was and Macalister had also located during an earlier finally deserted. The fact that it was deserted in the excavation. Disappointingly for him he was unable to post-medieval period is largely in line with what is find any evidence of medieval occupation on this suspected for many other village desertions in Ireland important site (Glasscock 1970). which were not deserted until after the fifteenth Piperstown was chosen because it was the only century, such as Liathmore, County Tipperary or known Deserted Medieval Village in County Louth, Caherguillamore, County Limerick (Barry 1994). Ireland's smallest county, and because there had not Generally speaking the artefacts recovered at been a modem excavation of such a settlement type Piperstown would indicate that the dwellers in this in the eastern half of the country. It had not been particular house did not enjoy a high standard of recognised as a possible Deserted Medieval Village living because no sherds of imported medieval fine by the Archaeological Survey of Ireland until 1974 ware were found nor any medieval coins or fine qual- because it lacked an identifiable church site and be- ity metal objects, such as were located at Caher- cause the motte was very small and irregular (Buck- guillamore in County Limerick, when two medieval ley & Sweetman 1991). There is, however, the ruins houses were excavated in the 1940s (6 Riordilin & of the medieval church of St. Mary at Drumshallon Hunt 1942). Nevertheless, after the excavation was located around 1/2 km to the south of the present completed a number of fifteenth and sixteenth cen- village earthworks. This church might well have also tury coins were found on the site, an indicator per- functioned as the parish church of the village com- haps of the thriving nature of the village during the munity of Piperstown. The village is located on the later Middle Ages. The tenuous nature of the house, margins of high ground, some 300-400 metres OD, with its cheap and readily available building mater- but it is surrounded by lower more agriculturally rich ials, would also suggest that its inhabitants were not lands on all but its western side. It first enters the very wealthy. Indeed it was probably very similar to documentary record in 1316 when 14 cottages at the mud walled cabins that were still to be found in 90 Recent research in medieval rural nucleated settlement in Ireland different parts of rural Ireland in the last century and of the Anglo-Norman colony in Leinster. At the even in the first few decades of this present century. height of its prosperity in the thirteenth century it had It was a simple one-storied structure with few if any a population of at least 250 family members belong- window openings, and where the smoke from the ing to its governing class of burgesses, as well as hearth would just have filtered out through its that- from among its free tenants. It is arguable that its full ched roof. It was probably occupied at the end of the population size was at least twice this figure because Middle Ages in Ireland although it was difficult to be the surviving medieval documents do not record the entirely sure about the exact length of occupation numbers of people who did not own any land in the because of the general lack of securely stratified date- town. But by the later Middle Ages it had been able finds associated with the house's occupation limping along for a century or so after the dissolution levels. of the nearby wealthy Cistercian abbey of Jerpoint in The general paucity of finds also meant that it was 15 3 8. This event meant the end of its important trad- difficult to be sure about the socio-economic basis of ing relationship with the religious community there the village community here as represented by the in- which had started with the foundation of the town in habitants of this particular house. It was probably 1200 AD, and which was central to the economic significant that only a small number of animal bones well-being of the town. It would appear that a severe were discovered, which may indicate that although plague in County Kilkenny in the first half of the animals were kept there that they were not such an seventeenth century, together with the presence of important feature of their diet. Alternatively, the Cromwellian armies in the locality in the 1640s all small number of animal bones recovered were in led to its final abandonment . such poor condition that they could not be readily In this discussion of current research into the identified, so it is possible that the acidic nature of the medieval rural nucleated settlement pattern it is im- soil had completely destroyed the remainder of these portant to note that one of the newest developments bones. The final possibility is that the animal bones has been the attempt to examine the Gaelic Irish may have been dumped some way from the house component in a more systematic way. The Discovery platform, and so were not detected during the excav- Programme Ltd. which was set up to encourage ation. Analysis of the drain which ran through the large-scale archaeological research projects in Ireland house produced some possible husks of grain seeds, has just employed someone to produce a programme while the low-lying lands surrounding the village on for future research on all types of medieval rural all but its western edge were probably under arable in settlement in Ireland, including the heretofore elusive the Middle Ages. It is likely that this was where the Gaelic settlements, both dispersed and nucleated. It village's open-field system was located in the medie- has been determined by the Directors of the Discov- val period. As well as these cereals which probably ery Programme that this important yet often neglec- were an important part of their diet the village's ted aspect of the rural settlement pattern be given inhabitants obviously supplemented this by hunting priority in this investigation. Until recently almost all deer and other game, as is shown by the hunting medieval rural settlement research has been focused arrow head located during the excavation. Beyond upon the Anglo-Norman element within it. It is scar- these tantalisingly limited pieces of evidence we can- cely surprising that the concentration of research in not be completely sure of this important aspect of this field up to the present has been on the Anglo- everyday life in this medieval village. Normans because they left behind them many manor- This probable desertion date is very different to ial and central government documents which give the that found in many areas of medieval England, modern researcher much additional useful informa- especially in the Midlands, where the major desertion tion on their settlement pattern. The Gaelic Irish period seems to have been in the fifteenth and six- sources, on the other hand, are usually either literary teenth centuries when arable farming gave way to an or annalistic writings which are more difficult to emphasis on pastoral farming in the changed econ- interpret if we wish to understand their settlement omic conditions of the later Middle Ages (Beresford forms in any detail (Duffy 1997). Secondly, the & Hurst 1971 ). In Ireland the major period of deser- settlement forms introduced into Ireland by the tion would appear to have been in the seventeenth Anglo-Normans have also been studied closely in the century when war and famine combined to finally other parts of Europe that were controlled by them, so destroy marginal settlements which had existed since this gives an excellent basis for comparative research. the expansionary thirteenth century. These factors But the new emphasis on Gaelic Ireland in future even affected important settlements such as the pros- research may well help to rectify this imbalance in perous town ofNewtown Jerpoint which controlled a our contemporary knowledge of medieval Irish settle- major bridge across the River Nore in the heartland ment generally. 91 T. Barry In conclusion, although nucleated settlements were CLEARY R.M. 1983: Excavations at Lough Gur, Co. usually the most prominent components of much of Limerick: part Ill, Journal of the Cork Historical the rural settlement pattern within the Anglo-Norman and Archaeological Society 88, 51-80. colony it is arguable that there was also a greater DUFFY S. 1997: Ireland in the Middle Ages, Dublin. number of dispersed settlements than was originally EDWARDS N. 1990: The Archaeology of Early thought. For instance, the 750 or so moated sites, Medieval Ireland, London. many of them the defended manor houses of the EVANS E.E. 1964: Ireland and Atlantic Europe', Anglo-Norman lesser nobility of the thirteenth and Geographische Zeitschrift 52, 224-41. fourteenth centuries, were dispersed widely over the GLASSCOCK R.E. 1970: Moated sites and deserted colony and especially on its periphery (Barry 1994, boroughs and villages: two neglected aspects of 84-93). There is also increasing evidence for the con- Anglo-Norman settlement in Ireland, in: N. tinued occupation of ringforts throughout the later STEPHENS & R.E. GLASSCOCK (eds.), Irish Geo- Middle Ages, particularly in the Gaelic-Irish control- graphical Studies, Belfast, 162-177. led areas of the north and west outside the control of GRAHAM B.J. 1993: The High Middle Ages: c. 1100 the Anglo-Normans. Nevertheless, the Anglo-Nor- to c.1350, in: B.J. GRAHAM & L.J. PROUDFOOT man's greatest and perhaps most enduring contribu- (eds.), An Historical Geography ofIreland, Lon- tion to the settlement pattern of Ireland was the don, 58-98. establishment of rural nucleated settlements all across 0 RiORDAIN S.P. & HUNT J. 1942: Medieval dwel- the eastern half of the island. lings at Caherguillamore, County Limerick, Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 72, 37-63. References PROUDFOOT V.B. 1959: Clachans in Ireland, Gwerin 2, 110-122. BARRY T.B. 1981: Archaeological excavations at STOUT M. 1996: Early Christian settlement and Dun beg promontory fort, County Kerry, 1977, society in Ireland with particular reference to Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 81 C 12, ringforts, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Trinity 295-329. College Dublin. BARRY T.B. 1994: The archaeology of medieval STOUT M. 1997: The Irish Ringfort, Dublin. Ireland, London. BERESFORD M.W. & HURST J.G. (eds.) 1971: Deserted Medieval Villages: Studies, London. Acknowledgement BRADLEY J. 1996: in: I. BENNETT (ed.), Excavations Professor Brian Graham of the University of Ulster, 1995, Dublin. for permission to reproduce Figure 2. BUCKLEY V.M. & SWEETMAN P.D. (eds.) 1991: Archaeological Survey of County Louth, Dublin. Abbreviation: OD = Ordnance Datum. Dr. Terry Barry Department of Medieval History Trinity College Dublin 2 Ireland 92 Art and Symbolism in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference· Volume 5 Marco Milanese, Fabrizio Benente & Franco Campus Il progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna 1 Introduzione segnalato come uno dei nodi interpretativi fonda- mentali di tutta la storia economica, demografica e L 'analisi della tematica dei villaggi abbandonati ha sociale dell'isola in epoca tardo medievale (Tanghe- registrato, in Italia, importanti contributi a partire roni 1976, 244). dagli anni Cinquanta e Sessanta, con lo sviluppo di La mobilita dell 'insediamento, una delle principali ricerche a carattere prevalentemente regionale. Fanno caratteristiche dell' abitato rurale sardo (Day 197 6, eccezione alcune sintesi di piu ampio respiro, fra cui 204), ha determinate le rilevanti dimensioni quan- il noto saggio di C. Klapisch Zuber e di J. Day (Kla- titative che i1 fenomeno assume in questo territorio. pisch Zuber & Day 1965). Pur non essendo questa la sede per una trattazione Questa problematica, dopo la precoce attivita di sistematica di tale complessa tematica storiografica, alcune missioni straniere ne! Lazio, e stata recepita si richiameranno almeno alcuni punti particolarmente agli inizi degli anni Settanta dalla nascente archeo- significativi. logia medievale italiana, in un clima di aperto con- fronto fra archeologia e geografia storica. Esperienze 2.2 Gia alcuni storici sardi d'eta moderna descri- metodologicamente mature ed importanti, come vevano la presenza dei resti dei villaggi abbandonati quella del Gruppo Ligure di Ricerca sulle Sedi Abban- nelle campagne sarde (Para 1586; Aleo 1677). L'esis- donate (Quaini 1973,712-713, 737-744) e quella del tenza di questi centri scomparsi non e mai uscita G.R.A.M. di Palermo non sono tuttavia riuscite, per totalmente dal possibile campo di osservazione im- motivi diversi, a sviluppare le premesse. Scavi im- mediate di storici, geografi ed eruditi locali, per la portanti come quello dei villaggi medievali di consistenza dei resti sui terreno (es. Day 1984, 26), Zignago (Boato et alii 1990) e di Brucato (Pesez delle fonti scritte e di quelle orali (Day 197 6), nonche 1984) sono stati comunque portati a termine ed editi per la lunga durata del fenomeno degli abbandoni, da gruppi di ricerca operanti in Liguria e Sicilia. che si protrae sino all' eta moderna ed all' eta con- E pero innegabile che si sia verificato, a partire dal temporanea, secondo dinamiche registrate analitica- decennia scorso, uno spostamento complessivo degli mente dalle fonti statistiche (Corridore 1902). interessi degli archeologi medievisti italiani verso Stante quindi una continuita di riflessioni e studi, che altre tematiche, come l'incastellamento e la tran- ha visto contributi, talora fondamentali, anche da sizione tra la tarda antichita e l'alto medioevo, parte di ricercatori stranieri (Le Lannou 1941, 106 ss.), mentre gli interrogativi storiografici fondamentali sui una stagione decisiva per lo studio dell'insediamento quali dovrebbe lavorare in modo sistematico l'arche- rurale della Sardegna e quella che, nei primi anni ologia del villaggio (diacronia dei modelli insedia- Settanta, si econcretizzata negli ormai classici atlanti tivi, continuita e rotture, cultura materiale, tempi, dei villaggi abbandonati sardi (Dau 1973; Terrosu modalita e cause degli abbandoni) rimangono sostan- Asole 1974). zialmente irrisolti o non verificati. 2.3 La spinta demografica verificatasi a seguito della colonizzazione rurale dei secoli XI e XII deter- 2 I villaggi medievali abbandonati della Sardegna mina in questo periodo, in Sardegna, la nascita di quattordici nuove diocesi (Day 1984, 21) e fu conno- 2.1 La Sardegna, con oltre 800 villaggi documentati tata da grandi opere di dissodamento dell 'incolto, agli inizi del XIV secolo (Day 1988, 18), euna delle probabilmente gia completate entro la prima meta del regioni italiane dove il problema dei villaggi medie- XII secolo (Meloni 1994, 53). Il processo tendente vali abbandonati si e posto all 'attenzione dei ricer- alla dispersione della popolazione rurale sui territorio catori con maggiore incisivita ed e stato piu volte dovette entrare in crisi gia nel tardo XII secolo - 93 ;vr. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus epoca alia quale possiamo datare, sulla base delle soltanto dalla presenza di una chiesa diruta o res- fonti scritte, i primi casi di abbandono (Day 1976 a, taurata. 230-231). Ancora agli inizi del XIX secolo, la chiesa si I! momento "classico" degli abbandoni dei vil- trovava in discrete condizioni, prima di essere utiliz- laggi medievali della Sardegna, in cui si verifica la zata come cava di materiale da costruzione per la maggiore ondata del processo di spopolamento delle nuova chiesa parrocchiale del vicino centro di Sorso. e campagne, tuttavia costituito dai secoli XIV e XV: Noto nelle fonti scritte a partire dai primi decenni le fonti statistiche redatte dai re d' Aragona, anche del XII secolo, il villaggio di Geridu era ubicato ne! sulla base di precedenti fonti fiscali pisane (Le Lan- Giudicato di Torres (Logudoro), ne! territorio della nou 1941, 105), permettono di stimare che soltanto curatoria di Romangia, sicuramente di limitata esten- 352 dei circa 805 villaggi sardi noti attorno al 1320 sione (98,5 Kmq), ma forse la piu densamente popo- erano sopravvissuti ne! 1485; risulta, quindi, una lata curatoria medievale di tutta la Sardegna, secondo valutazione possibile di circa 453 sedi umane scorn- i dati demografici desumibili da Day 1987b, 318. parse. Dalle stesse statistiche s1 evince inoltre che attar- Secondo J. Day (Day 1988, 18), anche nel XIV se- no agli anni venti del Trecento, oltre a Geridu, vi cola, I 'inurbamento continua ad essere motivo dello erano almeno altri cinque villaggi nella stessa cura- spopolamento dei villaggi, come potremo verificare toria di Romangia: Sorso, Sennori, Taniga, Uruspe e oltre, anche per il caso specifico di Geridu. Per Genor, mentre P!aiano, Domusnovas e Cleu risul- quanto riguarda la grande pestilenza della meta del tano gia abbandonati. Dalle medesime fonti, Geridu secolo, possiamo controllarne gli effetti sulla base di si pone con chiarezza come il centro piu popolato un inventario del regno sardo (Bofarul 185 6) voluto della Romangia, certamente uno dei maggiori aggre- da Pietro IV d' Aragona ne! 13 58: a questa sembra gati demici della Sardegna settentrionale, con una imputabile un calo della popolazione isolana stimato stima possibile, attomo a! 1321 (Le Lannou 1941, 105) attomo a! 50%, mentre il numero dei villaggi can- o al 1323-4 (Terrosu Asole 1979, 32; Day 1987b, cellati in seguito a! passaggio del morbo non ricalca 318), di 326 uomini validi o fuochi, contro i 213 di questa indicazione statistica . Sorso, i 140 di Sennori, i 90 di Taniga e i 37 di Uruspe Su questo contesto demografico comunque gia e di Genor. largamente sofferente, si innestano alcune congiun- Sembrerebbe pertanto possibile ipotizzare un nu- ture, che vengono spesso chiamate in causa per spie- mero di abitanti oscillante tra 13 50 e 1600 ea; cia, gare, fra gli ultimi decenni del XIV secolo ed il tuttavia, con la massima prudenza dovuta alle note successivo, la scomparsa di oltre 300 villaggi sardi: difficolta di interpretazione del valore demografico nuove ondate di pestilenza (1376, 1398, 1404, 1410, reale del singolo fuoco. 1424, 1476), carestie (1374, 1421), la guerra di libe- Dopo lo sbarco catalano-aragonese in Sardegna razione condotta dai re d' Arborea dal 1365 a! 1420, nel1323, Geridu venne assegnato a!la citta di Sassari e quella successiva del marchese di Oristano, termi- e, in seguito, variamente infeudato: questa situazione nata nel1478 con la battaglia di Macomer, che deter- dovette avviare la lenta agonia demografica del vil- minerebbe un'ulteriore fase di abbandoni (Day laggio, di cui abbiamo numerosi riscontri nelle fonti 1987a, 177; Day 1988, 19). scritte, ed incoraggia, nell 'impossibilita di far fronte all a crescente pressione fiscale, I' inurbamento in direzione di Sassari. Ne! 1344 gli abitanti di Geridu 3 11 villaggio medievale di Geridu (Sorso, Sassari) lamentano l 'eccessivo carico fiscale, proprio a causa dell'emigrazione verso Sassari (Day 1987, nota 68; 3.1 L' area interessata dai resti del villaggio medie- Day 1984a, 18). e vale di Geridu ubicata in comune di Sorso, lungo la La convergenza di queste congiunture negative e Strada Provinciale n. 25 Sassari-Sorso (Fig. 1), a della violenta pestilenza della meta del secolo, circa 2 Km da quest'ultimo centro, in direzione sud giustificano il drastico calo demografico registrato (I.G.M., 1:25.000, F.180, Ill, N.O., "S. Andrea"): la dal gia ricordato censimento catalano del 1358, strada attuale interseca i resti sepolti del villaggio, secondo i1 quale a Geridu erano rimasti soltanto 70 che risulta pertanto spezzato in due vaste porzioni. uomini validi o fuochi (Day 1987c, 318). La sola struttura del villaggio di Geridu soprav- Geridu continua probabilmente a vivere ancora vissuta a! di sopra del piano di campagna attuale, e ne! 1391, quando venne infeudato a Galcerando de costituita da una modesta porzione d'elevato della Santa Coloma (Casula 1977, 48-49), con le vicine ville chiesa di S. Andrea, secondo una situazione "clas- di Taniga e Sorso. Secondo J. Day, I 'abbandono di sica" del villaggio medievale, I' esistenza dei cui resti Geridu sarebbe completato definitivamente entro il sepolti e spesso segnalata, in aperta campagna, 1427 (Day 1973, 121, n. 218; Day 1987, nota 68), 94 11 progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna data in cui le terre di Geridu vennero annesse a quelle Fig. 1. di Sassari. Poiche le direttrici di ricerca sinora sviluppate in tema di insediamento rurale medievale della Sardegna sono state fondate in modo pressoche esclusivo sulle fonti scritte, soltanto sporadici sono stati i tentativi di discussione sulla struttura materiale degli abitati (Meloni 1994), per la scarsita dei riferimenti docu- mentari noti utili per una riflessione in questo sensa. Aprire il fronte della ricerca archeologica siste- matica, cambiando radicalmente la natura delle fonti b~ e la loro capacita informativa, pone la riflessione storiografica a diretto contatto con gli aspetti mate- riali dell a societa rurale medievale e con I' organiz- zazione spaziale e socio economica di una comunita di villaggio del medioevo della Sardegna. In questo sensa, con I' aspirazione di costruire un modello di insediamento (che, sec ondo tendenze sot- tolineate dalle ricerche europee ne! settore dei villag- gi abbandonati, ci attendiamo soggetto a profonde 0 ::som "CC m trasformazioni diacroniche e non cristallizzato nella configurazione iniziale del si to) o piu semplicemente un caso da sottoporre a discussione, sono state av- viate ne! 1995 le indagini nell'area del villaggio me- dievale abbandonato di Geridu, situato nel settore Sant' Andrea e denominata area 3000, si presentava nord-occidentale dell' isola, in prossimita dell a citta interessata da un' omogenea distesa di scaglie litiche, di Sassari. tegole frammentate e rari reperti ceramici, nonche da una micromorfologia della superficie che faceva ipotiz- zare la presenza di strutture sepolte sottostanti (fig. 1). 4 Le strategie dell'intervento archeologico I primi saggi eseguiti nel 199 5 hanno consentito di sviluppare in modo piu maturo la strategia comples- 4.1 Le indagini archeologiche condotte a partire dal siva della ricerca e di individuare con chiarezza gli 199 5 nell' area del villaggio medievale di Geridu obiettivi ed interrogativi fondamentali, finalizzati ad nascono ne! quadro complessivo della collaborazione un utilizzo storiografico delle fonti archeologiche, tra la Soprintendenza Archeologica per le Province di che possiamo cosi riassumere: Sassari e Nuoro e l'Universita degli Studi di Sassari 1. Determinazione di una ipotesi di estensione e I 'Universita degli Studi di Genova (Cattedra di dell'area occupata dal villaggio, da attuarsi con inda- Archeologia Metodologia della Ricerca Archeolo- gini di superficie, a causa del "costa zero" con il quale gica), con l'appoggio del Comune di Sorso. si sono dovute confrontare le prime campagne di scavo. La progettazione delle indagini archeologiche e 2. Valutazione della potenza dei depositi stratigrafici stata concepita tenendo presenti i seguenti dati: e delloro significate per la microstoria del sito. 1. le informazioni gia acquisite grazie ad alcune 3. Quando e in quali modi e stato abbandonato il indagini di emergenza condotte in diverse aree del villaggio di Geridu ? Si e trattato di un processo di sito dalla Soprintendenza Archeologica; lunga durata, articolato nel tempo ? 2. le informazioni stratigrafiche deducibili da alcune 4. A quando risalgono le prime fasi del villaggio e sezioni occasionali esposte da sbancamenti di enormi come sono caratterizzate archeologicamente (cultura dimensioni per lavori agricoli o edilizi; materiale, modi di costruire, etc.)? Esiste frattura o 3. le osservazioni condotte nelle prime ricognizioni continuita con l'insediamento romano di eta impe- effettuate nel si to nell 'invemo-primavera 1995, che riale certamente presente in una zona di Geridu avevano evidenziato la vasta superficie proba- ancora da riconoscere con precisione? bilmente occupata dai resti del villaggio, in seguito 5. Qual'era l'organizzazione socioeconomica del valutata preliminarmente attomo ai 14 ettari di esten- villaggio e quali risvolti essa aveva nella topografia stone. del sito tardo medievale? Esistevano quartieri pro- Tutta la superficie di un'ampia particella catastale duttivi distinti da quelli residenziali e la vicinanza (133: mq. 7230), ubicata nei pressi della chiesa di alia chiesa costituiva un fattore di privilegio sociale? 95 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus 6. Qual' era il livello dell a cultura materiale del si to 3. disponibilita del proprietario del terreno a permet- tardo medievale e delle tecniche di costruzione? La tere I' occupazione ed i lavori di scavo. vicinanza alia costa e gli interessi, in questa zona, Nella prima fase d 'intervento (dicembre 1995) della famiglia genovese dei Doria, determinarono un caratterizzata dall 'esigenza di una valutazione del rapporto mercantile privilegiato con la Liguria? potenziale stratigrafico dell 'area, si e proceduto all' Dopo i primi saggi e ricognizioni, svolte ne! 1995, apertura di due settori di scavo (31 00, 3500) di esten- due consistenti campagne di scavo sono state effet- sione limitata, con una superficie di 40 mq. ciascuno tuate ne! 1996 (aprile, dicembre-gennaio 1997), ne! (5 metri allineamento sud-nord, 8 metri allineamento corso delle quali sono state aperte grandi aree (per est-ovest), allineati e distanziati fra loro di 15 metri. una superficie di ea. 700 mq. in corso di scavo) che Nelle due successive fasi di intervento (aprile permettono di impostare le prime valutazioni sull'or- 1996 e dicembre-gennnaio 1997), finalizzate ad una ganizzazione spaziale dell' insediamento. lettura estensiva deg!i aspetti stratigrafici e plani- Ne! dicembre 1996, grazie all 'adesione a! pro get- metrici degli edifici precedentemente individuati, i to dell'antropologo G. Mullen, e stata aperta una settori di scavo sono stati ampliati fino a raggiungere grande area di scavo nei pressi della chiesa del villag- un'estensione di 182 mq. (settore 3100) e 162 mq. gio, in una zona sicuramente interessata dalle necro- (settore 3500). poli tardo medievali del sito. Di seguito si presentano in maniera sintetica i risultati delle indagini condotte nei due settori e si Marco Milanese procede ad una prima valutazione globale delle pro- blematiche di scavo che sembrano caratterizzare !'area 3000. 5 I documenti stratigrafici. Lo scavo dell'area 3000 5.1 Settore 3100 (fig. 2) Nelle fasi preliminari del progetto di indagine archeologica del villaggio abbandonato di Geridu e I! settore di scavo 3100 eubicato in posizione cen- stata adottata una gamma diversificata di strumenti trale rispetto alia particella catastale contrassegnata conoscitivi, che hanno consentito una prima valuta- dal numero 133, a circa cinquanta metri dal limite zione globale delle problematiche stratigrafiche e della strada comunale Sorso-Sassari. delle tematiche diacroniche del sito. Dopo una prima campagna di scavo ( dicembre In quest'ottica, all'analisi di archeologia di super- 1995), volta alla valutazione del potenziale strati- ficie ed alia lettura di stratigrafie verticali esposte da grafico del settore e conclusasi con I' individuazione lavori di sterro, si eaffiancata I' analisi stratigrafica di di due edifici (3000/1 e 3000/2), 1' area oggetto dell' due settori di una prima area campione (area 3000). analisi stratigrafica, con le successive campagne di Ne! quadro di tale progetto, quindi, I 'indagine strati- scavo, e stata ampliata a! fine di individuare l'intero grafica dell 'area 3000 e, piu in generale, le prime due sviluppo planimetrico degli edifici e di indagame in campagne di scavo condotte nei settori 3100 e 3500, estensione gli interni (fig. 2). hanno assolto a! compito di un prima approfondi- Negli ultimi anni (genericamente "dieci-venti mento stratigrafico (dicembre 1995), cui ha fatto anni" secondo la fonte orale raccolta) il sito e stato seguito una piu estesa analisi del tessuto insediativo oggetto di tentativi di aratura, attuati mediante un precedentemente evidenziato (aprile 1996, dicembre- aratro a dischi che incide il terreno per una profondita gennaio 1997). media di 30 cm. circa. Questo fatto potrebbe giusti- La scelta dell'area 3000 come prima area d'inda- ficare la presenza del pietrame e dei coppi sull' intera gine e motivata da una serie di concause: superficie dell'area 3000 (ma anche su buona parte 1. posizione centrale rispetto all' insediamento, pros- del sito). Durante la seconda campagna di scavo, sima all' edificio di culto principale, la chiesa di inoltre, si eosservato che i terreni incolti ubicati nelle Sant' Andrea, ma non cosi vicina da essere interessata vicinanze e destinati a! pascolo, vengono periodica- dalla presenza di aree cimiteriali; mente interessati da arature leggere. 2. presenza in superficie di un'alta concentrazione di La rimozione dello strata di humus ha consentito di materiale fittile e materiale da costruzione (materiale porre in luce su tutta !'area un suolo (3027) caratte- lapideo e coppi delle coperture), inequivocabili segni rizzato da una fitta presenza di frammenti di pietra cal- di un'intensiva presenza antropica, associati a vistose carea in disfacimento, con superficie irregolare e pen- anomalie del rilievo, caratterizzato da dossi ed avval- denza da sud verso nord. Questo strata deve essere lamenti che ne alterano il naturale degradare verso ricondotto a fasi recenti di utilizzo dell 'area, carat- nord; terizzate da tentativi di riduzione a coltura e di aratura. 96 I1 progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna -i- + 0 I ! 0 I' 0 ,, 30711 J 'i 0~1~ -i- Fig. 2. Nella parte nord del settore, lo strato 3027 copriva matesi in seguito all a frequentazione dei resti dell' direttamente le rasature delle strutture murarie edificio 3000/2 dopo il suo crollo ed abbandono. perimetrali dell' edificio 3000/1 ed il relativo strato di Si presentano di seguito le sequenze documentate crollo intemo (us 3007), mentre nella parte sud occul- nei singoli edifici. tava una serie di unita stratigrafiche (cfr. infra) for- 97 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus 5.2 Edificio 3000/1 di legarvi un animale, consente di ipotizzame una funzione di stalla per il ricovero di un numero limi- 5 .2.1 Questo primo edificio, localizzato nella parte tato di capi di bestiame. nord del saggio, e delimitato dai muri 3004, 3005, Sui fronte nord dell' edificio si aprivano due dis- 3033 e 3035, realizzati con un doppio filare contrap- tinti accessi ai due ambienti. L'accesso a! vano cucina posto di bozze di calcare locale, con un riempimento avveniva tramite una piu stretta soglia (us 3064) di centrale della cortina eseguito a sacco. In corrispon- ea. 1,1 m. e il cardine ed altri elementi li tici so no stati denza degli angolari si osserva una piu accurata trovati ne! crollo (3007) in prossimita dell' apertura. disposizione delle singole pietre con utilizzo di pietre L'accesso a! secondo vano, in posizione centrale di maggiori dimensioni, talora squadrate. Il legante rispetto al muro 3035, avveniva attraverso una soglia argilloso utilizzato epiuttosto povero, tanto da far in calcare finemente battuto (us 3090) della larghezza apparire la muratura in alcune zone quasi completa- di ea. 1,2 mt. mente a secco. La faccia a vista intema delle mura- ture conserva tracce di un intonaco, costituito da 5.2.2 L'edificio estato abbandonato repentinamente, fango argilloso, steso direttamente sulla superficie forse a causa di un incendio che ha provocato anche il delle murature forse con lo scopo di coibentare gli crollo del tetto. Gli oggetti metallici trovati in situ fan- ambienti. no pensare, anche a causa della loro dispozione cao- Le strutture murarie che delimitano 1' edificio, ed tica, ad un abbandono totale e repentino. La compre- in particolare 3035 (lato est) e 3005 (lato ovest) sono senza tra oggetti d'uso domestico, utensili agricoli conservate in elevato, rispetto a! piano d'uso intemo, (falcetto) e diverse armi, dovrebbe ricondurre l'incen- da un massimo di circa 8 corsi (verso sud) ad un mas- dio del tetto e la parziale distruzione dell' edificio ad un simo di 2 corsi (verso nord) e la loro rasatura o crollo evento bellico, o comunque doloso ed intenzionale. sembra aver condizionato successivamente l'anda- Successivamente al crollo del tetto I' edificio non mento dell'attuale piano di campagna, che declina venne riparato, ma prima del crollo dei muri peri- appunto da sud verso nord. L'edificio era ad un solo metrali I'intemo venne frequentato. I coppi sembrano piano (domus terrestris), aveva una pianta a sviluppo infatti avere subito un'azione di calpestio e all'in- rettangolare ed una superficie intema di ca.43 mq. temo vennero realizzate almeno due buche (us 3021- Presentava in origine una copertura a doppio spio- 3023). Gli elementi di crollo dei muri perimetrali vente con palo ligneo centrale alloggiato su un grosso coprivano, inoltre, uno strato (us 30 15) costituito da concio dalla superficie spianata (us 3054). limo argilloso di colore giallo distribuito prevalen- L'edificio aveva un piano d'uso intemo in terra temente lungo i muri 3004, 3005 e 3035, il cui limite battuta (us 3079) ed era suddiviso in due ambienti da sfuma a nord sulla sottostante us 3046, strato di crollo una tramezza, costituita da due zoccoli in muratura dei coppi di copertura dell' edificio. La formazione (us 3066-3067) su cui si innestava un elevato in dello strato di limo puo essere dovuta a! dilavamento materiale deperibile. Una porta con cardine in pietra dellegante dei muri perimetrali, o all' eventuale dila- consentiva, all' intemo dell a casa, il passaggio tra i vamento di un intonaco in argilla avvenuto dopo il due ambienti. crollo del tetto. La limitata estensione di us 3015 ed Il vano ovest, ad uso cucina e residenziale, risulta il suo sfumare su us 3046 avvalorerebbero questa di ea. 22 mq. Sulla sinistra dell 'ingresso era presente ipotesi. un focolare in argilla concotta, con soletta rialzata rispetto a! piano d'uso. Nell'angolo tra i muri 3004 e 5.2.3 La deposizione dello strato di crollo (us 3007) 3005 vi era un'area ad uso dispensa testimoniata dalla e la formazione del successivo strato 3027 chiudono presenza di almeno tre giare, trovate frammentate sui la sequenza stratigrafica relativa all' edificio 3000/1, piano d 'uso e dal rinvenimento di grano ed altri re- che puo essere cosi periodizzata (Tav. 1). perti paleobotanici carbonizzati. In prossimita della porta intema era presente una cassa in legno di cui sono stati trovati gli elementi in ferro (serratura, un 5.3 Edifici 3000/2- 3000/3. elemento angolare di sostegno e, quella che proba- bilmente era la maniglia ). 5.3 .1 Nella parte centrale del settore, gli edifici Il secondo vano, cui si accedeva da un' am pia 3000/1 e 3000/2 erano separati da una intercapedine apertura posta sui fronte nord della casa, aveva uno di ampiezza non superiore al metro, in cui, a! di sotto sviluppo intemo di ea. 21 mq. La mancanza di reperti di uno strato di crollo erano presenti strati di terreno ceramici, la presenza di un ferro da muratura con argilloso (us 3018 e 3062), che in fasi successive gancio e di un elemento litico forato (in sardo sa hanno costituito il piano di calpestio ne 11' intercape- loriga), originariamente inserito in parete allo scopo dine tra le due case. 98 Il progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna Tav. 1. Per. fa se principali attivita cronologia I V costruzione e vita dell' edificio 3000/1. XII -XIVsec. b costruzione del muro 3036, relativo ad un vano laterale. Ill a incendio, crollo del tetto, formazione di 3046. 1° meta XIV b formazione dello strata limoso 3015 per dilavamento dei muri perimetrali. c attivita di discarica su 3046, realizzazione delle buche 3021-3023. d crollo dei perimetrali all'intemo dell'edificio- formazione di 3007. II - abbandono dell'area. fine XIV I - aratura e tentative di utilizzo agricolo. XX sec Nella parte sud del settore 3100 il suolo 3030, 5.3.3 Ancora piu articolate e complesse sono le tagliato dalla buca 3029, copriva uno strata di crollo vicende che segnano il degrado progressivo e l'abban- esteso su tutta !'area (us 3003=3039), da cui emerge- dono definitivo dell' edificio. vano le rasature dei muri 3006, 3013, 3044 e 3050, Lo strata di crollo 3060, che segna l'abbandono 3090 che insieme delimitano diverse fasi di utilizzo della seconda fase d'utilizzo, era coperto da uno strata dell' edificio a pianta rettangolare 3000/2. L 'us 3030 di terreno argilloso giallastro (us 304 7), tagliato a! si appoggiava, infine alla struttura muraria 3031, centra da una grande buca (3049). E ipotizzabile che prossima allimite sud del settore, che dovrebbe cos- 3047 costituisca uno strata formatosi all 'intern a di tituire il perimetrale nord di un terzo edificio (3000/ 3000/2 per azione di dilavamento seguita all'abban- 3) da indagarsi con la prosecuzione dello scavo. dono dell' edificio e che si a stato interessato da suc- cessive attivita, quali, ad esempio, la realizzazione di 5.3.2 L'edificio 3000/2, localizzato nella parte sud una sequenza estremamente articolata di buche. del saggio era delimitato in origine dai muri 3006, Oltre alla buca centrale 3049, si e infatti indivi- 3013, 3050 e 3090, realizzati con la medesima tecni- duata una buca (us-3017) che, realizzata dopa !'ab- ca documentata per l'edifico 3000/1 (cfr. supra). La bandana di 3000/2, ne ha tagliato l'angolo tra i muri casa, ad un solo piano (domus terrestris) aveva pianta ovest e sud. Le dimensioni ed i1 profilo della buca, la rettangolare e sviluppo planimetrico intemo di ea. 30 stratigrafia intema, formatasi per progressivo collas- mq. L'indagine si efermata, ne! gennaio 1997 ad una so delle pareti, fanno supporre un'originaria funzione fase di abbandono (us 3093) dell'originale piano d'uso di vase a per la raccolta dell' acqua. I1 riempimento che non consente ancora una lettura dell'articolazione che sigilla la buca (us 3034) conteneva maiolica intema della casa. arcaica pisana con decoro del I-IV gruppo (Berti & L'edificio, forse dopo un crollo parziale (us 3080), Cappelli 1994,218, 256-259; Berti & Tongiorgi 1977, sembra avere avuto una seconda fase di utilizzo che 10°-12° gruppo) pertinenti all a terza fase produttiva ha comportato, con la costruzione del muro 3044, una pisana databile a partire dalla seconda meta del XIV riduzione della superficie intema a mq. 20. In questa secolo. seconda fase una soglia (us 3051) realizzata nell' an- Una terza buca di grandi dimensioni (us-3045), golo trail muro 3044 ed i1 muro 3050 consentiva, da individuata in prossimita del limite sud del settore, sud, l'accesso all'intemo dell'edificio. La soglia e intaccava i1 riempimento 3034 della buca us-3017, e stata pasta in opera tagliando in parte us 3051, ed era presentava due strati di riempimento (us 3059 e us costituita da due lastre di pietra poste in verticale, con 3040). Tale buca, per le caratteristiche del suo riem- funzione di batti-porta e da un elemento litico con pimento (us 3040), si puo configurare come scarico foro sagomato per I 'alloggiamento del cardine della di rifiuti domestici e residui di pasta. porta posto all'estemo del muro 3050. La sti-uttura muraria 3031, che costituisce illata 11 piano di calpestio all'intemo dell'ambiente era nord dell 'edificio 3000/3 risulta realizzata sul riem- costituito dall 'interfaccia superiore dello strata di pimento 3040 di us-3045. Ne consegue che tale riem- crollo 3080, caratterizzato da una marcata presenza pimento ne data post quem la realizzazione e deve di frammenti ceramici ed ossa animali. La mancanza essere segnalata in tal sensa, la presenza (in 3040) di di aree di fuoco, di partizioni interne e 1'estrema un "alfonsino" minuto coniato ad Iglesias, emesso a! irregolarita della superficie d'uso rendono proble- nome di Giacomo II d' Aragona e, quindi, entro il matico ricondurre questa seconda fa se dell' edificio 1327. ad una destinazione d'uso abitativo. 99 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus 5.3.4 Un successivo strato di crollo (us 3039) segna La presenza, nell 'edificio 3000/2, di uno strato di il progressivo deterioramento di quanto rimaneva in rifiuti (us 30 12) con reperti faunistici con vistose elevato dell'edificio 3000/2 e, in prossimita dell'an- tracce di macellazione, frammisti a carboni e ad og- golo tra i muri 3006 e 3013, tale strato era tagliato da getti ceramici indicherebbe che, ne! periodo II, fase una esile struttura in pietre (30 19), di forma rettan- b, qualche edificio vicino, probabilmente l 'edificio golare, realizzata in appoggio ai muri stessi per con- 3000/3, era ancora abitato. tenere una raccolta di coppi originariamente integri Questa fase, sulla base di un primo esame dei (us 3009). La presenza dei coppi, raccolti intenzio- materiali ceramici, con la presenza di maioliche nalmente e stoccati nell 'angolo di un edificio in arcaiche pisane con decorazioni a croce in verde e abbandono, trova confronto diretto con la situazione raggi in bruno (Berti & Cappelli 1994: decori I-IV documentata per l'edificio 4 del settore 3500 (cfr. gruppo), sembra delimitata alla seconda meta del infra). XIV secolo. Tale cronologia coinciderebbe con il Nello strato di crollo era, infine, presente un post quem indicato per la costruzione del muro 3031, avvallamento riempito da uno scarico di rifiuti perimetrale nord dell'edificio 3000/3. domestici (us 3012), costituito da terreno ad alta L'abbandono del villaggio non sarebbe quindi percentuale di cenere, con frammenti di ceramica da repentino ed assoluto, ma progressivo, con fasi diffe- fuoco e con un 'alta percentuale di residui faunistici renziate di collasso degli edifici. Tale abbandono con tracce evidenti di macellazione. comporterebbe, inoltre una fitta fase di frequenta- zione dei crolli con reimpiego di strutture ancora 5.3 .5 La sequenza in questa parte del settore echiusa parzialmente in elevato e raccolta di materiale edili- dalla formazione dello strato 3030 e potrebbe essere zio per un eventuale riuso, correlata a tentativi di cosi periodizzata (Tav. 2). ripresa dell' attivita edilizia su cui ancora bisogna indagare. 5.3.6 Analizzando ora i dati desunti dallo scavo dei Fabrizio Benente tre edifici individuati ne! settore 31 00 si puo dedurre che la dinamica del collasso delle strutture e dell' abbandono sembra aver avuto tempi differenziati. In 5.4 Settore 3500 (fig. 3) particolare, 1'edificio 3000/1, non presenta 1' intensa fase di frequentazione post-abbandono che caratte- I1 settore 3500 (fig. pianta Geridu 00/02) e ubicato rizza invece 1'edificio 3000/2, costruito ne! periodo nella porzione settentrionale dell 'area 3000 ed ha IV ed utilizzato nelle fasi a e b del periodo Ill come attualmente un'estensione di 162 mq. edificio ad uso promiscuo (ricovero animali ?), area Gli elementi determinanti che hanno portato a di discarica e di parzia1e raccolta di materiale edile preferire questa zona per aprire il secondo settore di per un eventuale reimpiego. scavo sono del tutto simili a quelli del settore 3100, Tav. 2. Per. fa se principali attivita cronologia IV castruziane e 1"fase dell' edificia 3000/2 XIII - 1o meta XIV sec. III a 2° fase di utilizza di 3000/2 1° meta XIV castruziane del mura 3044 e della saglia 3051 frequentaziane della superficie di us 3080 cralla parziale e farmaziane di 3060 b attivita successive all' abbandona di 3000/2 2° meta XIV farmaziane di 3047 realizzaziane dell a buca 3017 realizzaziane della buca 3045 realizzazione della buca 3049 cralla di quanta ancora in elevato dei perimetrali di 3000/2 c castruziane di 3000/3. 2° meta XIV deposita dell a strata di rifiuti 3012. farmaziane di 3030 realizzaziane della buca 3029 II ab bandana fine XIV I aratura e tentativo di utilizza agricola XX sec. 100 I! progetto Geridu. Indagini archeo1ogiche in un villaggio medieva1e abbandonato della Sardegna I l,. L I I 0 I =·~1-- ~~~~ I'"~~OB \ . O~df Y'>~J 0 I 0 I C)-1 ' '-1..! 0 0 o0 8 oo I 0 3SB3 0 0 0 I 0 I I i I J515 AMB.o ,, ., . anche se e opportuno segnalare che in questa zona dell'area, che doveva presentarsi come una distesa di 1' andamento naturale dell a collina, orientato da sud pietre e macerie con un sottilissimo strato d'humus. verso nord, appare piu regolare rispetto al settore 3100 (cfr. supra). 5.4.1 Edificio 300014. Al di sotto dell 'humus e stato posto in luce uno Localizzato al centro del settore 3500 e al momento strato di terreno abbastanza omogeneo di colore mar- quello meglio documentato dal punto di vista rone scuro, ricco al suo intemo di frammenti cera- planimetrico e stratigrafico. Obbiettivo raggiunto solo mici, di coppi e scaglie litiche di piccole dimensioni con tre ampliamenti del settore nelle due ultime cam- esteso su tutto il settore (us 3501=3527) ed inter- pagne di scavo. Presenta forma rettangolare con una pretabile come il prodotto delle attivita agricole con- larghezza intema dim 6 (3506) e una lunghezza dim dotte nell'area in tempi recenti. 11 (3514, 3507); le murature, che risultano orientate Immediatamente al disotto di tale unita stratigra- sull 'incrocio degli assi est-ovest- i lati corti- e nord- fica e stato possibile documentare le rasature delle sud, hanno uno spessore variabile tra i 65 e 63 cm e murature di quattro edifici (3000/4,5,6,7) che insieme conservano solo pochi corsi: tre nellato meridionale alle interfacce superiori dei crolli intemi ed estemi e due in quello settentrionale. La tecnica costruttiva agli ambienti venivano a costituire un livello omo- consiste in un doppio filare contrapposto di pietre di geneo caratterizzato da evidenti segni di usura delle calcare locale, del tutto analoga a quella documentata superfici ricollegabili alle sopraccennate attivita agri- nel settore 3100 (cfr. supra). cole. Ad un momento immediatamente precedente e L'edificio 3000/4, dopo l'asportazione degli strati invece da collegare la deposizione e 1'accumulo di di crollo, presentava nella sua parte centrale uno focolari (us 3504, 3531, 3530) costituiti semplice- strato uniforme di frammenti di coppi posti di piatto mente da pietre poste in circolo, concotte sulle super- (us 3559) interpretabile come il residuo della coper- fici, correlabili con una frequentazione occasionale tura. 101 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus Lo strata di coppi si presentava in realta come il bito ad una conservazione stagionale delle derrate ali- frutto di tre azioni: la prima (us. 3505) rivolta allo mentari come formaggi o granaglie o legumi secchi. Lo stoccaggio in file parallele verticali di coppi integri, scavo dei diversi riempimenti (us 3582, 3586) del con 1' attenzione di porre la parte piu larga dei singoli pozzetto, costituiti da strati di terra mol to depurata ricca pezzi in basso, concentrando i materiali in prossimita al suo intemo di semi carbonizzati, ha permesso di dell 'angolo sud/ovest (us 3505). La seconda caratte- verificare in realta che il taglio ericavato nell'angolo rizzata da una disposizione caotica dei frammenti di di due murature ortogonali tra loro (us. 3563, 3574) grandi dimensioni, ancora utilizzabili, strata localiz- palesemente pertinenti ad un edificio preesistente al zato su buona parte del lata sud (us 3519=3546). 3000/4, e del quale solo attraverso le prossime cam- Infine il livello dei coppi di piatto descritto in pagne di scavi si potra chiarire la cronologia e I' orga- precedenza ed interpretabile anche come lo scarto nizzazione planimetrica rispetto agli altri edifici. diretto delle due precedenti, ed interessato successi- vamente da fenomeni post deposizionali di calpestio 5.4.2 Edificio 300015. e assestamento. La formazione degli strati di coppi, Su questo ambiente abbiamo al momento scarse sulla base dei reperti numismatici rinvenuti, e data- informazioni a parte i limiti dell 'angolo sudlest costi- bile a partire dal secondo quarto del XIV secolo. tuito dai muri 3533 e 3509 coperti direttamente dallo La rimozione dei coppi ha consentito di porre in strata di riporto agricolo, che occultava anche un luce uno strata molto compatto e uniforme, di colore possibile strata d'uso intemo (us. 3570). Le murature marrone scuro (us 3520=3543) e con presenza in sono realizzate con la medesima tecnica costruttiva superficie di numerose chiazze di carbone, interpre- descritta in precedenza. Anche da questi pochi dati e tabile come illivello di battuto pavimentale dell'am- comunque gia possibile trarre alcune considerazioni biente nell 'ultima fase di utilizzo domestico. L'ana- preliminari che prendono lo spunto dal fatto che il lisi globale di tutti gli elementi emersi sul battuto muro 3533 e allineato con quello dell'edificio 3000/ consente gia una prima definizione dell' articolazione 4, e che tra le due case sia stato previsto uno spazio intema dell' edificio. Trattasi di una cas a terranea con di rispetto (us 3515) destinato alla raccolta delle copertura a doppio spiovente organizzata con una acque piovane provenienti dai due tetti adiacenti. trave di colmo su cui poggiano i travetti, coperti a loro volta da uno strata di canne o di paglia su cui 5.4.3 Edificio 300016. poggiavano direttamente le tegole, tutti elementi Il data piu significativo di questo edificio e che non documentati nello scavo della porzione est dell'am- rispetta ne gli spazi aperti esistenti tra gli edifici biente (us. 3578, 3580), la trave centrale esostenuta, 3000/4 e 3000/5, ne l'indipendenza presente tra gli oltre che sui lati brevi, su un palo alloggiato in edifici appena descritti. Infatti il nuovo ambiente e un'apposita struttura in pietra (us 3587). L'accesso realizzato allato di una costruzione precedente sfrut- all' ambiente avveniva dal lato sud, in prossimita tando alcune murature gia esistenti- porzione meri- dell'angolo tra i muri 3506 e 3507, dove e presente dionale del muro 3506- e appoggiando un nuovo un grosso blocco in calcare che fungeva probabil- muro (usm 3516) ad una cortina preesistente (usm mente da battiporta. 3506). In questo modo la nuova costruzione sembra La parte ovest dell' edificio era destinata alla cucina occupare quasi completamente uno spazio destinato, ed alla prima conservazione dei cibi. Indicazioni in in un prima tempo, o al passaggio oppure a spazio tal senso provengono dalla presenza di un focolare aperto di servizio degli ambienti. Tutto cio permette (us 3555), pasta in prossimita della soglia su una di ipotizzare che il nuovo ambiente si tratti sempli- soletta di argilla concotta e dalla presenza di alcuni cemente o di un ampliamento connesso all' edificio oggetti ceramici integri e da numerosi frammenti di 3000/4, oppure che la nuova struttura sia sorta in ceramica acroma destinata al contatto diretto del modo del tutto autonomo quando ormai si era perso fuoco; l'angolo nord-ovest, dove sono stati recuperati completamente il significate di ordine e indipen- parti di anforacei, era destinato alla prima conserva- denza tra le diverse abitazioni del villaggio. zione delle derrate o dell' acqua per I 'uso quotidiano. Inoltre la possibilita di costruire una sequenza di La zona est era suddivisa in due parti: l'angolo nord- cronologia relativa tra gli edifici 3000/4 e 3000/6, il est racchiuso da una tramezza lignea (us 3565, crollo di quest'ultimo edificio obliterava tutta la parte 3567,3593) con un strata d'uso caratterizzato da una ovest dell a sequenza descritta per 1'ambiente 3000/4, concentrazione di pietre di piccole dimensioni (us. permette di correlare ancora meglio le diverse fasi di 3560) su cui va a sfumare la strata nero descritto sopra vita tra i due ambienti. (us. 3543) e forse destinato al ricovero di un animale. AI suo intemo e stato possibile documentare la Nell'angolo sud-est si apre un taglio circolare (us 3581) presenza di un livello di terreno nero, ricco di fram- profondo 1,5 m ea. interpretabile come pozzetto adi- menti di ossa e ceramica, interpretabile come un bat- 102 11 progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna Tav. 3. Per. fa se attivita principali cronologia V a Costruzione del 1°edificio 2° meta XIII sec IV a Rasatura delle murature del 1o edificio e costruzione 4, 5 XIV sec. dell' ambiente b Vita dell'edificio 4, costruzione di un divisorio in materiale deperibile e apertura del pozzetto (us.3581) 1° quarto XIV sec. Ill a Abbandono edificio 4, incendio, crollo del tetto 2° quarto sec. XIV b Costruzione e vita di 3000/6 Serie di attivita all' interne dell' ambiente 4 stoccaggio dei coppi integri, assestamento delle macerie, demolizione dell~ murature c Crollo dell'ambiente 5 2° meta sec. XIV II Occupazione temporanee, asportazione di materiale edile, focolari superficiali fine XIV I Formazione del terreno agricolo e utilizzo agricolo con arature meccaniche XX sec. tuto pavimentale su cui poggia un focolare (us. 3577), 5.5 Area 3000: analisi dei dati e prospettive non ancora indagato in maniera esaustiva. d'indagine 5.4.4 Edificio 3000/7 La periodizzazione, proposta congiuntamente e Localizzato per ultimo nell' angolo sud est del settore, criticamente analizzata per i due settori di scavo, nel corso della campagna svolta nel dicembre 1996, potra in futuro essere oggetto di migliorie e di modi- e stata posto in luce solo una limitata porzione di un fiche sostanziali. Ancora di difficile collocazione, al- angolo (us 3589). L'unica annotazione possibile e meno nelle sue fasi iniziali e il periodo V registrato che l'edificio ha il medesimo orientamento plani- nel settore 3500, ma che comunque aggiunge gia nuovi metrico degli edifici 3000/4 e 3000/5 e che risulta elementi sulla complessita dell' evoluzione iniziale separato dal prima da una stretta stradina (us. 3573) del villaggio. I limiti di separazione tra periodo IV e del tutto analoga per ampiezza e orientamento con periodo Ill sono sicuramente meno netti, la distin- quella del settore 3100. zione in fasi potra essere meglio organizzata e corre- La sequenza stratigrafica relativa al settore 3500 lata, con l'ampliamento dello scavo. puo essere dunque cosi periodizzata (Tav. 3). La fase insediativa del periodo IV sembra essere Da un punto di vista strettamente cronologico, le pianificata e programmata, caratterizzata dall' ado- fasi centrali offrono margini sufficienti di affida- zione di moduli abitativi di grandi dimensioni (supe- bilita, anche se devono essere indagati ancora i con- riori ai 40 mq.), dall'utilizzo delle medesime tecniche testi pertinenti agli ambienti 6 e 7. 11 prima periodo costruttive, dalla presenza di una copertura in coppi. connesso all a vita dell' edificio preesistente all' edi- Gli edifici sono tutti orientati allo stesso modo (mu- ficio 4 e al momento datato dal terminus ante quem rature parallele agli assi nord-sud ed ovest-est) sono costituito dall'abbandono di quest'ultimo. Gli ultimi indipendenti tra loro, con presenza di spazi intra- periodi possono essere inseriti in archi cronologici muranei per lo scolo delle acque. abbastanza lunghi e con limiti di separazione alquanto Questa organizzazione pianificata dell' insedia- sfumati tra loro: soprattutto per quanta riguarda mento sembra perdersi progressivamente, forse a 1'operazione di spoglio sistematico delle strutture partire dagli inizi del XIV secolo. Nella prima meta murarie superstiti e la formazione dei focolari, azioni del secolo i due edifici del settore 3100 e quell a cen- che possono essere iniziate anche in momenti imme- trale del settore 3500 sono distrutti, 3000/1, 4 ven- diatamente successivi al definitivo abbandono degli gono definitivamente abbandonati, 3000/2, ridotto, e edifici e potrebbero essersi protratte sino alla prima destinato ad usi non abitativi, uso che non puo essere meta dell' ottocento con la formazione progressiva escluso anche per 1' edificio 3000/6. Nelle ultime fasi del pascolo, 1' aratura e invece collocabile con cer- del periodo Ill la crisi diventa piu marcata: gli edifici tezza, grazie alle fonti orali raccolte, negli ultimi non crollano sincronicamente, ma aree in abbandono vent'anni di questo secolo. convivono con abitazioni ancora in uso e con case di Franco Campus nuova costruzione (3000/3 3000/6). Viene attuato lo 103 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus spoglio sistematico dei crolli, con fenomeni di rac- pongono prime infonnazioni su questa fascia crono- colta e stoccaggio delle tegole di copertura ancora in- logica, per la quale non disponiamo sinora di alcun tegre. Gli edifici in abbandono, onnai privi di coper- contesto chiuso. tura diventano spazi aperti destinati alia discarica dei I reperti metallici ed il vetro, sono stati voluta- rifiuti domestici e forse alia custodia degli animali. mente esclusi da questa relazione preliminare e sar- Ne! periodo II, probabilmente nella seconda meta anno pertanto presentati nell 'edizione dello scavo, del XIV secolo, avviene 1'abbandono definitivo dell' corredati dei dati di associazione. area, che vanifica tutte le precedenti attivita di stoc- caggio e raccolta dei coppi, che rimangono accatas- Marco Milanese tati senza poter essere riutilizzati, pur rimanendo per un lungo periodo in superficie e ben visibili. Attivita di frequentazione o di spoglio possono 6.2 Quadri tipologici e circolazione delle ceramiche essere anche avvenute nel periodo I, contemporanea- mente all 'attivita di demolizione e spoglio condotta La Sardegna, a partire dall 'XI secolo, e a! centro sulla chiesa di Sant' Andrea nel XIX secolo. Sono delle rotte commerciali tirreniche e mediterranee, attestate nell 'ultimo ventennio le attivita legate a ten- ideali vettori di diffusione delle ceramiche prodotte tativi di riconversione ad uso agricolo dell'area, ten- in Sicilia e ne! Nord Africa e, a partire dal XIII se- tativi che hanno come obbiettivo minimo di trasfor- cola, provenienti da Savona, da Pisa e dall 'Italia mare I 'area in pascolo invemale, considerato i1 sottile meridionale (Campania, Puglia). Per quanto riguarda strato di humus a disposizione. i contesti architettonici (Berti, Hobart & Porcella I1 prosieguo dello scavo, 1'ampliamento e il colle- 1990, 153-168; Hobart & Porcella 1993, 139-160) i gamento dei settori 3100 e 3500 dovrebbero consen- quadri tipologici ed i fenomeni di circolazioni sem- tire I' acquisizione dei dati cronologici mancanti su11' brano essere ben delineati, mentre per quanto con- avvio della fase insediativa medievale mentre l'ana- ceme i contesti di consumo sembra ci siano ancora lisi dei contesti pertinenti a! periodi IV e V consentira ampie possibilita di approfondimento. una piu chiara definizione dell 'articolazione intema I1 quadro tipologico delle produzioni ceramiche degli edifici. Rimane ancora del tutto aperto il pro- emerso da questa prima fase d'indagine documenta blema dell'organizzazione della viabilita intema al 1' ampia circolazione di tipi ceramici importati dalla villaggio e della presenza di eventuali spazi aperti nel Liguria (graffita arcaica savonese, protomaiolica savo- tessuto insediativo, ma lo scavo de11' area 3000 do- nese, ingobbiata monocroma), dalla Toscana (maio- vrebbe costituire un campione valido, almeno per lica arcaica pisana, boccali privi di rivestimento de- I 'area centrale dell 'insediamento del villaggio. purati), dall 'Italia meridionale tirrenica (spiral ware), dalla Spagna (giare e grandi contenitori, vasellame da Fabrizio Benente mensa di produzione catalana, ispano moresche) e dal Nord Africa (ceramica smaltata e decorata a co- balto e manganese, invetriate monocrome). Le pro- 6 I reperti duzioni locali sembrano, invece, destinate a coprire il fabbisogno di vasellame da cucina e di altri tipi 6.1 Premessa funzionali. L'attestazione di ceramiche smaltate decorate a La notevole quantita di reperti emersi nelle prime cobalto e manganese, di produzione tunisina, con campagne di scavo, la cui analisi e ancora in corso, ceramic a campana tipo "spiral ware", associate a non pennette di presentare in questa sede una rifles- produzioni savonesi duecentesche (ingubbiata mono- sione sui rapporti quantitativi intercorrenti tra le di- croma, graffita arcaica tirrenica) trova confronti con verse classi di materiali. Tuttavia, pur rimandando situazioni gia note in Sardegna, con reperti rinvenuti questo obbiettivo ad una fase piu matura della ricer- nel cagliaritano (AA.VV. 1993a, 32) e con "bacini" ca, si ritiene utile presentare una prima analisi volta documentati nei contesti architettonici (Berti, Hobart a focalizzare i limiti del campione presentato, si sot- & Porcella 1990, 153-168; Hobart & Porcella 1993, tolinea che esso estato composto con materiali pro- 148-149). venienti prevalentemente da contesti di crollo, carat- Per quanto riguarda la Sardegna Settentrionale, le terizzati da reperti in fase e residuali, mentre i piu attestazioni di San Nicola e Santa Barbara a Sassari, attendibili contesti chiusi attribuibili a! XIV secolo dove le produzioni liguri sono associate con prodotti non sono stati sinora presi in esame. dell 'Italia Meridionale (Santa Barbara) e con cera- Alcuni reperti residuali emersi da strati di pieno miche islamiche (San Nicola), costituiscono il con- XIV secolo sono attribuibili al XII-XIII secolo e pro- fronto piu eclatante per i materiali rinvenuti a Geridu. 104 I1 progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna Si propongono di seguito alcuni spunti di indagine 6.2.2 Toscana emersi da un primo esame dei materiali: Sono attestati alcuni frammenti riconducibili alla classe delle brocche e boccali nudi, ad impasto depu- 6.2.1 Liguria rato, di tipo pisano, recentemente oggetto di una Accanto alla circolazione della graffita arcaica revisione globale (Berti & Gelichi 1995, 191-240). A tirrenica, che e ormai fenomeno ben noto e su cui questa classe di oggetti non deve essere associata la sembra inopportuno soffermarci in questa sede funzione di contenitori da trasporto, ma piu proba- (Hobart & Porcella 1993, 149; Berti & Cappelli 1994, bilmente quella di contenitori da dispensa per liquidi 151-168; Varaldo 1995) e particolarmente signifi- o per aridi. La loro presenza e la loro circolazione, cativa l'attestazione delle produzioni savonesi piu sovente in associazione con maiolica arcaica pisana, rare e marginali, come 1'ingobbiata chiara e mono- trovano confronti in area alto-tirrenica, in centri con croma, ma soprattutto le graffite arcaiche tirreniche approvvigionamento ceramico eterodiretto (Berti & monocrome e la protomaiolica savonese. Queste Gelichi 1995, 237). tipologie, ben note nei contesti liguri di XIII secolo La maiolica arcaica di produzione pisana risulta (Andora, Savona, Casteldelfino, Genova, San Frut- ben documentata ed in particolare sembrano avere tuoso di Camogli), sono di solito scarsamente buona circolazione le forme chiuse, sia i prodotti a attestate in termini di esportazione. piede svasato duecenteschi, sia le produzioni della La graffita arcaica tirrenica monocroma, ovvero prima meta del Trecento. Tale presenza rimanda a una tipologia con caratteristiche morfologiche e modelli di circolazione gia documentati in molti decorative assimilabili a quelle della graffita arcaica centri di consumo alto-tirrenici in contesti del XIII- tirrenica, ma priva della decorazione dipinta in verde prima meta XIV secolo. Si fa riferimento, in parti- e giallo, e attestata negli scavi di Caste! Delfino colare, all 'associazione tra le forme aperte di produ- (Milanese 1982a, 90, fig. 4 e 7; Milanese 1982b, 87, zione savonese e le forme chiuse di produzione n. 26), documentata negli scavi di San Fruttuoso di pisana, la cui attestazione in diverse realta regionali Capodimonte (ex inf. A. Gardini), nota da reperti da (Benente & Gardini-Sfrecola 1993, 15-21; AA.VV. scavo genovesi (Anfrews & Pringle 1977, 123, n. 86) 1993a, 15-22; AA.VV. 1989, 87-88, tav.V) andrebbe e savonesi ed e anche attestata da bacini della chiesa riletta in uno studio volto alla definizione delle pra- di S. Cecilia a Pisa (Berti & Tongiorgi 1981,tav. tiche di commercializzazione del vasellame da mensa CCXIII, n. 354; tav. CCXIV, n. 333; Berti 1993, 126), tra Toscana, Liguria, Provenza, Sardegna e Corsica. di San Francesco a Lucca (Berti & Cappelli 1994, 157, n. 12, fig. 118) e da bacini della chiesa di Santa 6.2.3 Italia Meridionale Marta a Novara (Cortellazzo & Panto 1993, 35-36, Gli scavi di Geridu fomiscono testimonianza della 45, fig. 9).Trattasi di una produzione a circolazione circolazione, come ceramica d'uso, di produzioni del piu limitata e a carattere minore, avviata da qualche tipo spiral ware, gia attestate in Sardegna nei contesti atelier savonese nel corso del duecento, esauritasi architettonici (Hobart & Porcella 1993, 149-150) e probabilmente agli inizi del XIV, senza alcun rap- prodotte in diversi centri dell 'area campano-laziale porta di continuita o filiazione con la piu tarda graffi- tra la fine del XII ed il XIII secolo (Molinari 1990, ta monocroma ligure (Benente, Gardini & Sfrecola 362). La spiral ware, ben documentata a Genova 1993, 21; Benente 1996a, 253). (Palazzo Ducale) e a Savona (Priamar), nota a Pisa Sono stati rinvenuti almeno due frammenti di (Hobart & Porcella 1993, 149, nota 57) ampiamente protomaiolica savonese, uno dei quali trova confronti attestata nell'Italia meridionale (Fontana 1984, 121- con la decorazione attestata da un frammento prove- 122; Molinari 1990, 362-363), rinvenuta anche nel niente dagli scavi del Priamar a Savona (Varaldo Nord Africa (Vitelli & Riley 1979, 96-101) e nel 1990, fig. 2, csd 10376, fig. 6). Entrambi sono, infine, Mediterraneo orientale (Pringle 1984, 460), cos- confrontabili con un bacino pisano della chiesa di tituisce una delle classi ceramiche ad ampia diffu- San Giovannino, che reca un volatile dipinto in bruno siotie, il cui vettore di circolazione potrebbe essere e verde al centro del cavetto (Berti & Tongiorgi 1981, stato la rotta tirrenica e mediterranea delle navi tav. CLXI, n.626). genovesi. Risulta infine significativa 1'estrema scars ita delle piu importanti produzioni savonesi della seconda 6.2.4 Islam Occidentale meta del XIV secolo e del XV secolo (maiolica Non essendo ancora stati analizzati i contesti iniziali arcaica, graffita monocroma) (Benente 1991; Benente d'uso degli edifici scavati (cfr. supra), soltanto pochi 1996a; Benente, Gardini & Sfrecola 1993); scarsita frammenti, in giacitura residuale, rimandano a cera- da correlarsi con la cronologia proposta per l'abban- miche d'importazione islamica, prodotte in Tunisia, dono del villaggio. nel Maghreb e nella Spagna. 105 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus Trattasi di un frammento di ceramica smaltata deco- mente connessa allo sfruttamento agricolo della zona, rata a cobalto e manganese, di alcune invetriate mono- a meglio definime almeno i1 quadro cronologico, che crome e di un frammento di giara decorata a stampo si puo preliminarmente delineare fra I e V-VI secolo la cui presenza e cronologia possono essere ricondot- d.C., sulla base di materiale residuo presente nei te alle prime fasi di vita del villaggio di Geridu. contesti medievali. 6.2.5 Spagna 7.4 L'interrogativo riguardante i tempi e i modi Accanto alle tipologie ceramiche duecentesche sem- dell 'abbandono trova prime risposte nelle sequenze bra inserirsi, con la conquista catalano-aragonese, la documentate nello scavo dell 'area 3000, che indicano circolazione delle ceramiche da mensa e dei grandi che i depositi archeologici di Geridu sono altamente contenitori da trasporto e da dispensa di produzione informativi per 1'interpretazione delle attivita di spo- spagnola (Francovich & Gelichi 1984, 28-39). glio, dei processi di abbandono e di crollo degli Ceramiche smaltate dipinte in bruno e verde, edifici, grazie all 'articolata pluristratificazione esa- prodotte in Catalogna (Telese Compte 1992, 93-100) minata in precedenza che ha perrnesso di evidenziare o, piu probabilmente, a Paterna (Paz Soler 1992, 13- fenomeni anche molto particolari, come il recupero e 22) sembrano avere buona diffusione in questa fase, 1' immagazzinamento di materiale da costruzione .. trovando confronti con le piu !imitate attestazioni I documenti archeologici sinora analizzati testi- provenzali (AA.VV. 1989, 87, fig. 61, tav. V, nn. 3- moniano con chiarezza che lo spopolamento di Geridu 8) e liguri (Mannoni 1975, 107, tipo 83, nn. 2, 3). Le si verifico gradualmente attraverso tutto il XIV se- ceramiche decorate in blu o in blue lustro compaiono colo: il campione esaminato sottolinea pertanto la nei tipi databili entro il XIV secolo, mentre sono lunga durata di questo fenomeno e ne caratterizza assenti i prodotti valenzani del XV secolo. analiticamente la dinamica, attivata da una serie di La presenza di queste ceramiche deve essere concause (fra cui l'eccessiva pressione fiscale e le correlata alla presenza catalana in Sardegna e, piu in pestilenze dell a meta del secolo ), gia discusse sulla generale, ai traffici commerciali dei mercanti catalani base dei dati storiografici, che perrnettono di seguire con Provenza, Liguria, Sicilia e Mediterraneo Orien- il calo demografico e la scomparsa dell' insediamento tale (Castellaccio 1983). fra la fine del XIV e gli inizi del XV secolo. Fabrizio Benente 7.5 I dati sinora raccolti permettono prime risposte all 'interrogativo concemente 1'organizzazione spa- 7 Conclusioni ziale del villaggio, stante il gia evidenziato problema della sua estensione topografica. 7.1 I dati sin qui discussi hanno gia consentito con- Sono stati ad oggi evidenziati i resti di 15 edifici clusioni parziali su differenti tematiche, ma sembra (7 nell'area 3000; 4 nell'area 5000; 1 nell'area 2000 comunque opportuno discutere sinteticamente in e 3 nei saggi di tutela della Soprintendenza), tutti quale misura le prime campagne di scavo nel villag- riferibili alla fase due-trecentesca del sito, con la sola gio di Geridu abbiano portato risposte agli interro- eccezione dell' edificio 5000/3. Anche se i1 campi one gativi iniziali della ricerca. dell 'insediamento sui quale si sono sin ora concen- trate le ricerche e forzatamente limitato, gli edifici 7.2 I1 problema dell' estensione del villaggio medie- della fase tardo-duecentesca e trecentesca posti in luce vale estato affrontato con campagne di ricognizione, dalle campagne di scavo sembrano rispondere ad una che, nonostante i limiti esposti, hanno consentito di programmazione generale dell' organizzazione spa- ipotizzare che il sito di Geridu possa occupare una ziale del villaggio e dell' orientamento degli edifici, superficie di circa 12-14 ettari. I1 ricorso a differenti probabilmente funzionale a contrastare il forte vento metodologie di prospezione ed alla fotointerpreta- di maestrale che spira particolarrnente nei mesi piu zione aerea, sinora impediti dal gia ricordato costo freddi. zero di queste fasi iniziali della ricerca, portera ad Le case sono suddivise tra loro da passaggi di di- una piu esatta formulazione di questa risposta e ad verse dimensioni talvolta cosi stretti da non con- una sua piu soddisfacente articolazione qualitativa. sentire neppure il transito di una singola persona e sembrano, pertanto, esclusivamente funzionali ad una 7.3 Sui problema dell a continuita fra il si to romano raccolta delle acque piovane e forse ad una parcel- certamente presente nell 'area di Geridu ed il villag- lizzazione dello spazio fiscale (Bucaille & Pesez gio medievale, le campagne di scavo e ricognizione 1980, 77). hanno contribuito, oltre a confermare la gia indiziata Le case di Geridu presentano moduli rettangolari, esistenza di una frequentazione romana probabil- con superfici interne utilizzabili variabili da 30 a 43 106 Il progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villaggio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna a 66 mq. La copertura ea doppio spiovente con palo servira alla famiglia per mangiare, riscaldarsi, dor- centrale destinato a reggere il trave maestro del tetto. mire, lavorare" (Mazzi 1980, 143). Tutti gli edifici sinora scoperti sembrano rispondere Le strutture murarie, per quanto lo scavo abbia con chiarezza alla tipologia di domus terrestris, limi- sinora potuto evidenziare, sono costituite da una tata quindi al solo piano terreno, quale e stata eviden- doppia cortina di pietre calcaree locali sbozzate, ziata negli studi regionali svolti sulle fonti scritte. cavate seguendo i piani naturali di sfaldamento della I1 caso dell 'edificio 3000/1, datato al primo quarto roccia e il riempimento intemo e formato da scaglie del XIV secolo, e particolarmente informativo per litiche di lavorazione. un'analisi funzionale degli spazi intemi della casa del I principali materiali da costruzione, il calcare villaggio: naturalmente non sappiamo ancora quanta tenero elveziano e 1' argilla, sono sta ti chiaramente questo esempio .possa essere rappresentativo di ten- reperiti in loco, cosi come sembra ragionevole ipo- denze piu generali, infatti altri edifici in corso di tizzare (anche se mancano ancora i riscontri archeo- scavo come il 3000/4, invitano alla massima pru- metrici) per le teule, i coppi di copertura presenti nel denza in questa fase delle indagini. Le evidenze sito in enormi quantita. disponibili suggeriscono tuttavia 1' appartenenza dell' A questo proposito, occorre ricordare che il vicino edificio 3000/1 al noto modello della maison mixte villaggio di Bosove disponeva nel XII secolo di un (es. Chapelot & Fossier 1980, 228): esso risulta infatti proprio teularius, (Meloni & Dessi Fulgheri 1994, suddiviso in due ambienti, grazie ad un tramezzo 164-165), figura la cui esistenza anche a Geridu e precario forse di canne, legno o vimini (quale quello ampiamente supportata dall' evidenza archeologica: attestato in una casa mista quattrocentesca roma- queste osservazioni su fonti di differente natura sug- gnola, che separava la stalla dalla camera da letto: geriscono un mutamento di prospettiva rispetto alle Librenti & Zanarini 1991, 41/43) certamente dotato ricostruzioni dei sistemi di copertura delle case rurali di una porta in legno atta a separare la stalla dalla medievali di questa zona della Sardegna elaborate cucina. I due ambienti, comunicanti tra loro all 'in- sulla base delle fonti scritte secondo le quali le coper- temo dell 'abitazione, erano tuttavia muniti anche di ture avrebbero di norma utilizzato materiale vegetale autonomi accessi dall 'estemo, maggiore quello della deperibile e, solo raramente, le teule in terracotta stalla, minore quello della cucina. (Meloni & Dessi Fulgheri 1994, 51-52). Per soste brevi o per i periodi caratterizzati da clima migliore 1'asino, sicuro ospite della stalla do- 7.6 Le prime osservazioni riguardanti la cultura mestica, era legato a sa loriga, un blocco litico mura- materiale di Geridu hanno permesso di apprezzare la to nella facciata dell'edificio e forato per consentire vivac ita dei rapporti mercantili che gravitano nell' di leg are 1' animale all' estemo dell a casa. La cucina area di Sassari fra XIII e XIV secolo. Il quadro delle presenta un focolare soprarelevato in argilla, sulla importazioni si presenta infatti particolarmente arti- sinistra dell'ingresso, mentre un angolo del vano era colato ed ha evidenziato nella Toscana (Pisa), nella destinato a dispensa, testimoniata da alcune anfore Liguria (Savona) e nell 'area catalana le direttrici contenenti fave selvatiche e grano carbonizzato. quantitativamente privilegiate delle merci ceramic he Questi resti ci rimandano alle attivita economic he le- presenti nel sito. gate allo sfruttamento dei campi, testimoniate anche A tale proposito si deve sottolineare il rilievo che da alcuni falcetti per la mietitura. Aderente al tra- le fonti e la letteratura storiografica attribuiscono alla mezzo precario chiare tracce rimandano ad uno dei presenza genovese e ligure nel Logudoro, particolar- piu emblematici elementi dell 'arredo della casa con- mente nell 'ultimo ventennio del XIII secolo (es. tadina medievale, la cassa in legno che non manca mai Loddo Canepa 1952, 49 ss.), a conclusione di un neppure nelle case piu povere (Bresc 1976, 114/127) lungo periodo di tensioni e scontri con Pi sa, che ebbe e che nella citta di Sassari era invece spesso im- in Porto Torres ed in Sassari importanti basi opera- portata da Pisa e da Venezia, nella piu ricca versione tive di carattere mercantile (Deliperi 1931, 3 ss.). dipinta. La presenza commerciale ligure in questa zona La casa 3000/1, distrutta da un incendio nel secon- della Sardegna trove nei mercanti genovesi i suoi piu do quarto del XIV secolo e pertanto un documento attivi riferimenti, grazie anche ai vasti possessi fon- archeologico di particolare interesse per la ricostru- diari, nel nord-ovest dell' isola, dell a famiglia Doria zione antropologica: essa si presenta di !imitate dimen- (Deliperi 1935, 6; Artizzu 1985, 147; Meloni 1990), sioni, probabilmente buia e piena di fumo (Bucaille & saldamente attestata nelle vicine curatorie di Anglona Pesez 1980, 80), "povera di cose e affollata di uomini", e della Nurra ed in altre piu meridionali. Proprio con una cucina polifunzionale che "accoglier ... spesso all'iniziativa dei Doria si deve l'incastellamento del alla rinfusa gli arredi che le competono e in piu attrezzi punto strategico di Caste! Genovese (Zirolia 1899), agricoli, scorte granarie, giacigli, e nello stesso tempo I 'attuale Castelsardo, porto di rilievo sulla costa set- 107 M. Milanese, F. Benente & F. Campus tentrionale. Tuttavia, forse ad una presenza diretta di BERTI G. & CAPPELLI L. 1994: Ceramiche medievali mercanti savonesi in questo porto ed a Sassari, docu- e post-medievali (Museo Nazionale di Villa mentata a partire dal XIV secolo (Varaldo 1981, 349 Guinigi), I. Dalle ceramiche islamiche alle ss.), e probabilmente da riferire il ritrovamento, a "Maioliche arcaiche" Secc. XI-XV, Ricerche di Geridu e nella stessa citta di Sassari, di prodotti cera- archeologia altomedievale e medievale 19-20, mici di Savona. Firenze. Informazioni puntuali per la ricostruzione dei sis- BERTI G. & GELICHI S. 1995: Le "anforette" pisane: temi economici e del paesaggio sono gia emersi dalle note su un contenitore in ceramica tardo-medie- prime indagini sui resti faunistici da contesti chiusi vale, Archeologia Medievale XXII, 191-240. tardotrecenteschi: una base quantitativa particolar- BERTI G., HOBART & PORCELLA M. F. 1990: Proto- mente solida ha consentito di individuare attendibil- maioliche in Sardegna, Albisola XXIII, 152-168. mente una dieta camea assai varia, basata principal- BERTI G. & TONGIORGI L. 1977: Ceramica Pisana. mente su uno sviluppato allevamento di ovicaprini Sec. XIII-XV, Pisa. per macellazione e per la produzione di latte e lana, BERTI G. & TONGIORGI L. 1981: I bacini ceramici mentre asini e bovini di piccola taglia risultano adulti medievali delle chiese di Pisa, Roma. e quindi utilizzati per lavoro. La presenza di daini e BOATO A. et alii 1990: Scavo dell'area est del vil- cervi suggerisce infine 1'esistenza di vasti boschi e, laggio abbandonato di Monte Zignago. Zignago 4, quindi, un paesaggio di Geridu medievale assai Archeologia Medievale XVII, 355-410. diverso da quello attuale ( caratterizzato da oliveti e BOFARULL Y MASCARO P. 1856: Repartimientos de vigneti) e che soltanto un adeguato programma Ios reinos de Mallorca, Valencia y Cerdefia, archeobotanico potra definire con un soddisfacente Collecion de documentos ineditos del Archivo de livello di analiticita. la Corona de Aragon, tomo XI, Barcelona. Marco Milanese BUCAILLE R & PESEZ J.M. 1980: L'habitat paysan en Bourgogne viticole du XIVe au XIXe siecle. Approche antropologique, Archeologia Medie- Bibliografia vale VII, 73-82. BRESC H. 1976: L'habitat medieval en Sicile, in: Atti Albisola = Atti del Convegno intemazionale sulla del Colloquia Internazionale di Archeologia ceramica. Medievale, Palermo, 186-197. 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Marco Milanese Universita degli Studi di Genova Dipartimento di Archeologia e Filologia Classica & Universita degli Studi di Sassari Dipartimento di Storia Fabrizio Benente Universita degli Studi di Pisa Scuola di Specializzazione in Archeologia Franco Campus Universita degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" Scuola di Specializzazione in Archeologia 110 Art and Symbolism in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 5 M 0Angels Ruf, Toni Vila, Xavier Soli, Xavier Llovera, Cristina Yaiiez & Josep Maria Bosch Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andorra): evolution des strategies d'occupation et exploitation d'un territoire du Veme a la fin du VIIIeme siecle Introduction permis de restituer !'occupation du site. Ce travail a ete publit~e en 1997 sous le titre: Roe d 'Enclar. Avec cette communication, le Service charge de Transformacions d'un espai domina! (segles IV- la recherche (Servei de Recerea Historiea) du Patri- XIX), dans la collection de monographies du Patri- moni Cultural d 'Andorra presente une synthese des moni Cultural d' Andorra. resultats obtenus apres onze ans de campagnes de fouilles clans le site du Roe d'Enclar (1979-1993). Ce travail de recherche archeologique a surtout apporte Situation geographique des informations sur une de ces vallees pyreneennes orientales meconnues pour les periodes du Bas- Situe au coeur des Pyrenees, 1' Andorre est un pays Empire et pre-feodale (IVeme-IXeme siecles). Etant extremement montagneux dont 1' altitude moyenne donne 1' etat de la recherche, cette etude est excep- est de 2.000 m. L'orographie s'organise autour d'une tionnelle. grande vallee centrale orientee Nord-Sud creusee par Actuellement, les recherches sont en train de la riviere Valira. Perche sur un plateau a une altitude concentrer leurs efforts sur ces siecles de transition. de 1.225 m, le site du Roe d 'Enclar domine la plaine Elles sont toutefois surtout centrees sur les zones centrale. Depuis cet emplacement, le site veille ainsi proches des cotes. L'occupation des hautes vallees sur 1' entree sud du pays qui se fait etroite a cet pyreneennes du Tet, le Tech, 1'Aude, 1'Ariege, le endroit. I1 foumit en outre une bonne visibilite vers Fluvia, le Segre, le Valira, et la Noguera Pallaresa est l'interieur du pays. Cette situation met le site a pro- encore tres peu connue par rapport aux regions pro- ximite d'un vaste reseau de communications fluvi- ches des centres urbains plus anciens comme Narbo, ales. Le Valira qui coule aces pieds se jette ensuite, Emporiae, ou Gerunda. Dans ce sens, il faut signaler en-dehors des frontieres andorranes, clans la riviere le travail de synthese sur la romanisation clans le du Segre. Le cours de celui-ci permet de relier la Nord-Est de la Catalogne (Casas et al. 1995) ou les plaine meridionale de Lleida avec le versant sud des etudes micro-regionales de la region de Narbonne Pyrenees, puis a travers les ports de montagne il dirigees par Favory et Fiches (1994). etablit un lien avec les vallees qui menent a Toulouse L'etude de notre site nous a amene a dresser un par 1' Ariege et a la Mediterranee par les vallees de etat des connaissances dans toutes les vallees avoisi- 1'Aude et de la Tet. nantes, aussi bien sur le versant nord que sur le ver- sant sud de cette partie orientale des Pyrenees. Dans cet ensemble, la region de la Cerdagne est parmi L'evolution du site celles ou la romanisation a ete un peu etudiee (Rico 1992; Olesti 1990). Mais pour ce qui conceme la Le site du Roe d'Enclar presente cinq moments transition entre 1'Antiquite tardive et la periode pre- d 'occupation all ant de la protohistoire jusqu 'au feodale, le Roe d'Enclar constitue le seul site connu XIXeme siecle. Dans un premier temps, le site con- clans une vaste region eloignee des grands centres nalt une occupation protohistorique (entre 1' Age du politiques de !'Empire romain, et puis du regne wisi- Bronze ancien et 1' Age du Fer) dont temoignent sur- gothique de Tolede. Devant !'importance du site nous tout la ceramique et les objets lithiques, notamment avons veille a appliquer une approche interdiscipli- des polissoirs et des haches. naire pour obtenir un maximum d'informations des La periode d'occupation suivante se divise en objets et des structures exhumees. Les datations au deux phases. La premiere se situe pendant le pro- 14 C, les analyses des mortiers, des ceramiques et des cessus simultane d'iberisation et de romanisation de scories de metaux sont autant de donnees qui ont ces vallees. Cette occupation n' a pas laisse de 111 M.A. Ruf, T. Vila, X. Sole, X. Llovera, C. YMiez & J.M. Bosch l Segle IV '\ "--'------" Zona 'I ' "-----._ -----------. de Feixes '\ ........ ..... ,. , . '\ , ... \. .... / t I I 1.,"' I I I I I ' ' ' .. - ..... ,. ' - .,.. .. ,. I I '" ' I , / ' ,. • Camf principal \.' ' ''- ,' ' ' : Zona 1 '. de Feixes \ I ',> ' I ' I I \ \ \ I\ J 1 ,' \ lll\)l i ..._\\\\Jifl I ,' f \ )I \ ~ ( ' : \ . I ' Camf '. I I I ' principal ~: I I I I I I I I ' I lnstal.lacions per a l'elaboraci6 del vi Zona de Feixes N {) ~ Zona o 10 20m de Feixes Fig. 1.- Roe d'Enclar: plan general des vestiges de la deuxieme phase (!Verne siecle) (re/eve: Alex Net). 112 Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andorra) vestiges et on ne peut, de ce fait, definir de fa<;on ple du modele d'exploitation viti-vinicole propre au precise que! put etre 1'usage du site. La deuxieme Bas-Empire (IVeme siecle): la culture et la fabrication phase a lieu au IVeme siecle et se distingue par la du vin se font au meme endroit alors que !'habitat est transformation du Roe d 'Enclar en un espace voue a place ailleurs. Plusieurs elements nous ont amene a la culture de la vigne (fig. 1). definir cette phase d'occupation. Les vestiges muratLx La troisieme grande etape correspond aun moment de la zone vouee a la culture, le fait d'avoir trouve le de transition entre le mode romain et la periode poids du pressoir, une cuvette revetue d 'opus signinum feodale (fin du IVeme-IXeme siecle). Nous pouvons et les restes de vitis vinifere sont autant d'indices de la anouveau observer deux phases clans cette periode de vocation agraire du site acette epoque. !'occupation. Dans un premier temps, on construit une fortification sur la partie haute du plateau. Sa Les stntctures de culture fonction etait de control er les lieux de passages Nord- No us avons decouvert tout d' abord les murs qui Sud traversant la vallee d' Andorre et d' am~ter ainsi temoignent de 1'exploitation agraire. Il s 'agit de tout les eventuels mouvements de peuples germaniques un systeme de terrasses allongees et etroites tres vers 1'Hispanie. Le second moment est marque par la adequates pour la culture de la vigne. La superposi- formation, puis la consolidation d'un petit d'habitat tion des structures murales et !'absence de references perche (fig. 3 et 6). documentaires ad'autres activites agraires du IXeme L' avant-demiere etape co'incide avec 1' avenement au XXeme siecle nous amene a penser que ces du feodalisme clans ces vallees pyreneennes. L'an- structures sont a her a l'etape du Bas-Empire que cienne fortification tardo-romaine d'Enclar devient connait le site. alors un chateau sous 1' emprise du comte (IXeme- XIIIeme siecle). Le poids du press air La cinquieme etape correspond a une longue A ces structures s'ajoute la presence d'une partie periode pendant laquelle les autorites communales significative de 1' outillage qui servait a presser le recuperent le Roe d'Enclar comme zone de paturage raisin. Il s'agit d'un bloc de granit (larg. 80 cm, long. (XIIIeme-XIXeme siecles). 86 cm, hauteur 39-56 cm) dont les cotes opposes sont creuses par deux rainures verticales d 'une trentaine de centimetres de long (L. 34 cm, 1. 9 cm et L. 43 cm, L'exploitation viti-vinicole (IVeme siecle) 1. 14, prof. 8 cm), et dont le centre possede une con- cavite circulaire (diam. 16 cm et profondeur 5 cm). Au cours du IVeme siecle, le pui du Roe d'Enclar Le poids du rocher est de 550 ou 600 kg (fig. 2). est voue ala mono-culture du vin et ason elaboration. a Il est tres probablement rattache un habitat plus Le petit bass in important place dans la plaine en contrebas du rocher, Le second vestige qui nous indique que la production dans la vallee centrale. Le site constitue alors un exem- de vin se faisait sur place est un petit bassin qua- Fig. 2.- Le poids du pressoir (a droite) et reconstruction du systeme d'ancrage de la vis de pressoir ala pierre (a gauche) (dessin Josep M. Bosch). I I 113 M.A. Ruf, T. Vila, X. Sole, X. Llovera, C. Yariez & J.M. Bosch drangulaire (1. 180 cm, L. 230 cm) bati en pierre et boutons indispensables pour unir les differentes par- impermeabilise par un double revetement fait de deux ties en cuir des equipements de monture. Ils sont types d' opus signinum: I' un recouvre les parois, I' autre propres aux cavaliers hispano-romains: type IIIc le fond du bassin. Ce bassin dont la capacite est de 49 (grand) (fig. 5/2), type IIId (petit) (fig. 5/3). Un pas- litres etait utilise pour recueillir le mo(lt du pressoir. sant de ceinture tres rare dans la region dans laquelle Les operations liees a 1'ecrasement du raisin et a la nous nous situons, constitue un des elements remar- fermentation du mout avaient lieu dans un autre quables du site (fig. 5/6). C' est 1'objet militaire par reservoir dont nous avons observe les restes du cordon excellence du Veme siecle, les paralleles les plus hydraulique et du revetement en opus signinwn. proches se rencontrent dans le Nord de la Gaule, a Le site du Roe d'Enclar appara1t comme faisant 1'Est du Rhin, en Germanie, Belgique, dans I' a ire partie d'un ensemble visant a exploiter le territoire. danubienne, en Illyricum et ponctuellement en His- Les caracteristiques des structures agraires trouvees panie et dans le Nord de 1'Afrique. Dans ces regions, sur le site nous revelent une exploitation avec des il est date entre les annees 380-420 (fin IVeme-debut elements de culture romaine. Dans ce modele d'ex- Veme). Dans notre cas, il est bien evidemment plus ploitation, !'elaboration du vin se fait a l'endroit tardif (Rovira 1997). Sa presence confirme le carac- meme ou il est cultive, et loin du lieu de residence; il tere militaire de 1' occupation de ce moment. existe un mode le oppose dans lequel le lieu d' ela- boration du vin est aussi celui de la residence, a Les structures militaires I' ecart de la zone ou est cultivee la vigne. L'etude exhaustive des mortiers des murs du site a permis de distinguer differents groupes. L'un d'entre eux est apparu tres clairement, il s' agit de 1'opus Le castellum d'Enclar (fin du IV erne-Veme siecle) signinum dont nous avons parle plus ha ut. Un second groupe qui se detache nous a permis de mettre en La recherche archeologique sur le haut-plateau du relation deux structures quadrangulaires qui se distin- Roe d'Enclar a permis de decouvrir un ensemble de guent par leur construction. La premiere se trouve pieces metalliques correspondant a un uniforme mili- juste a cote du chemin d' acces principal a 1'Ouest du taire et un armement dont la chronologie se situe du site (T4) et la deuxieme est situee au point le plus au milieu du IVeme siecle au milieu du Veme. A cela Nord du piton, pres d'un second acces (T2) (fig. 3). s' ajoute un ensemble de structures murales dont les Une troisieme structure dont le mortier est different caracteristiques constructives et la disposition sont mais que nous situons dans la meme logique, est significatives. Tout ceci nous porte a considerer que constituee de deux murs en angle; elle est placee au nous avons affaire aux vestiges d'une infrastructure Sud a un point avec une tres bonne visibilite. Cette militaire de 1'Antiquite tardive. Nous pouvons la structure est amortie par la construction de 1, eglise a mettre en relation avec une politique generale desti- la fin du VIIeme siecle (T3). A!'Est, le flanc du rocher nee a convertir la limite provinciale romaine entre est inaccessible de par sa topographie meme. I 'Hispanie et la Gaule en une barriere pour arreter les I1 faut remarquer le soin mis dans la construction eventuels mouvements de peuplades germaniques de ces structures; il est exceptionnel dans 1'ensemble vers le Sud de 1'Empire. Les temoins directs ou indi- du site. Leur disposition sur le plateau (aussi bien leur rects de la volonte de faire des Pyrenees une frontiere relation stratigraphique avec les amenagements pos- sont les claustra des Pyrenees occidentales, mention- terieurs, que leur emplacement aux endroits les plus nes au cours de la lutte de Didymus et de Veranianus vulnerables du relief) et leur morphologie nous ame- contre Cons tan tin Ill (408) (Velazquez 1991 ), et, nent a penser a une fonction de tours de guet. De par dans le Pyrenees orientales les castella de Cauco- leur disposition, il est fort probable qu 'il y eut un mur liberi (Cotlliure, Rosse116), de Vultaria (Oltera, Ros- perimetral qui les ait uni en renforyant leur role sel16 ), les deux qui se trouvent a 1'en droit appele dans militaire. Nous n 'avons pas pu fouiller ce contour de les textes Clausuras (Les Cluses, Vallespir), celui de fayon a confirmer cette hypothese de travail. Malgre Sardonia (Opol, Rosse116) et enfin celui de Lybiae cela, de par la situation strategique du roe her a 1'en- (Liibia, Cerdanya) (Barbero & Vigil 1984). tree de la vallee principale, et etant donne les troubles qui surgissent dans les regions voisines a cette epo- Les bronzes que, il nous semble que le site du Roe d'Enclar a pu Nous avons decouvert un ensemble de bronzes etre choisi comme point militaire. I1 nous semble hispano-romains dates de la fin du IVeme siecle et du qu'il est possible qu'il s'agisse d'un castellum. Veme siecle. Certains d'entre eux sont a vocation Il est difficile de determiner le degre d'importance exclusivement militaire, ce qui renforcerait la fonc- du site dans 1'organisation du territoire etablie par les tion du site a cette epoque. Il s'agit, par exemple, de romains dans cette partie interieure des Pyrenees, 114 Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andorra) 'I Zona Segles V-IX ' ' de Feixes ' ', I ' ' I .. ~ ' ' ' 'I '' ' ' ' ' .......... ' ' ,.' ' ' ' '" ' ~ ' Camr principal # ... .. .. .. ' ' ' ' I ' '.• ' ' ',_. ' '' ' : Zona 1 '. de Feixes \ 1 ' I .' ', '\'\\\) ' \ ,1\\)\ I ' ' :----..\\\ \J(I I r ' ' I ' .\)I \\( Camf · ( ' principal / D t2 '' I ' ' ' ' ' ' '' ' ',f=l t4 ' ' ' ' N -EL) \ ~ I Zona de Feixes I\ :1 I ~\ \\ L___jl___J \\ ~ '- o 10 20m \ ~ '--- ' Fig. 3.- Roe d'Enclar: plan general des vestiges de la troisieme phase (fin du !Veme-!Xeme siecle) (releve: Alex Net). 115 M.A. Ruf, T. Vila, X. Sole, X. Llovera, C. Yaiiez & J.M. Bosch Fig. 4.- Quelques exemples de la vaisselle de table composee de sigiltees estampiltees paleochretiennes (dessin Julio Ariza). etant donne le manque de sites connus pour cette majoritairement au groupe de la Narbonnaise. La periode. En tout cas, nous considerons que le castel- principale caracteristique de cet ensemble est la lum d 'Enclar est plutot lie aux autres claustra batis variete aussi bien pour ce qui est des pates que pour pour preserver 1'Hispanie de la penetration des peu- leur aspect. Le riche eventail d'estampilles et leur ples germains. distribution sur les pieces rappellent les ceramiques languedociennes. Quelques unes seulement sont pro- ches de la production proven9ale. Leur datation se Occupation du site de hauteur (Veme-IXeme situe au Veme siecle. Le second type de vaisselle de siecle) table est moins represente. 11 s 'agit de vaisselle d' ori- gine africaine, la sigillee D, des formes Hayes 61/ Le materiel importe qui accompagne cette occu- Lamboglia 54 datant de la periode 325-400/420. pation constitue un ensemble exceptionnel compose Nous disposons aussi d'une lampe a huile d'imitation de ceramique fine, de bronzes et de verre, pour lequel de type Atlante X/Hayes IIB. Sa chronologie vades nous ne disposons pas d'exemples comparables dans annees 450 a 600 (fig. 5). les zones voisines. Il constitue done une reference Les ceramiques africaines ont surtout servi pour le obligee pour !'etude de 1' Antiquite Tardive dans cette stockage. 11 s'agit d'amphores nordafricaines tardi- partie des Pyrenees. ves, certaines allant jusqu'a la fin du VIeme siecle. Le lot de materiel correspondant aux activites Le numeraire de cette etape est repn!sente par des domestiques du site est compose en grande partie de monnaies dont la date d'emission est a situer entre le vaisselle de table, puis de recipients destines au milieu du Illeme siecle et le milieu du IVeme. Mais magasinage. La vaisselle de table est surtout com- ils ont pu etre utilises au cours du VIeme siecle posee de sigillees estampillees paleochretiennes, (Gomis 1997). aussi bien cuite en atmosphere reductrice qu' oxy- A la vue de !'ensemble de ce materiel: cerami- dante. De par leur typologie, elles se rattachent ques, bronzes, verres, on peut etablir une chronologie 116 Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andorra) de cette etape du site allant de la fin du IVeme siecle au Vleme siecle. Certains elements, comme les amphores entre autres, nous permettent de donner une chronologie pour cette etape jusqu' au Vleme siecle. Ceci est confirme par les datations de 14 C. L'habitat dont temoigne ce materiel est accompagne d'inhumations que nous avons date par le 14 C du Veme au Vli~me siecle. Ainsi nous pensons que la transformation du Roe d'Enclar en castellum et la presence de cette culture materielle sont des indices suffisants pour penser a 1'existence d'un habitat stable a l'interieur du cas- tellum des le debut du Veme siecle. Celui-ci est le fruit de la mise en place meme du castellum et de l'insecurite cree par les deplacements des peuples germaniques vers le Sud. Pendant le Veme et en partie le VIeme siecle, cet habitat vit une certaine vitalite due a son role defensif, mais cet elan Fig. 5.- Quelques bronzes hispano-romains dates de la fin s 'estompe pendant le Vleme siecle lorsque cette du JVeme siecle et du Veme siecle. 3 et 2: boutons partie du territoire devient une zone peripherique au indispensables pour unir les differentes parties en cuir des equipements de monture, 6: passant de ceinture (dessin sein du regne de Tolede. Malgre cette decadence, Julio Ariza). 1'habitat perdura jusqu'au IXeme siecle (fig. 7). Le materiel livre par 1'habitat des Veme-Vleme siecles temoigne des contacts commerciaux de cette transmettent les nouvelles des troubles qui se pro- partie des Pyrenees avec la Narbonnaise. Ces contacts duisent au sud de la Gaule pendant les Veme et Vieme s' effectuent par les voies fluviales qui relient les deux siecles et 1'on peut penser que 1' occupation du site qui versants des Pyrenees a 1'Est. Les voies commerciales se deroule alors est lie ace climat d'insecurite. ~- - _.-_ l I I I I CP- ----. \ L -I - I \ \ ll____j 0 2 Fig. 6.- Roe d'Enclar: plan des vestiges de !'habitat stable cree a l'interieur du castellum (re/eve: Alex Net). 117 M.A. Ruf, T. Vila, X. Soh!, X. Llovera, C. Yar'iez & J.M. Bosch 11 appara!t clairement par les datations au 14 C que Au IVeme siecle, les indices concemant la fabri- I 'habitat se prolonge de fa9on continue. Les datations cation du vin et les objets associes temoignent d'un effectuees sur les tombes et les silos rattachent cette des aspects de tout un systeme de vie qui aurait, du a etape du site la periode qui va du VIIeme au IXeme moins, des traits romains significatifs. Nous ignorons siecle. Cette consolidation se concretise avec la quel etait exactement son fonctionement puisque construction d'une eglise avec son espace funeraire a nous n'avons pas trouve le centre auquel etait lie !'ex- la fin du VIIeme siecle. Autour s'installeront les ploitation viti-vinicole de ce moment. Neanmoins, les structures de stockage et 1'habitat. Comme dans les vestiges mettent en evidence toute une strategie regions voisines du Sud de la France (Demians 1994; d'amenagement des versants et du haut-plateau pour Charmasson 1970; Lebecq 1990, 21; Favory 1994, la culture de la vigne et la fabrication du vin. 2'18; Lugand & Pellecuer 1994, 25 8), dans la partie la A 1•etape suivante, il est fort probable que la plus septentrionale de 1'Italie (Brogiolo 1995) ou situation d 'instabilite qui se produit entre les V erne et dans le Nord-Ouest de 1'Hispanie (Quiroga & Lo- VII erne siecles fut un element decisif dans la creation velle 1993, 33-34), le perchement de !'habitat que d'un castellum et 1'apparition d'un habitat perche sur no us avons decrit pour 1'etape anterieure se poursui t. le site. Cette infrastructure militaire chargee de veil- Le site suit ainsi la tendance generale de cette a ler sur les lieux de passage devait peu peu ete suivie periode. d'un deplacement progressif et partiel de la popula- Le materiel est caracteristique de ce type de sites tion, attiree par le perchement du site. Malgre la pre- perches. Il est lie aux activites domestiques, et est sence dans un premier temps d' elements de culture a constitue de ceramique commune cuisson reduc- romaine, nous considerons que cet habitat perche est trice et d'objets en fer (couteaux). Pendant cette indigene et qu'il maintenait des relations commer- periode les ceramiques importees sont absentes du ciales, tout au moins entre les V erne et VIIeme siecles, a lot. C'est la production locale cuisson reductrice a avec la region narbonnaise grace la proximite de la qui predomine. Cette ceramique modelee et regula- Strata Ceretana (voie secondaire du grand axe cotier, a a risee la toumette est lie !'usage culinaire. La forme la via Domitia). predominante est l'oule, bien qu'il y ait des cruches A la fin du VIII erne siecle, 1' expansion de 1'etat ou des bols. Grace 1'etude analytique des matieres carolingien vers le Sud place la vallee d' Andorre premieres et des recipients nous avons pu etablir deux sous le pouvoir politique d 'une nouvelle aristocratie. a types de productions locales. L 'une est rattacher La donation de la vallee d'Andorre par l'empereur a aux alentours proches du site et la vallee centrale du Charles le Chauve au comte Sunifred, en l'an 843, pays, }'autre provient de la vallee orientale bien a correspond bien cet avenement. Ces changements foumie en argiles. La presence des ceramiques de ce politiques se traduisent par la construction du chateau second groupe produites a plusieurs kilometres du d'Enclar. Ace moment, le comte utilise a sa faveur site nous a permis d 'illustrer les echanges dont cette la tradition de lieu d'habitat et la situation strategique a ceramique commune est l'objet l'interieur du terri- du site, qui devient alors le nouveau centre du toire dans une periode peu connue. pouvoir comtal et feodal. Conclusion Bibliographie Pour 1'instant, le site pyreneen du Roe d'Enclar BARBERO A. & VIGIL M. 1984: Sabre Ios origenes est un des rares exemples des sites qui soient connus sociales de la Reconquista, Ariel, Barcelona. dans cette partie des pyrenees pour cette periode de BROGIOLO G .P. et alii 1995: Citta, castelli, cam- transition (IVeme-Xeme siecles). 11 est en ce moment pagne nei territorio di frontiera (secoli VI- VII), tres difficile de reconstruire 1' evolution de 1'occu- Edizioni all 'Insegna del Giglio, Mantova. pation du sol a partir de ce site seulement. Dans CASAS J., CASTANYER P., NOLLA J.M. & TREMO- l'attente d'autres recherches !'evolution du site du LEDA J. 1995:El man rural d'epoca romana a Roe d 'Enclar nous permet de voir un exemple de Catalunya, l 'exemple del nord-est, Centred 'Inves- continuite dans 1' occupation des lieux perches dans tigacions Arqueologiques de Girona, num. 15, cette partie des Pyrenees. Girona. Les caracteristiques morphologiques et la situa- CHARMANSSON J. 1970: Un oppidum du bas-empire: a tion geographique dominante par rapport la plaine Lombren (Avenejean; Gard), Archeologia, num. de la vallee centrale d' Andorre ont influence les 36, Paris, 54-61. differents usages du site aux differentes periodes: au D.A. 1997: Roe d'Enclar. Transformacions d'un Bas- Empire, 1'epoque prefeodale et feodal e. espai dominant (segles IV-XIX), Govern d' Andorra, 118 Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andona) Andorra la V ell a. NOLLA J.M & RoD A I. 1995: El sector meridional DEMIANS G. 1994: L 'oppidum de Saint-Blaise du V dels Pirineus a l'epoca antiga. Unes reflexions, au VIIs. (Bouches-du-RhOne), Maison des Scien- clans: Cultura i medi. De la Prehistoria a I 'Edat ces de 1'Homme, Paris. Mitjana, Xe Co·loqui Internacional d'Arqueo- FAVORY F. et alii 1994: Lunel-Viel et son territoire, logia de Puigcerda, Puigcerda, 507-515. clans: Les campagnes de la France mediterra- QUIROGA J.L. & LOYELLE M.R. 1993: Poblamiento neenne dans l'Antiquite et le !taut Moyen Age, rural en el noroeste de la Peninsula Iberica (ss. V- Maison des Sciences de 1'Homme, Paris, 1994, XI): Una introducci6n al estudio del poblamiento 163-245. rural entre la Antigtiedad tardia y la Alta Edad FAVORYF. & FICHES J.L. 1994: Les campagnes de la Media en Galicia a traves de un am\.lisis micro- France mediterraneenne dans l 'Antiquite et le regional, Boletin de Arqueologia Medieval 7, haut Moyen Age. Etudes microregionales, Maison Madrid, 21-52. des Sciences de 1'Homme, Paris. Rico C. 1992: Les Pyrenees entre la Gaule et les GOMIS M. 1997: Les monedes, clans: Roe d'Enclar. provinces iberiques a l 'epoque de la domination Transformacions d 'un espai dominant (segles IV- romaine, Tesi Doctoral, Universitat de Tolosa II- XIX), Govern d' Andorra, Andorra la V ell a, 515- Tolouse Le Mirail, inedit. 526. ROVIRA M. C. 1997: Els accessoris dels vestits, clans: LEBECQ S. 1990: Les origines franques (V-IX siecle), Roe d'Enclar. Transformacions d'un espai domi- Editions du Seuil, Paris. nant (segles IV-XIX), Govern d' Andorra, Andorra LUGAND M. & PELLECUER C. 1994: La region de la Vella, 143-150. Meze et la villa des Pres-Bas a Loupian (Herault): VELAZQUEZ I. 1991: Notas sobre la descripci6n de contribution a 1' etude du litoral languedocien, tierras pirenaicas en fuentes literarias de epoca clans: Les campagnes de la France mediterra- tardoantigua y visigoda. (Aspectos literarios fun- neenne dans l 'Antiquite et le haut Moyen Age, damentalmente), clans: Aetas del Congreso Inter- Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris, 1994, nacional Historia de los Pirineos, Universidad 246-278. Nacional de Educaci6n a Distancia, Madrid, 4 77- 488. M" Angels Ruf, Toni Vila, Xavier Sole, Xavier Llovera, Cristina Y Miez & Josep Maria Bosch Servei de Recerca Historica Patrimoni Cultural d' Andorra Carretera de Bixessarri s/n Aixovall Principat d' Andorra 119 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Maruska Federici-Schenardi & Robert Fellner L'habitat rural du haut moyen age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) Introduction fouis et la seule occupation d'une etendue vraiment importante. Situee a une profondeur oscillant en Dans le canton du Jura, au nord-ouest de la Suisse, general entre 40 et 60 cm, elle se developpe le long un service d'archeologie a ete cree en 1985, suite a un du ruisseau "La Pran". Son etat de conservation projet de construction autoroutiere. D 'emblee, un change considerablement d'un endroit a l'autre; par- programme de sondages sur le trace de 1' autoroute A fois presque completement erodee, elle peut s'epais- 16 a ete planifie. Sur un tron9on de 15 km ainsi sir et presenter plusieurs phases sedimentaires. explore entre les villes de Delemont et de Porrentruy, L'activite ininterrompue du ruisseau "La Pran" a plus de quinze sites ont deja ete decouverts et fouilles considerablement influence la conservation des tra- (Schifferdecker 1994). Ce chiffre n'est pas definitif ces d'occupation. D'une part, la formation des mean- puisque la prospection de la demiere moitie du trace dres posterieurs a 1'occupation en a detruit de grandes autoroutier vient seulement de commencer. parties mais, d'autre part, l'enfouissement rapide des L'habitat rural merovingien de Develier-Courte- vestiges situes clans des bras morts du ruisseau a telle a ete decouvert lors de sondages realises entre permis la conservation de matieres organiques telles 1987 et 1993. L'etendue considerable de ce site que bois ou macrorestes vegetaux non carbonises. (environ 1 km de long et 3,5 ha de surface) a impli- que la creation de deux equipes actives pendant quatre campagnes de fouille de neuf mois chacune L'organisation spatiale de !'habitat (1993-1996). L'etude vient d'etre lancee et devrait se terminer par une serie de monographies a paraitre des Plusieurs ensembles de structures s 'echelonnent l'an 2000. le long du cours d'eau. 11 s'agit soit de fermes, soit de zones a vocation specifique (Peytremann 1995) vou- ees notamment a l'artisanat et au stockage. Situation topographique et geologique Ace stade de la recherche deja, d' evidentes diffe- rences ont ete relevees entre les moities orientale et Le site de Develier-Courtetelle est situe a 450 occidentale du gisement, situe de part et d' autre du metres d'altitude, clans une plaine alluviale large ruisseau "La Pran". d'environ 250 metres, occupant le fond d'un vallon Dans la partie ouest du site, un systeme de fosses lateral de la vallee de Delemont. Dans cette plaine orthogonaux semble delimiter les differentes zones coule le ruisseau "La Pran" domine, au sud, par le d'activite, en separant par exemple un quartier d'ha- "Bois-de Chaux", colline formee de molasse de l'Oli- bitat d 'une aire artisanale. Plus a 1' est, des espaces gocene. depourvus d'amenagement et de mobilier s'inter- Dans ce bassin sedimentaire, 1'epaisseur des depots calent entre les differentes concentrations de struc- quatemaires recouvrant la molasse varie de 3 a 4 tures. metres. 11 s'agit essentiellement de formations fluvia- De maniere provisoire, on peut distinguer six tiles (graviers, sables, limons) entre lesquelles vien- fermes, quatre zones liees a 1'industrie du fer, deux nent s 'intercaler des sols enfouis. Deux occupations secteurs de stockage et deux types d, amenagement anterieures a celle du Haut Moyen Age ont ete ren- plus specifiquement rattaches au ruisseau. Des enclos contrees; l'une de l'Age du Fer, l'autre de l'epoque reserves au betail semblent egalement etre presents a gallo-romaine. Ces deux niveaux, presents ponctuel- plusieurs endroits de }'agglomeration rurale. lement seulement, ne renfermaient que peu de mobi- Deux tombes isolees, probablement merovin- lier et de rares structures. La couche archeologique giennes, ont ete mises aujour a proximite immediate du Haut Moyen Age est le plus recent des sols en- de }'habitat, mais la necropole qui devait etre as- 121 M. Federici-Schenardi & R. Fellner N .( 0 5 10 km .. -· I .,, ~ ·~ . . .• I :1\ .. ::·:~:·.::.· ·::::::---~ .....\, -· .. • • ·-~--~ .....,....~~., 'l.:·~:c;-:.;;-;;;=~~···~~..;:-:·:::;::::;::.;;;; ·:..... • f\ ...,.... ..1,. - . ·~. "~i;i"''.:/ . . " .I ~- . ..--11 - l! ._J:E-- e1- . Deveher ;:.::::::::::- 111!1111 I I Delernont '"' ~_,_-- ~ 453 --·· j'J'f ·~1 a u. .- ·__.o-- u fl/ / I I -/,:-:""'"-' I .··· we ---- l a .... ·· WKmm Extension de la fouille 1993-96 Fig. 1. - Situation geographique et extension du site de Develier-Courtetelle. 122 L'habitat rural du haut moyen age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) Fig. 2.- Exemples de plans de ferme dans la partie orientate (1) et occidentale (2) du site. + 0 D 0 • 1 · Trou de poteau • Trou de poteau potentiel 0 Fosse 122> Foyer \ '-\ Empierrcment ~ Foss6 tmiTiil Maison t:ZZl Cabane en Fosse H Biltiment annexe .. 2 0 tOm sociee a cette occupation n 'a pas ete decouverte. I! Les fermes faut neanmoins signaler la presence d'un cimetiere a merovingien quelques centaines de metres, decou- Les differentes fermes de 1'habitat rural de Deve- vert au 19e siecle (Gerster 1976). lier-Courtetelle presentent chacune une maison d 'ha- L'etude n'est pas encore suffisamment avancee bitation entouree de plusieurs batiments annexes tels pour que !'organisation interne du village et l'inter- que cabanes en fosse ou petites constructions a 4 ou activite des differentes parties de ce dernier puissent 6 poteaux generalement (fig. 2). Cette association, etre presentees ici. Nous nous limiterons done une a typique du Haut Moyen Age, est particulierement breve description des premiers acquis. lisible dans la partie orientale du site, ou chaque 123 M. Federici-Schenardi & R. Fellner Fig. 3.- Exemples de plans de maison + d 'habitation dans la partie occidentale (1, 2) et orientate (3, 4) du site . • !Ill ® ~ ~==---= ) • ' • • Trou de piquet Ill 2 CP • a Trou de poteau C• Trou de poteau potentiel 0 Fosse ez> Foyer ® == Fosse ~ (j) ~ (t)~ @ @ • ,::; • @ t/1 • \:') ~ '~ • ~ ;::, ~ 11/iiP • • ~~~ !3 ' (j (j) @ ~ •• .:-<i) • 3 @ 4 0 5m ferme presente une seule phase de construction. Plus rant environ 6,5 x 8 m (fig. 3.3, 4); clans un troisieme a 1'ouest, la presence de constructions superposees cas, on a affaire a un batiment sur solin de pierre en- brouille la vision de 1' organisation. toure d'un portique sur deux cotes. Le corps central mesure 7 x 9 m; le portique atteint 2 m de large. Dans Les maisons d 'habitation ces trois exemples, les proportions de la partie habitee Les maisons d 'habitation presentent differents modes sont tres semblables (env. 1,2/1 ). De plus, chaque mai- de construction. Dans la partie orientale du site, elles son contient un foyer situe aproximite de la paroi sud. possedent toutes un plan a une seule nef. Dans deux Dans la partie occidentale du site, les maisons a cas, il s'agit de constructions poteaux en bois mesu- d'habitation semblent toutes presenter un plan adeux 124 L 'habitat rural du ha ut moyen age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) nefs. Une construction, asablit':re basse, est materia- Le travail du fer lisee par deux fosses paralleles (fig. 3.1) et mesure La vallee de Delemont est riche en minerai de fer, et environ 7,5 x 3,5 m. Elle comporte un foyer central. des bas fourneaux datant du Ha ut Moyen Age ont ete Deux auh·es maisons, apoteaux en bois, font respec- fouilles dans cette region (Eschenlohr & Semeels tivement 6,5 x 4,5 m (fig. 3.2) et 9 x 5 m. L'archi- 1991 ). Ce type de construction qui temoignerait de la tecture des maisons de la partie occidentale est plus premiere phase de la cha'ine operatoire du travail du leg ere que celle de 1'est: le diametre des poteaux est fer, la reduction du minerai, n'est pas atteste dans plus petit et l'espacement entre ceux-ci est plus grand. !'habitat de Develier-Courtetelle. Par contre, les sco- L 'erosion du niveau de circulation pourrait etre a ries produites lors du raffinage et du forgeage de ce I' origine de 1' absence de foyer dans les deux bati- metal sont tres abondantes et se concentrent a proxi- ments apoteaux. mite de petites fosses marquees par des traces de combustion. Les ea banes en fosse On distingue deux categories de structures liees a Quinze structures de ce type ont ete decouvertes sur ce travail, a savoir les bas foyers de raffinage et les le site. Ces fosses de forme plus ou moins rectan- bas foyers de forge. Les premiers se definissent par gulaire presentent des dimensions comprises entre la presence de scories en forme de calotte et les 2,5 x 2 m et 3,5 x 3 m, soit une surface variant entre 5 seconds par celle de battitures (petits eclats de fer et 10m2. La profondeur conservee de ces structures produits lors du martelage). oscille entre 10 et 50 cm. Dans la partie occidentale du site, un quartier A une exception pres, ces cabanes en fosse con- destine au travail du fer et delimite par un systeme de tiennent, a 1' interieur de 1' excavation, une serie de fosses a ete observe en bordure d'une zone d'habitat. trous de poteau. Le type a quatre poteaux d'angle, Cet ensemble se caracterise par deux bas foyers de parfois doubles, semble etre la solution la plus raffinage et un bas foyer de forge associes ades trous couramment choisie. Le modele a deux poteaux fait de poteau epars. defaut. Dans deux cas, un avant-toit materialise par A 1'est ont ete relevees trois zones de travail, dont deux trous de poteau a ete pers;u. une est constituee d'un bas foyer de raffinage et d'une La fonction primaire de ces structures n'a pas pu aire de forge associes aune concentration tres impor- etre clairement definie. Leur remploi en tant que tante de scories d 'un poids approchant deux tonnes. zones de rejet ou de combustion a par contre ete La metallurgie du fer a joue un role preponderant observe aplusieurs reprises. clans l'economie du village; celle du bronze, bien Les deux tiers de ces constructions se concentrent plus limitee, est attestee par la decouverte de quel- dans la partie occidentale du village. Ce nombre eleve ques petits creusets portant des traces de ce metal. trouve peut etre une explication clans la presence de plusieurs phases de construction clans cette aire du site. Le stockage La presence de petites constructions aproximite des Les bdtiments annexes maisons indique qu 'une partie des produits agri- Depourvus de foyer, les batiments annexes sontresti- coles a ete stockee a 1'interieur des fermes. Nean- tues d'apres les alignements des trous de poteau sauf moins la mise au jour de plusieurs ensembles de dans un cas ou il s'agit d'une construction a sabliere constructions en dehors des zones d'habitat suggere basse. La plupart sont des structures carrees aquatre 1, existence de quartiers reserves au stockage et au poteaux d'angle mesurant entre 2 et 3 m de cote. parcage du betail. D'autres structures, rectangulaires et de dimension Un ensemble de ce type se dessine notamment superieure, sont constituees de 6 a 12 poteaux. clans la partie centrale du site. Une cabane en fosse et Les differentes fonctions de ces batiments seront une petite construction quadrangulaire sont associees definies a un stade ulterieur de la recherche. ades alignements de trous de poteau definissant pro- bablement des enclos. A proximite immediate, un empierrement traversant !'ancien lit du ruisseau a ete Les zones a vocation specifique interprete comme gue. A proximite plus ou mains immediate des fermes Les amenagements du ruisseau se trouvent des ensembles de structures associees a Dans les anciens meandres du ruisseau, au-dessous une serie d'activites diverses. On peut notamment du niveau de battement de la nappe phreatique, on a distinguer des quartiers lies a1' industrie du fer et des mis au jour plusieurs concentrations de bois datant de zones apparemment destinees au stockage des !'occupation. Il s'agit de deux sortes d'amenagement recoltes ou au parcage du betail. qui semblent egalement avoir ete destinees a des 125 M. Federici-Schenardi & R. Fellner Fig. 4. - Ceramique apate rugueuse ~ (1, 2, 3), sableuse (4) et fine (5). I I I I 2 ' - - - - - - - t . · .. 0 2cm 4 5 vocations specifiques qui pour le moment demeurent D'autre part nous avons affaire, plus a l'ouest, a enigmatiques. des amenagements ponctuels de la berge, par endroits I1 s' agit d 'une part de trois bass ins surcreuses arti- a assainie !'aide d'empierrements et stabilisee par des ficiellement clans un ancien lit du ruisseau et proteges rangees de piquets relies entre eux par un tressage. Ce du ruisseau contemporain par une digue en gravier. type de construction se rencontre encore actuelle- Ils sont relies entre eux et au ruisseau par un canal ment clans les ruisseaux de la region et fonctionne d' adduction. effectivement comme protection de la berge contre !'erosion. 126 L'habitat rural du haut moyen age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) Fig. 5. - Ceramique tounu?e ancienne (1, 2, 3) et d montage mixte () I 1 Tg I . - (4, 5). 2 3 rf' I I 4 Le mobilier La poterie La poterie, en general tres fragmentee, est sub- Parmi le mobilier archeologique mis au jour lors divisable en cinq classes d'apres la pate: de la fouille de Develier-Courtetelle, les categories a - la ceramique fine, cuisson majoritairement reduc- suivantes peuvent etre distinguees: poterie, terres trice, est composee de gobelets, vases biconiques et cuites, objets en metal, scories de fer, verre, industrie rares pichets (fig. 4.5); lithique, bois et ossements animaux parfois travailles. - la ceramique rugueuse, a cuisson souvent oxy- Cet inventaire, representatif d'un habitat du Haut dante, est constituee de pots a cuire ovoldes et de Moyen Age, est expose succinctement ci-dessous. quelques formes ouvertes (fig. 4.1, 2, 3 ); 127 M. Federici-Schenardi & R. Fellner - la ceramique sableuse, a cuisson generalement fibule conique amedaillons ocules date de la periode reductrice, est uniquement composee de pots a cuire gallo-romaine. (fig. 4.4); En outre, une figure anthropomorphe en t6le de - la ceramique a montage mixte, a cuisson oxydo- fer interpretee provisoirement comme ex-voto (fig. reductrice, est egalement uniquement composee de 6.4) a ete trouvee en bordure de I'habitat. Il n'est pas pots acuire (fig. 5.4, 5); exclu que cet objet soit plus tardif. - la ceramique toumee ancienne, a pate jaune, pro- I! reste asignaler plusieurs fragments de clochet- venant vraisemblablement de 1' Alsace, a cuisson tes en t6le de fer recouvertes de cuivre ou de bronze oxydante elevee, est representee par des pots acuire et differents types de clous et fragments de tiges en aprofil globuleux et epaulement marque (fig. 5.1' 2, grande quantite. 3). Parmi le mobilier datable, les pieces attribuables D'apres la typologie, le mobilier ceramique se au 7e siecle predominent. situe entre le 6e et le 9e siecle. L'etude preliminaire La majorite des objets metalliques sont actuelle- de la repartition spatiale de la ceramique a permis de ment en cours de restauration et n'ont pas encore ete reconna1tre plusieurs ensembles co'incidant souvent etudies. avec une ferme. Ceci devrait permettre de compren- dre !'evolution chrono-typologique de ce mobilier. Les scories de fer Entre trois et quatre tonnes de scories de fer ont ete Les terres cuites retrouvees. Les scories en forme de calotte, souvent Les tuiles constituent la categorie dominante. Il s' agit fragrnentees, sont les plus nombreuses. De plus petite d' elements de recuperation et de reutilisation prove- taille, les scories coulees proviennent vraisembla- nant probablement d 'un etablissement gallo-romain blement des operations de raffinage et forgeage et non situe a proximite du site. Les briques recyclees sont pas de la reduction du minerai. Les battitures, eclats plus rares. minuscules de fer produits lors de martelage, sont Les elements de clayonnage sont peu nombreux. particulierement frequentes pres des aires de forge. Une seule concentration importante a ete mise aujour pres d 'une structure de combustion. Ceci incite a Le verre penser que l'argile n'intervenait pas souvent dans la Les recipients en verre et les objets de parure en pate construction. de verre forment les deux categories reconnues. Les L'inventaire des terres cuites comprend, outre ces premiers sont tres fragrnentes; les tessons de coupes elements architecturaux, quelques fusa'ioles. hemispheriques ou coniques predominent. Quelques rares fragments aparois plus epaisses proviennent de Les objets en metal bouteilles carrees romaines. Les artefacts en fer sont de loin les plus nombreux. Parmi les objets de parure, on compte deux frag- Les objets en bronze sont relativement bien repre- ments de bracelet et plusieurs dizaines de perles de sentes, tandis que 1'argent, a deux exceptions pres, forme, de couleur et de qualite de fabrication variees. n' a ete utilise que pour la technique de damasquinage Le type de perle le plus courant est de couleur jaune rencontree sur des elements de ceinture. opaque, en pate de verre fritte. Generalement globu- L'outillage, en fer, se compose de lames de cou- laire, ces petites perles peuvent aussi etre composees teaux et d'objets lies au travail du bois ou du metal de plusieurs segments. comme des ciseaux, des meches a cuillere et une petite enclume. Des eperons et des pointes de fleche en fer (fig. Les objets lithiques 6.3, 5), ainsi que des boutons decoratifs de fourreaux La vaisselle et les outils ont aussi ete fabriques a de scramasaxe en bronze sont des elements de partir de la pierre. Ainsi, de nombreux fragments de 1'equipement militaire. marmites fac;:onnees dans de la pierre ollaire temoi- Parmi le mobilier vestimentaire, les elements de gnent de l'interet que l'on portait a cette matiere gamiture de ceinture et de courroie predominent. refractaire ideale pour la cuisson des aliments. Fabriques en fer, parfois damasquine (fig. 6.2), en Quelques aiguisoirs et polissoirs en gres molassi- bronze et rarement en argent, ces objets rappellent le que ont probablement un lien avec la fabrication des mobilier retrouve dans les necropoles. Les quelques objets en fer. fibules en bronze appartiennent al'habillement femi- La presence limitee d'eclats de silex s'explique nin. On releve en particulier la presence d'une fibule par une utilisation exclusive de ces pieces comme en forme de cheval (fig. 6.6) et de deux fibules ansees, briquet. I! s 'agi t en partie d' artefacts prehistoriques dont une incrustee de verre rouge (fig. 6.1). Une reutil ises. 128 L 'habitat rural du ha ut moyen age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) Fig. 6. - Objets metalli- ques: 1 jibule en bronze, 2 elbnents de garniture de ceinture en fer et argent, 3 pointe de flee he en fer, 4 figure anthropomorphe en fer, 5 eperon en fer, 6 jibule en bronze, 7 boucle d 'oreille en bronze. Echelle 1:1, sauf(4) et (5). I' 4 o 2cm =- 0 o 2cm =-5 6 Des fragments de meules en gres ou conglomerat Conclusions completent cet inventaire. Le ruisseau "La Pran" semble jouer un role d'e!e- L 'ambre ment ordonnateur clans I' organisation spatia le du L' ambre, importe de la Baltique, est aus si atteste: huit village de Develier-Courtetel!e, qui peut ainsi etre perles de forme allongee ont ete decouvertes sur le site. qualifie d'habitat lineaire, selon le vocabulaire adop- L 'origine exogene de cette matiere ain si que celle te par H. Hamerow (1995). de la pierre ollaire, provenant des gisements alpins, Les questions d'ordre chronologique, economique a indique !'existence d'un commerce longue distance. et social constitueront le sujet central de I' etude 129 M. Federici-Schenardi & R. Fellner pluridisciplinaire qui a recemment debute. Elles Bibliographie interviendront a deux niveaux, c 'est-a-dire aus si bien au sein des differentes unites composant le village ESCHENLOHR L. & SERNEELS V. 1991: Les bas four- que clans un cadre plus large. neaux merovingiens de B01icourt, Les Boulies Pour ce qui est de la datation, quelques jalons ont (JU, Suisse), Cahiers d' ArcMologie Jurassienne deja ete poses: d'une part par la typologie, d'autre 3, Porrentruy, Office du Patrimoine Historique et part par une serie de datations C14. Si !'occupation Societe jurassienne d'emulation, 143 p. semble avoir dure du 6e siecle au 8e, voire au 9e GERSTER A. 1976: Romische und merowingische siecle, elle semble atteindre son apogee au courant du Funde in Develier, Helvetia archaeologica 7, 30- 7e siecle. 38. Sur le plan economique, il appara1t clairement HAMEROW H. 1995: Shaping settlements: early qu' on a affaire avant tout a un village de forgerons. medieval communities in Northwest Europe. In: I1 s'agira neanmoins encore d'estimer le degre BINTLIFF J. & HAMEROW H. (dir.), Europe bet- d' importance de cette activite metallurgique ain si ween Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, BAR que celui des autres domaines de la production. International Series 617, Oxford, 8-37. PEYTREMANN E. 1995: Les structures d'habitat rural L 'extension de la surface exploree, ainsi que la du Haut Moyen Age en France (Ve-Xes.). Un etat qualite des vestiges, rendent le site de Develier- de la recherche. In: Lorren Cl. & Perin P. (dir.), Courtetelle exceptionnel a 1'echelle suisse, ce qui L 'habitat rural du Haul Moyen Age (France, justifie une etude approfondie. Pays-Bas, Danemark et Grande-Bretagne). Actes des X!Ve Journees internationales d 'Archeologie Le present document a ete redige sur la base des merovingienne, Guiry-en- Vex in et Paris, 4-8 donnees contenues clans les rapports de fouille fevrier 199 3, Memoires de 1'AF AM VI, Conde- annuels disponibles a 1'Office du patrimoine histo- sur-Noireau, 1-28. rique, Porrentruy. Depuis 1993, 8 rapports, so it SCHIFFERDECKER Fr. 1994: Sous la Transjurane. environ 800 pages au total, ont deja ete consacres a Prospection et sondages entre Porrentruy et 1' etude de cet habitat. Delemont, Archeologie Suisse 17, 31-35. Maruska Federici-Schenardi & Robert Fellner Office du patrimoine historique Section d'archeologie Hotel des Halles 2900 Porrentruy (JU) Suisse 130 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference - Volume 6 Armelle Querrien L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle Le village de Moulins-sur-Cephons, clans le forage du puits autour de 1050. Plusieurs niveaux departement de 1'Indre, est un ancien bourg castral, qui d'occupation et de remaniement ont ete mis en evi- s, est developpe a 1, interieur des basses-cours du dence au sommet, le plus ancien ayant ete conserve chateau a motte edifie au bord de la Cephons au milieu grace a une surelevation de la plate-forme par une du XIe siecle. La motte fut construite au moment ou couche de remblais d' 1 m d'epaisseur. La plate-forme les guerres opposant les comtes de Blois aux comtes de la motte, occupee des la deuxieme moitie du Xle d' Anjou se deroulaient sur les confins de la Touraine, siecle, l'etait encore durant la guerre de Cent Ans, les du Berry et du Blesois; elle etait situee a la frontiere couches de destruction de la motte renfermant du entre les terres relevant de Deols et celles relevant du materiel du XVe siecle et des monnaies emises entre comte d' Anjou. Son abandon coincide avec la fin de la 1419 et 1431. C'est egalement a cette periode que les guerre de Cent Ans. La fouille de la motte a ete Grands Fosses qui delimitaient la zone fortifiee accompagnee de nombreuses recherches sur le pay- annexee a la motte ont ete combles. Tout le mobilier 1 sage et !'exploitation du territoire relevant de la motte, et le materiel osseux mis au jour, et les nombreux mettant en jeu differentes sources et techniques. prelevements effectues clans les structures et clans les stratigraphies ont ete etudies avec la participation de divers specialistes, etudiant les vestiges du monde 1 Les sources vegetal tels que les pollens, graines, fruits et fragments de bois. Une reconstitution du paysage des environs de a. Les sources archeologiques !'atelier de potier et de la motte a ete entreprise grace aux differents resultats obtenus. La motte etait de dimensions imposantes puisque, jusqu' au XIXe siecle, elle avait 45 a 50 m de diametre a la base, 22 m au sommet, et une hauteur de plus de 7 m. Elle n'a conserve que la moitie de son volume, 1'autre moitie ayant alors servi de carriere de terre. Malgre les lacunes dues a son exploitation, le site s'est revele d'une grande complexite. Un atelier de potier du debut du XIe siecle, date par archeomagnetisme et par sa production, a ete decouvert, enfoui sous la motte. Un puits, fore depuis la plate-forme de la motte peu apres son edification, s'enfonyaitjusqu'a 7 m sous le niveau du sol en place au Xle siecle; a sa base se trouvait un cadre en bois de plan carre, le "rouet", forme de quatre poutres de chenes encastrees, destine a assurer la stabilite de la construction mayonnee edifiee au dessus. Une datation par dendrochronologie et une autre par carbone 14 ont permis d'etablir le -- - - limitc du dcpartcmcnt de l'lndre Sous la direction d' A. QUERRIEN, Un village nuidieval en Bas Berry, Moulins-sur-Cephons, Catalogue d 'exposition, ARHAMIS, Moulins-sur-Cephons, 1988, 84 p. Situation de Moulins sur Cephons (Indre, France). 131 A. Querrien b. Les sources documentaires egalement parvenus. L'ensemble de ces documents sont autant de jalons necessaires a la mise en oeuvre Les plus anciens documents ecrits concemant la de la methode regressive a laquelle les analyses de seigneurie de Moulins sont posterieurs a 1200. Les parcellaire et les tentatives de reconstitution du premieres mentions de la castellania, du castrum et paysage ont recours pour remonter le temps a partir de I'aula de Moulins ont au moins 150 ans de retard de documents comme les photographies aeriennes de sur les donnees archeologiques. Pourtant la motte I' IGN, les cartes au 1/25000, et les cadastres du XIXe etait le centre d'une seigneurie qui avait rang de siecle. Ils permettent de suivre de nombreux evene- chatellenie et dont le dominus exerc;:ait le droit de ments, dont les changements de toponymes, les par- haute, moyenne et basse justice. Un document ante- tages de parcelles, certains defrichements et retours a rieur montre qu'il y avait la en 966 un grand domaine la friche, des modifications du reseau routier. La con- lai'c, dont un manse fut donne a l'abbaye Saint- servation du cadastre de 1812 et de ses etats de sec- Sulpice de Bourges: "cedo ... mansum meum indomi- tion, et sa confrontation avec I'aveu de 1500 ont per- nicatum qui est in pago Biturigo in vicaria Bulbiensi mis de retrouver la situation et les surfaces des terres in villa Mollinis super jluvium Naonis hoc est una du domaine seigneurial a la fin du XVe siecle, de cum casualis et suprapositis urtiferis et cultiferis, retracer la limite de la chil.tellenie et de reconstituer terris, camp is, pratis, mancipiis et omnibus que aspi- en grande partie le terroir de Moulins au XVe siecle, ciunt ad ipsum 2... ". Ce manse devait se trouver au avec ses hameaux, ecarts, moulins, chemins, ponts, nord de Moulins, a Balzeme, ancienne paroisse sous gues, etangs, bois, pres, terres cultivees, vignes. La le vocable de Saint Sulpice. Le centre de la villa a ete repartition des terres cultivees, pres, vignes, tail lis et identifie a Moulins-sur-Cephons, qui est le seul lieu forets, telle qu'on la perc;:oit clans l'aveu de 1500, ne dont le toponyme correspond clans tout le bassin du connalt que des modifications de detail par rapport au Nahon, la Cephons etant un affluent du Nahon, et qui cadastre de 1812. Les indications recueillies clans les est a 9 km a vol d'oiseau de Bouges, centre de la textes du XIIIe siecle, bien que fragmentaires, mon- vicaria Bulbiensis. La villa etait sans doute situee sur trent une permanence de I' organisation du terroir de la rive droite de la Cephons, la ou une enceinte de la Moulins entre 1200 et 1500. La comparaison entre fin du troisieme millenaire avant notre ere, encore les analyses des pollens actuels et celles etablies pour occupee a I' Age du Fer et aI' epoque gallo-romaine a ce site occupe du XIe au XVe siecle fait remonter ete partiellement fouillee. L 'atelier pourrait en avoir cette organisation au moins au XIe siecle. C'est a ete une dependance, etablie sur la rive gauche, de cette periode de mise en place de la chil.tellenie !'autre cote d'un ancien gue. qu 'une reorganisation du parcellaire autour du chef- A partir du XIIIe siecle les sources se multiplient, lieu de la chil.tellenie suivant un schema radiocon- notamment grace au cartulaire de Levroux et aux centrique a ete attribuee lors d'un etude recente 5 . Ce archives de I 'abbaye cistercienne du Landais et du schema a succede a une organisation orthogonale prieure fontevriste de Jarzay, situes au maximum a 5 heritee de I' Anti quite et conservee durant le ha ut km de la motte, le demier etant clans la seigneurie de Moyen Age. Une etude des structures d 'habitat et Moulins. Un aveu et denombrement de 15003 , redige d'occupation du sol a demontre la remarquable stabi- pour assurer les droits des seigneurs de Moulins clans lite de cet heritage du Moyen Age. C'est seulement la periode de reconstruction du regime seigneurial au milieu du XIXe siecle que !'evolution du reseau qui a suivi la guerre de Cent Ans et les troubles de la routier et le debut de l'exode rural commencent a fin du XVe siecle, donne une description tres precise modifier l'apparence du terroir villageois d'ou plu- de la terre de Moulins a la fin du Moyen Age. Deux sieurs ecarts disparaissent. Les etangs sont asseches autres aveux et denombrement du XVIIe et d'un Etat a la fin du XIXe et les moulins abandonnes au debut de la terre de Moulins du XVIIIe siecle 4 nous sont du XXe. L. BUHOT DE KERSERS, Essai de reconstitution du cartulaire Archives dep::rtementales de l'lndre, H 839, copie du A de l'abbaye Saint-Sulpice de Bourges, Memoires de la Societe XVIIe sii:cle de I' aveu de 1623. Archives privees du chateau de des Antiquaires du Centre XXV, 1912, I 05 et I 06, charte de 966. Saint-Aignan (Loire et Cher), aveu de 1646. Archives natio- 3 Aveu d' lmbert de Batamay, mars 1499 avant Paques, ancien nales, minutier central, L XXXIX, 388, Etat de la terre de style, c'est-a-dire 1500, Archives departementales de l'lndre, H Moulins en Berry, 1728. 839, copie sur papier du XVIIe sii:cle. Toutes les indications de f" 5 A. QUERRIEN, Parcellaires antiques et medievaux du Berry, sans precision d'origine renvoient ace document. Journal des Savants, 1994, fasc. 2, 235-366, 4 depliants hors texte, 40 cartes et figures. 132 L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du XIe au XVe siecle Le bourg castral de Moulins d 'apres les sources archeo- logiques, historiques et le cadastre de 1812. 1 matte; 2 grands fosses; 3 eglise; 4 chatelet d 'entree du cas- trum; 5 maison seigneuriale intra muros; 6 Maison des Salles; 7 moulin du Pont. 2 Le paysage sud-est, les etudes faites sur le village de la Tene aboutissent a !'image d'un paysage deja decouvert. a. Lajlore Les arbres autochtones sont surtout representes par des pins, des aulnes, des noisetiers et des chenes L'etude palynologique 6, par !'analyse des pollens pedoncules. D'autres arbres ont ete introduits et culti- et des spores de fougeres apportes par le vent et depo- ves comme le tilleul, les noyers et les chiHaigniers, ses dans les sediments du site, a permis de restituer pour la consommation des fruits, le marronnier (ni- le paysage vegetal des environs du site, depuis l'eta- veau du debut du Xle siecle ). La vegetation herbacee blissement de !'atelier de potier jusqu'a nos jours. dominante est celle des prairies de fauche et des Les faibles taux de pollens d'arbres ont montre que, patures (graminees et cichoriees du type du pissenlit) des !'an mil, le paysage etait decouvert et voue aux dont les frequences varient probablement se Ion 1'im- prairies et aux cultures. Differentes etudes archeo- portance des coupes ou de la frequentation du betail. logiques ont par ailleurs mis en evidence 1'anciennete Les cultures cerealieres sont attestees par les pollens de !'occupation de cette region; de nombreux vesti- de cereales, associes a ceux des "plantes messicoles- ges prehistoriques, protohistoriques et gallo-romains compagnes" que !'on trouve communement au milieu ont ete trouves en prospection sur le territoire de la des champs de ble, de seigle, ou d'orge. Ce sont, par commune, et deux importants etablissements du chal- exemple, les marguerites (anthemidees), les coqueli- colithique mis au jour. Mais seules les structures et le cots (papaveracees ), les centaurees, les plantains et mobilier ont ete publies. Une tentative d'etude paly- des cruciferes. Certaines especes attestees par d'autres nologique dans !'enceinte du chalcolithique s'est sol- sources n 'apparaissent pas; certaines pollinisent peu, dee par un echec, les prelevements etant steriles. d'autres sont coupees pour leur consommation avant Aucun element de comparaison avec les epoques leur floraison. Mais surtout, pour la plupart des her- anterieures au Moyen Age n'est done possible actuel- bacees, I'analyse se limite le plus souvent a deter- lement, alors que les defrichements ont dO. etre miner la famille; elle peut rarement identifier I' es- importants des le neolithique. A Levroux, 5 km au pece. Ainsi en est-il pour !'ensemble des cereales qui ne peuvent que rarement etre distinguees les unes des autres; toutefois un certain nombre de pollens de seigle ont pu etre isoles de !'ensemble des pollens de L'etude palynologique a ete faite par Bui Thi Ma'i, CRA- CNRS, Valbonne; elle sera developpee, ainsi que les autres cereales des niveaux de 1' atelier de potier du debut du etudes presentees ici dans la publication finale de la fouille dont Xle siecle, grace a un etat de conservation remar- la redaction est en cours. quable. 133 A. Querrien LAFLORE carpo- palyno- xylo- t ex- carpo- palyno- xylo- tex- logie logie logie tes logie logie logie tes ESPECES LlGNEUSES PLANTES CULTIVIlES aubepine - - - X seigle X X - X aulne - X X X froment X - - X bouleau - X - - epeautre X - - - buis - X - - orge vetue X X - X charme - X - - millet X - - - chataignier - X X X avoine X - - X chene - X X X cereales ind. X X - X cormier - - - X pois X - - X epic ea - X - - feverole X - - X epine vinette - X X - fenouil X - - - frene - X - - vigne cultivee X - - X genevrier - X - - chanvre X X - X griottier X - - - !in - - - X hetre - X X - PLANTES SAUV AGES lierre - X - - marronnier - X - - alliaire officinale X - - - ne flier - - - X bryone dioique X - - - nerprun - X - - capselle X - - - noisetier X X X - cirse ou chardon X - - - noyer X X - X cruciferes ind. X - - - orme - X - X fetuque des pres X - - - pecher X - - - fleole des pres X - - - fougeres - X - - peuplier - - X - fraisier X - - - pin - X - - gesse sans feuille X - - - platane - X - - graminees ind. X X - - pommier ou poirier X - - - grande marguerite X - - - prunellier X - - - la!che distique X - - - prunier creque X - - - prunier cultive X - - - lampsane commune X - - - sap in - X - - legurnineuses ind. X - - - saule - X X - lentille d' eau X - - - sureau hieble X X - - myagre perfolie X - - - sureau noir X X - - nielle des bles X - - - tilleul - X - - onoporde acanthe X - - - ortie royale X X - - oseille/patience X - - - paturin commun X - - - renoncule scelerate X - - - renouee des oiseaux X - - - renouee liseron X - - - ronce X - - - in d. = in determine( e) setaire verte/verticillee X - - - N.B.: !'attribution au XVe siecle du pepin de fraisier silene X - - - et de la semence de fenouil mineralises trouves dans vesce ind. X - - - le Grand Fosse n 'est pas certain e. vulpie ind. X - - - La xylologie 7 et la carpologie 8 ont montre quelles immediats. Ils appartiennent a quatre essences dont especes poussaient sur place ou etaient apportees par la plus representee est le chene (358 fragments); 1'homme volontairement ou involontairement. De nombreux fragments de branchages, ne presentant L'etude xylologique et anthracologique a ete faite par Anne aucune trace de travail, ont ete trouves dans la zone Dietrich. immergee du puits; ils y ont ete jetes depuis la plate- L'etude carpologique a ete faite par Marie-Pierre Ruas, forme de la motte et proviennent de ses environs CNRS, Toulouse. 134 L' exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d 'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle viennent ensuite le noisetier (29), l'aulne (3) et le tandis que les graines, les bois et les charbons don- saule (2). Une vingtaine d'especes cultivees ou con- nent une vision des plantes utilisees par I'homme et sommees par I 'homme ont ete recensees grace a des croissant vraisemblablement dans le voisinage. grains conserves apres carbonisation ou a des ele- ments conserves dans I' eau du puits (noyaux, pep ins, coques, graines). Ce sont des cereales (seigle, fro- b. L 'agriculture et l'arboriculture ment, orge vetue, millet, avoine), des legumineuses (pois, feves), des fruits (prunes, griottes et peches, Au debut du Xle siecle, !'atelier de potier est envi- raisins, pommes et peut-etre poires, sureau, mures, ronne de champs ensemences en cereales, notam- noisettes et noix), une pi ante textile (chanvre, atteste ment en seigle, de prairies de fauche et de pacages. egalement par les pollens). Une vingtaine de plantes Des les premieres phases d' occupation de la motte sauvages ont egalement ete identifiees: plantes qui se (XIe-XIIIe siecle), la diversite des cereales cultivees melent aux recoltes (nielle des bles, renouee des apparait avec deux bles d'hiver (froment, seigle), et oiseaux), plantes de prairies (fetuque et fleole des trois de printemps (avoine, orge, millet). I! y avait pres, grande marguerite). Ces especes, par leurs carac- une rotation des cultures, entrainant une large repar- teristiques ecologiques, sont des temoins de la nature tition des travaux agricoles au long de I 'annee et la des terrains ou elles se sont developpees. Ainsi, la diminution des risques dus aux mauvaises recoltes. presence permanente d'eau dans les Grands Fosses, Cette rotation est confirmee par la presence de plan- au XVe siecle, avant leur comblement, mise en evi- tes adventices des cereales d'hiver (nielle des bles et dence par des analyses micromorphologiques, est myagre perfolie), et d'autres des sarclages et cultures confirmee par la presence de Ientille d'eau et renon- d'ete (capselle, setaire et renouees). La polyculture cule scelerate. De plus, la flore trouvee dans Ies permettait de disposer de diverses denrees stockables echantillons de ce fosse montre la presence de prai- (grains, pois, feves ). Les rentes du seigneur s 'ele- ries de fauche et de pacages aux environs immediats vaient en 1500 a 17 setiers et 10,5 boisseaux de fro- du fosse. En revanche, les especes mises en evidence ment, 4 se tiers de seigle, 3 muids 10 se tiers 15,5 bois- dans les echantillons provenant du puits sont des seaux d' avoine, 3 a 4 setiers de pois et feves W 41 r); plantes de terrains incultes pietines, comme 1'etait la ses deux metairies lui valaient chacune 4 a 5 muids plate-forme de la motte. de ble. La viticulture, assez developpee aux abords de Un tableau general des especes determinees par Levroux jusqu'ala crise du phylloxera, vers 1885, ces differentes methodes, complete par les mentions occupait de petites surfaces dispersees dans le terri- de flore relevees dans les textes, a ete dresse. C'est toire de la seigneurie; le vin produit devait etre de ainsi que le !in, dont aucun vestige n'a ete trouve, est qualite mediocre et consomme sur place 9 . Le sei- mentionne en 1500. Ce tableau met en evidence la gneur exers:ait un droit de banvin de quarante jours, complementarite des methodes utilisees. En effet, une fois par an, a la date de son choix; ce droit est aucune pi ante n' est representee par to us ses elements maintenu jusqu'a la Revolution. En 1500, outre la constitutifs. Deux facteurs principaux interviennent production des vignes de son domaine qui pour 4 sur la disparition des restes et doivent etre pris en arpents lui rapportent de 12 a 15 pipes de vin par an, compte dans !'interpretation des resultats. En premier les dimes lui «valent de 8 a 10 pipes de vin par an», lieu, la conservation dans le sediment varie selon les la pipe etant estimee a environ 220 litres (f' 26r). Les cas. Ainsi les bois ne se sont conserves que dans la pepins retrouves dans la partie immergee du com- zone immergee du puits, renfermant des vestiges blement du puits proviennent de grappes dont les datant du comblement de la plate-forme, done du grains ont vraisemblablement ete manges sur la motte. XVe siecle; ailleurs ils se sont decomposes. D'autre La presence d'arbres fruitiers dans des vergers, des part, les resultats d 'une discipline comme la xylo- potagers ou des vignes des environs est attestee par logie sont directement lies au comportement de des restes de fruits egalement consommes au XV e I 'homme et aux selections qu' il opere, alors que la siecle, mais les textes n 'en parlent pas. Dans les patu- palynologie ~chappe a cette influence. Les informa- rages situes le long des cours d' eau paissaient les tions foumies par la palynologie correspondent a vaches, les boeufs et les chevaux, tandis que les trou- I' image globale de la vegetation locale et regionale, peaux de moutons parcouraient librement les terres non cultivees. Bois et forets, situes en limite du terroir, appartenaient essentiellement au seigneur. L 'exploitation des arbres pour la construction et pour A. QUERRIEN, La viticulture en Bas-Berry au Moyen Age. «Cl os et vignes separees» autour de Levroux et de Moulins-sur- le chauffage etait tres strictement reglementee, de Cephons, in: La vigne et le vin dans le Centre de la France, meme que les "pessons" et la "glandee" pour l'ali- Revue de I 'Acadernie du Centre, 1995, 97-113. mentation des pores (F 29v). 135 A. Querrien LA FAUNE dimes lui rapportent "de quarante acinquante aignaux et dix a douze cochons (fO 26r)", et ses rentes 8 trouves en mentionnes "oysons" (fO 41r) et 75 chappons (fO 42r), 76 gellines fouille clans l'aveu (en plus de celles de la gelliniere; fO 42r). I1 a en outre de 1500 "le proffit du bestial qui peut estre nouris" dans sa ANIMAUX DOMESTIQUES metairie de Grange Rouge (f<' 38r). boeuf X X Les chats et les chiens sont representes par plu- mouton X X sieurs individus, principalement du XVe s. Parmi les ch{wre X X restes de chien figurent ceux d'un animal dont la pore X X taille au garrot etait inferieure a 20 cm. Ce squelette cheval X X appartenait a un petit chien de compagnie, tels ceux ane - X que 1' ont voit sur la table du Due de Berry, dans chat X - I 'illustration du mois de janvier des Tres Riches chien X - Heures du Due de Berry. C'est un animal rare, qui poule X X correspond au statut aristocratique du site. oie - X Des animaux intrusifs ont ete reperes: des rats, des ANIMAUX SAUV AGES campagnols, des musaraignes, des taupes. La plupart li<':vre X - des restes de ces micro-mammiferes ont ete trouves lapin de garenne - X dans des pelotes de rejection de chouettes tombees cerf X X dans le puits; ces pelotes comprenaient egalement de sanglier - X nombreux restes de batraciens. chevreuil - X cygne X - La chasse est evoquee par quelques os de lievres, de cerfs, d'oiseaux sauvages (cygne). Les os de lapin lNSECTES sont egalement peu nombreux, alors que l'aveu de abeille - X 1500 note 1' existence de deux garennes seigneuriales ANIMAUX INTRUSIFS a "connils". Le meme texte indique que sangliers et rat X - chevreuils etaient aussi chasses. Le seigneur avait un musaraigne X - "maistre venneur" qui aidait les habitants du village campagnol X - de Thouez, situe aI' oree des bois du seigneur, a faire taupe X - et diviser 1es «hais» necessaires pour que le gibier ne crapaud X - se perde pas, sinon ils lui devaient "pour chacun serf MOLLUSQUES perdu ung thoreau en l'aage de trois ans, pour une moule des rivieres X - biche une thaure en l'aage de deux ans, pour ung escargot de Bourgogne X - sanglier ung pourseau en l'aage de deux ans et pour POISSONS une sangliere une truiee puinee en l'aage de deux ans carpe X X (f<' 17 rv)". anguille - X Quelques restes de carpes ont ete retrouves en fouille dans les niveaux du XVe si eel e. L' elevage de la carpe etait alors tres developpe dans la region et les 8 etangs du seigneur de Moulins en comptaient plus c. Animaux domestiques, e!evage, chasse et peche de 25000 en 1500. L'aveu de 1500 mentionne en outre les anguilles que les meuniers pouvaient pecher Aucun depotoir n'a ete retrouve au cours des dans les biefs des moulins. Mais seules ces deux fouilles, mais seulement des dechets culinaires dis- varietes de poisson sont attestees au Moyen Age, perses et peu nombreux. L'etude de la faune 10 a done alors que la Cephons, comme le Nahon, portait bien ete limitee a un aperc;:u des especes presentes sur le d' autres especes qui etaient pechees et consommees, site. L'essentiel appartient a des animaux domesti- mais qui sont aujourd'hui detruites par la pollution de ques, boeufs, moutons, chevres, cochons, poules, la riviere due aux produits chimiques utilises par les oies, eleves pour la consommation de leur viande, des megisseries de Levroux 11 • L' aveu de 1500 evoque laitages et des oeufs. Quelques os de cheval ou d'ane ont ete retrouves dans les niveaux anciens (XIe-XIIIe 10 L'etude de la faune a ete faite par Marie-Christine s.). L'aveu de 1500 indique que chaque annee le Marinval- Vigne, I' etude malacologique par Patrice Rodriguez. seigneur a droit a"sept vingt gellines" des "habistans 11 La Federation de Peche de I'Indre enregistrait les especes et demeurant" en sa terre de Moulins, exception faite suivantes, en 1985, dans le Nahon: carpes, gardons, truites fario, des exemptes de trois hameaux (f<' 11 v et 12r); ses loches, vairons, anguilles, lamproies, epinoches, bremes, 136 L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle ces autres especes, mais sans les preciser, quand le et au seigneur d'Entraigues, avant de passer aux mains seigneur rappelle son droit de pecher une nuit par an, du seigneur de Moulins au XVIe ou, au plus tard, au de son choix, "toutes les anguilles et poison qui se debut du XVIIe siecle. Cette situation resta inchan- pourront prandre esdits moulins et pescherie gee jusqu 'a la Revolution. Aucun etang ne fut vendu d'iceulx" (f' 13v). ni baille. I1 semble qu'on ait egalement consomme des Le long de la Cephons et de ses affluents etaient escargots dits de Bourgogne (Helix pomatia Linne): installes de nombreux moulins appartenant au sei- 132 individus de grande taille, calibres, ont ete gneur du lieu et aux proches etablissements religieux. retrouves en fouille. Plusieurs d' entre eux rem on tent au ha ut Moyen Age, Un tableau met en vis a vis la liste des especes et ont entra!ne !'adoption du toponyme Moulins retrouvees en fouille et de celles mentionnees clans atteste au milieu du Xe siecle. Entre le XIIIe et le les textes. Aux especes precedentes, il convient d'ajou- XVe siecle, une quinzaine de moulins a fonctionne ter les abeilles des ruches pour la cire et le miel.; en clans la seigneurie. La majorite etait des moulins a 1500, la prevote est affermee moyennant 25 livres de ble. Quatre etaient a tan et servaient a pulveriser cire par an en 1500 (f' 38v) et les rentes rapportent 17 l' ecorce de chene utilisee pour la preparation des livres de cire (f'41 v), soit 42 livres en tout. cuirs; ils ont fonctionne jusqu' apres la demiere guerre, mais I 'utilisation des produits chimiques pour la teinture des cuirs a m is fin a I 'utilisation de I' ecorce d. Les amenagements hydrauliques clans I' industrie du cuir, et entraine leur abandon. Deux etaient a draps, dont l 'un etait en ruine avant La terre de Moulins est traversee par la riviere de 1623. L 'utilisation de martinets hydrauliques semble la Cephons et ses affluents. Elle renfermait de nom- posterieure au Moyen Age clans cette region 13 • breux etangs qui ont presque tous ete asseches au XIXe siecle. On ne sait a quand remonte leur con- struction, les premieres mentions les concemant etant 3 L'utilisation des matii~res premieres et les du )QIIe sieel e. Les etangs, onereux a mettre en oeuvre artisanats et a entretenir, constituaient une source de revenus importants qui interessa particulierement les sei- a. Bois travailles et bois de chauffe gneurs de Moulins. En effet, i1s etaient empoissonnes et peches regulierement, I' exploitation en etant faite Au fond du puits et lors de son creusement au directement par le seigneur et ses officiers 12 . Ainsi milieu du XIe siecle, un cadre en bois, ou rouet, tous les grands etangs, de 22 a 60 ha, et presque tous forme de quatre poutres de chenes, a ete dispose pour les petits appartenaient au seigneur ou furent acquis stabiliser les parois en pierre montees jusqu'a son par lui. Les seuls qui ne lui ontjamais appartenu sont sommet; c 'est le seul vestige de bois conserve de celui du prieure fontevriste de Jarzay et les deux cette periode. petits de la celle de Grandmont. Au XIIIe siecle, le Dans les niveaux inferieurs du puits, restes en eau seigneur de Moulins accorda un droit de peche sur depuis leur comblement, des pieces de bois gorgees ses etangs aux moines du Landais, mais on ne sait ni d'eau ont ete retrouvees. Leur etude a permis d'iden- de combien, ni de quels etangs il s 'agit. En 1500, le tifier les arbres selectionnes au )QVe-XVe siecle par seigneur avoue huit etangs qui sont peuples de 25000 les artisans locaux. La majorite des objets et debris carpeaux. Le fief de la Ferriere en a 3, attestes en retrouves sont en chene. Ce sont des fragments de 1623, appelles l'Etang de la Ferriere, l'Etang Vieil et bois de construction (planches de moins d' 1 m de l'Etang Neuf; ils sont alors passes clans la main du long, bardeaux, lattes), ou de mobilier (fonds de seau, seigneur du Moulins, la Ferriere ayant ete incorporee douelle de tonneau, pointes, outil). Une planche sur au domaine seigneurial. De meme l'etang des Ysam- laquelle ont ete prelevee des morceaux de forme bert, mentionne clans un bail de 1438 (ADI, G 131 circulaire ou ovalaire de 3 a 5 cm de diametre Grand Livre Noir du chapitre Saint Sylvain de pourrait avoir servi a la fabrication de boutons, de Levroux, f' 13 ), appartenait au chapitre de Levroux pions ou de jetons. chevesnes, ablettes, perches, brochets. 11 n'y avait alors pas un 12 La premiere mention d 'un maitre des eaux et fon-:ts a seul poisson dans la Cephons (source: Rivieres Nahon et Moulins remonte a l'aveu de 1623. Cephons, diagnostic de qualite et programme de rehabilitation 13 A. QUERRJEN, La mise en oeuvre de l'energie hydraulique des milieux, octobre 1994). Les ecrevisses etaient egalement en Berry. Les moulins du bassin de la Cephons, in: Melanges nombreuses dans la Cephons avant cette pollution. oflerts aJ.M. Pesez, aparaitre. 137 A. Querrien Les techniques de mise en oeuvre ont ete ana- quand le bois «sue», clans !es bois des environs et en lysees. La taille se fait sur quartier, les planches per- particulier celui de la Ferriere, a I' ouest de Moulins. pendiculaires au fil se tordant beaucoup moins que les autres. Les outils utilises sont la hac he, I 'herminette ou le couteau. La fouille a mis aujour deux fragments b. Textiles et cuir de lames de scie, l'une acadre, !'autre egoi'ne. De nombreux fragments de noisetier ont egale- Un artisanat textile foumissait des draps de laine, ment ete trouves; les jeunes branches, tres souples, de !in et de chanvre. I! est atteste par des redevances ont pu servir aconfectionner des parois tressees. clans les aveux et denombrements apartir de la fin du Enfin, les qualites du saule, bois tendre et fibres XVe siecle: en 1500, le seigneur rec;:oit 40 a50 aulnes courtes ne donnant pas d'echardes, en faisaient un de toile pour ses dimes en !in et chanvre, et «demie materiau bien adapte au toumage, comme l'atteste un cens de laines» pour les dimes de lainages (f" 26r). I! fragment d 'ecuelle et un autre d 'un objet indeter- peut se deduire des etudes de faune et de flore. Des mine. pollens de chanvre ont ete trouves en grand nombre Les bois choisis comme combustibles ont ete (7 %) clans le sediment du cercueil monoxyle (620- recenses a partir des prelevements de charbons de 890), correspondant soit a un depot intentionnel au bois effectues clans les couches de destruction de moment du depot du corps clans le cercueil, so it aune !'atelier de potier et clans les niveaux d'occupation de pluie pollinique au moment du transfert sur la motte la plate-forme: chene, aulne, hetre, peuplier, epine- au milieu du XIe siecle. La tres forte concentration de vinette. Excepte le chene qui, en buches, donne un ces pollens a la base des Grands Fosses combles au feu long et de bonnes braises, ce sont de petits bran- XVe siecle ( 18 %) indique que le rouissage devait y chages qui brulent rapidement. Le faible nombre etre pratique, ou a proximite. Plusieurs chenevieres d'essences inventoriees (5) est le fait d'une selection sont indiquees clans les textes et portees sur le par I' homme. Le hetre, par exemple, represente une cadastre de 1812. part importante des charbons de bois, alors qu' il est Un seul objet de fouille se rapporte acet artisanat: absent des bois gorges d'eau. L'exploitation fores- une petite fusaiole en calcaire trouvee clans le puits. tiere pour le bois de chauffage est attestee clans P!usieurs moulins a draps fonctionnaient le long differents documents, que ce soit lors de conflits a de la Cephons dont celui du seigneur de Moulins, propos de droits d 'usages concedes au chapitre de juste au nord de la Maison des Salles, en activite en Levroux ou a d 'autres etablissements religieux, ou 1500 et en ruine en 1623. pour proteger le seigneur contre le chapardage: Le travail du cuir etait tres developpe clans cette "quand aulcuns est trouve dedans mes bois de Dizeu region. Levroux etait un grand centre de tanneries, et couppant derosbant ou charoiant aulcuns bois dudit la Cephons portait plusieurs moulins atan. La fouille lieu, en ce cas les chevaux charrettes qui sont trouvez du puits n'a livre qu'une semelle de chaussure en iceux bois sont a moy confisquez, et s'ils d'enfant en cuir, un bouton fait de deux brins de cuir n 'avoient charrette ne chevaux ils soient trouvez entrelaces et un fragment de cuir non identifie, mais coupant et faisant dommages esdits bois, je !es puis seul le fonds du puits offrait des conditions de constituer prisonniers et iceulx detenir jeusque a ce conservation pour ce type d'objet et le puits, comble qu 'il aye baille caultion solvable, se soient soubsmis au XVe siecle, avait auparavant ete entretenu et sans a I' ordonnances de ma justice et doibvent estre doute cure a p!usieurs reprises, et n' etait pas un comdampnez en amande arbistraire a la discretion de depotoir. Deux objets trouves en fouille pourraient se mon bailly dudit lieu de Molins (f" 19v)". Mais rattacher acet artisanat: une tige de fer du type alene aucune precision n'est donnee sur les arbres. (fin XIe-XIIIe s.), et un outil en chene cylindrique, Xylologie et anthracologie montrent !'exploita- avec une extremite taillee en biseau, evoquant une tion des especes ligneuses des bois, des haies et des forme acuir (XVe s.). bords de riviere des environs du site; de ce fait, elles foumissent une liste d 'especes (7) beaucoup moins complete que la palynologie (23). c. La metallurgie du fer Ce tableau resterait incomplet sans la mention de I' exploitation permanente des ecorces de chene pour Les fouilles ont mis au jour de nombreux residus les nombreux moulins atan (8) qui s 'echelonnaient le d'une production metallurgique 14 locale representee long de la Cephons et ou etaient moulues !es ecorces des la premiere phase d'occupation de la motte au de chene necessaires aux tanneries de Levroux. Ces ecorces etaient decollees avec une levrette (cuillere 14 L'etude des elements relatifs ala metallurgie a ete realisee en en fer, au manche en bois ou en fer), au mois de mai, collaboration avec Prof. Paul Benoit de I'Universite de Paris l. 138 L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle .-· Cour • La Pomerie I I I I I ,/ I '-I I I I I ' I I I \ \ ', ,, !km I I H. DavuJ village L 'Habitat d'apres l 'aveu de 1500 bois * etang + etablissement religieux riviere • residence aristocratique chemin • metairie limite de la paroisse lieu-dit habite limite de la chil.tellenie moulin seigneurial bourg castral et moulin autre siege de la paroisse Xle siecle, jusqu'a son comblement au XVe siecle. treux et correspondent a ce que les metallurgistes Les elements retrouves sont des scories lourdes de actuels appellent des laitiers. Ces scories peuvent forme massive, de 12 cm de diametre environ, qui ont provenir de la reduction du minerai dans un four, ou la forme d 'un culot de four, et des scories beaucoup du travail a la forge. Il est en effet souvent difficile de plus legeres, dont certaines presentent un aspect vi- distinguer les scories provenant de ces differentes 139 A. Querrien operations. Dans les techniques employees au Moyen surface ou de tres faible profondeur. Faciles a recon- Age, leurs compositions chimiques sont compara- na1tre, faciles a exploiter, composes d'un minerai bles: il s'agit surtout d 'oxydes et de silicates. L'abon- aise a reduire, ils correspondent au type de gisement dance de silice clans les scories, la diffusion de metal que le Moyen Age a mis en valeur. en formation visible clans un des culots scies, tendent Les analyses chimiques 16 ont m is en relation a faire penser que des activites de reduction ont eu minerai et scories. Bien que les teneurs en fer des lieu, a proximite immediate de la motte, clans des echantillons de minerai varient, ils appartiennent tous structures de petite dimension. Ce travail a tres bien a un meme type. Oxyde de fer et silice en sont les pu etre effectue clans une forge d'ou proviendrait une principaux composants; l'alumine est a peu pres tota- partie des scories. lement absente et la chaux tres rare. La teneur en Ni le travail d'extraction, ni le travail de forge chaux des scories, superieure a celle des minerais, n 'apparaissent clans Ies textes, pas meme clans les prouve 1'usage de calcaire ajoute comme fondant a la redevances. Pourtant la toponymie temoigne d'une charge du four. Ce minerai ainsi defini par ses ele- importante activite metallurgique sur le terroir: ]es ments majeurs, est parfaitement compatible avec les Minieres, la Ferriere, Ies Forges, l'etang et le moulin scories retrouvees. L 'etude des elements moins abon- de la Forge, le Foumeau, la Molline. La Ferriere et la dants, elements mineurs ou traces, confirment cette Molline sont mentionnees clans l'aveu de 1500. Mais affirmation. Aussi sans qu'on puisse dire avec exacti- certains de ces toponymes sont posterieurs au Moyen tude de que! site d'extraction provient le minerai, il Age. Ainsi les Minieres apparaissent clans les textes est certain que la metallurgie de Moulins-sur-Cephons au XVIIe siecle: "la grange de deffunt Andre Villede a trouve sur place, clans un rayon tres restreint, les appelee de present les Minnieres" (aveu de 1623, f' minerais necessaires. 23v et 27r). L'etang et le moulin de la Forge ont change de nom apres 1646, date a laquelle ils s 'ap- pellent encore Roe (aveu de 1646, Saint-Aignan). d. Materiaux de construction et carrieres Le minerai de fer etait exploite par poche, a ciel ouvert, clans une large zone situee essentiellement au Au sommet de la motte, le premier talus est cou- sud-ouest de la motte; une aire de grillage du minerai vert de silex, et le deuxieme de calcaire de Buzanc;;ais, a ete fouillee clans les bois de Thouez, a !'est de les deux parements tranchant totalement 1'un par rap- Moulins, mais aucune datation n'a ete obtenue 15 • port a 1'autre. Les silex du premier tal us se ramassent Les prospections menees clans un rayon de six a meme le sol clans les champs des environs, surtout kilometres autour de la motte ont permis de mettre en au nord du village, sous la forme de galets; il semble evidence !'existence d'un certain nombre de sites ou qu'ils aient ete casses lors de leur utilisation sur la du minerai est present. Sur les 5 echantillons envoyes motte. Certains eclats laissent penser que des ele- a !'analyse, 4 ont des teneurs et des qualites suffi- ments d 'un atelier de taille contemporain de 1'en- santes pour etre utilises comme minerai. L 'un a ete ceinte du chalcolithique ont ete utilises pour ce trouve clans les terres de remblai de la plate-forme, un parement medieval. Le calcaire de Buzanc;;ais pro- autre a 300 m (oolithes ferrugineuses); les autres vient lui de carrieres a ciel ouvert, comme il en proviennent soit du lieu-dit les Minieres a 800 m, ou existait de nombreuses sur le plateau de la Cham- les agriculteurs trouvent encore des blocs d 'hematite, pagne, au sud de Moulins (carte geologique de la soit du bois de la Ferriere a 2,5 km. L'analyse montre France, BRGM, au 1/50000, Levroux, J?h). que ces minerais se composent essentiellement de Dans la basse-cour principale se dresse I' eglise silice et d'oxyde de fer, c'est-a-dire qu'ils sont rela- dont les deux phases de construction sont reperables tivement faciles areduire. Ils appartiennent ala cate- au simple examen du chevet. La premiere eglise est gorie des minerais d'alteration superficielle: ils pro- construite, a la fin du XIe ou au debut du Xlle siecle, viennent de 1'action de 1'atmosphere, clans des condi- en gres glauconnieux vert et gres ferrugineux rouge, tions climatiques de type tropical, sur les couches au dessus d'une assise en calcaire et gres durs. Une superficielles de 1'ecorce terrestre. Ces minerais ont deuxieme nef lui est accolee au sud, a la fin du XIIe d'ailleurs ete retrouves clans des petits gisements de ou au debut du XIIIe siecle. La pierre blanche alors 15 P. TOURNAlRE, Bois de Thours (sic), Chronique des fouilles ARTEMISE-SCORIES). Les analyses foumissent uniquement le medievales, Arc!teologie medievale XV, 1985, 306. pourcentage des elements qui composent l'echantillon, quelque 16 L'analyse des elements chimiques a ete effectuee au Centre soit leur forme; ainsi elles donnent la quantite de fer globale, de Recherches Petrographiques et Geochimiques du C.N.R.S. a aussi bien le fer metallique que les oxydes ou les silicates de fer Nancy (C.R.P.G.). Les donnees sont traitees informatiquement contenus clans l'echantillon. et comparees avec des resultats obtenus par ailleurs (Programme 140 L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle a utilisee, une craie silex de provenance plus loin- s'estire le sable" (f" 3v) pres de la Fontaine Saint- taine (C 3a), met en evidence cet agrandissement et est a Sulpice, Balzeme, au nord. En 1766, une piece de adaptee aux sculptures que la nouvelle partie, plus terre appelee les "sablieres" est "partye en culture et soignee, reyoit pour decorer les pilastres du choeur et a a partye en friche" la Charonnerie, 1'est de Moulins. le nouveau portail. La pierre devait etre reservee aux constructions La construction de la plate-forme de la motte du aristocratiques et aux edifices religieux. Lorsque la XIVe-XVe siecle a utilise des gres roses et des gres maison seigneuriale intra muros est abandonnee et ferrugineux (C 1-2a), provenant du nord de Moulins, du a detruite, !'exception de son pignon nord, la maison a calcaire mameux huitres, du calcaire piquete de a de notable qui est construite sa place 17 a sa base en Levroux (J 6-7a) et du calcaire de Buzanyais, provenant moellons et l'etage en pans de bois et torchis, selon du sud. Tous ces materiaux ont ete exploites dans des la technique qui devait etre couramment utilisee pour a carrieres ciel ouvert de petites dimensions, situees les maisons paysannes. Les materiaux necessaires a dans les environs. ce type de construction etaient disponibles sur place Les memes types de materiaux se retrouvent dans et peu onereux a se procurer et a mettre en oeuvre. les autres batiments du village de la fin du Moyen Age. La tour du chatelet d'entree du bourg, attribuee au XIVe siecle, est faite principalement de moellons e. Tuileries et poteries de gres ferrugineux, et d' autres de gres rouge; elle comprend aussi des calcaires et des silex. Les restes Plusieurs types d'argile ont ete exploites autour de de la maison seigneuriale intra muros du debut du Moulins. La region est en effet riche en argile pro- XVe siecle allient calcaires et gres. A 1'interieur, au venant des couches secondaires du cenomanien. Cette premier etage, une fenetre a coussiege et une che- argile commune, qui donne des pates de couleur sou- a minee sont faites de calcaire aise sculpter, sauf les a tenue, orange, rouge gris-noir, apres son passage au corbeaux de la cheminee qui sont en gres. Une porte four, etait destinee ala fabrication de tuiles, carreaux surmontee d'une accolade, qui a ete reutilisee dans le et briques, dont les couches de destruction du XVe reconstruction de cette maison est en gres vert. Dans siecle ont livre de nombreux exemplaires sur la la Maison des Salles, nouvelle et demiere residence motte. La repartition des toponymes tels que 1'Ar- des seigneurs de Moulins du milieu du XVe siecle, on gillerie ou les Ardiller (2), les Fosses, la (ou les) a utilise du calcaire de bonne qualite, propice la a Tuilerie, suit la couche cenomanienne sur la carte taille, pour la cheminee de la gran de salle de 1'etage geologique, sauf au sud de Levroux, ou les be so ins de a et pour les fenetres meneaux et coussieges. la ville ont suscite la creation d 'une tuilerie dans les La plupart des constructions etudiees ont utilise fauxbourgs de la ville, la matiere premiere etant des materiaux heterogenes et locaux extraits pres du apportee et non extraite sur place. Mais ces eta- a village et aptes la fabrication de moellons. Gres et blissements ne sont pas dates. Les tuiles devaient etre calcaires etaient issus de banes superficiels, faciles reserves aux edifices religieux et aux maisons de d'acces et abandonnes apres epuisement du gisement. notables. Bardeaux, branchages et chaume etaient a Seuls les calcaires silex blonds et noirs utilises pour utilises pour les couvertures des maisons paysannes 1'eglise avaient une origine plus lointaine: ils pro- et des batiments agricoles, comme la bergerie du venaient des carrieres a ciel ouvert et souterraines a a seigneur Beaugibier qui, en 1500, est "couverte de Luyay-le-Male connues autrefois pour leur tuffeau, a bardeau et les comiers de thuille (f" 34r)". 16 km au nord-ouest de Moulins. En revanche, les potiers du debut du Xle siecle La documentation ecrite ne se preoccupe guere de utilisaient une argile specifique, donnant une pate ces activites. L'aveu de 1500 mentionne la "perriere" a claire la cuisson. Cette argile comporte une forte (f" 24r) pres du chemin de Moulins a "Coqu", vers proportion d'alumine (Alz0 3), et de faibles pourcen- l'ouest, ou la carte geologique indique une ancienne tages de Fep 3 et de Kp, caracteristiques des argiles carriere de craie a ciel ouvert, et la "sabelonniere ou kaolinitiques 18 . Or les affleurements de kaolinite sont 17 A. QUERRIEN, Une maison de notables du XVe siecle a Moulins-sur-Cephons (Indre), in: J.-M. Pesez (dir.), Cent maisons nuidieva/es,aparaltre. 18 Les analyses chimiques ont ete realisees par Daniel Dufournier (CNRS, CRAM, Caen), et les analyses physiques par le regrette Claude Lorenz (Universite de Paris VI) et Annie Blanc (Laboratoire des Monuments Historiques). Tableau resumant les resultats des analyses chimiques des ceramiques de I'atelier de potier de Moulins; moyenne et ecart-type de la serie, pour 30 echantillons analyses: SiO AI 0 Fe 0 TiO CaO MgO Na 0 K 0 MnO moyenne: 70} 23;8) 3,J5) 0,71 2 0,45 0,43 o,ib 0,68 0,02 ecart-type: I ,9 I ,9 0,30 0, I 0 0,12 0,07 0,07 0,17 0,007 141 A. Querrien exceptionnels dans cette region, si on les compare Moulins etait un petit chef-lieu de chiltellenie, aux possibilites d'extraction des nombreuses argiles dont le territoire etait reparti de maniere equilibree locales cenomaniennes. Les niveaux d'argile ou des entre terres cultivees, paturages, bois taillis et forets. carrieres ont pu etre ouvertes ont ete reperes sur la Sa population fournissait l'essentiel des produits carte geologique. Des prW:vements ont ete effectues necessaires ases besoins, que ce soit dans le domaine et des echantillons ont ete cuits. Des analyses physi- agricole ou artisanal. Poteries, tuiles, objets en fer, en ques (lames minces) et chimiques ont permis de com- cuir ou en bois, toiles de laine, de chanvre et de lin parer ces argiles acelle des poteries et d'identifier le etaient fabriques sur place. Mis apart quelques objets gisement. Il s'agit d'une argile tertiaire, qui etait de dinanderie, bijouterie et tabletterie, et des produits extraite a 5 km au sud-ouest de !'atelier de Moulins, manufactures provenant d'ateliers specialises pour dans un lieu appele le "Terrier Blanc". Ce choix cor- l'armement et l'equipement du cavalier, la grande respond a des constatations faites dans d 'autres majorite du materiel mis au jour tors des fouilles parties du Berry ou les depots tertiaires foumissent provient de maniere certaine, ou peut provenir, d'une des argiles refractaires et des argiles a poteries. Le fabrication locale. Les materiaux necessaires sont materiau etait de qualite et permettait d'obtenir une disponibles et exploites dans les environs du village, pate de couleur claire a la cuisson, preference que et, dans le cas de la poterie, la cha'ine materiau- 1'on observe dans beaucoup d' autres regions a cette produit fini a pu etre reconstituee. Toutefois, il ne epoque. La distance entre 1' argiliere et 1'atelier n 'etait semble pas qu' il y ait eu de verrerie aMoulins, mais pas un reel handicap, malgre les difficultes des tran- un etablissement verrier, dont on ne connait pas sports de l'epoque, car il suffisait d'une ou deux char- 1'origine, se trouvait a 6,5 km au nord-est, dans les retees de terre pour qu'un potier puisse travailler bois du seigneur de Levroux. Certaines trompes en pendant un an. L'emplacement de !'atelier a ete terre cuite et quelques vases des niveaux recents de la determine par I' existence prealab le d' un groupement motte furent peut-etre achetes ades marchands, dans humain. les foires et marches des environs, ainsi que des Les textes sont muets au sujet de l'artisanat cera- anneaux en alliage cuivreux et en bronze dore. Une mique. L'archeologie a non seulement mis en evi- bague en argent gravee d'un tau de Saint Antoine dence 1'atelier du XIe siecle, mais elle a prouve qu 'un entoure de trois etoiles a sans doute une origine plus artisanat ceramique continuait, si ce n'est sur place, lointaine. Mais ce sont des exceptions qui contraste du moins dans les environs immediats. L'analyse des avec l'homogeneite de !'ensemble du materiel re- pates des ceramiques montre en effet que la meme trouve. argiliere a servi du XIe au XVe siecle. L 'enquete me nee a Moulins illustre 1' interet de Ces etablissements artisanaux, comme pour la combiner diverses sources pour tenter de pallier les metallurgie, posent le probleme des rapports entre insuffisances des unes et des autres. La documenta- artisanats et seigneurie. s 'agissait-il d' etablissements tion ecrite, d' origine seigneuriale lai:que et religieuse, autonomes, ou bien dependaient-ils directement de la est orientee vers les interets seigneuriaux. L'archeo- seigneurie? La construction de la motte a-t-elle logie met en lumiere des documents d'essence dif- entra'ine la fin de I' atelier, ou bien celui-ci s 'est-il ferente. Dans une region ou la documentation fait developpe plus loin? Que! etait le statut social de presque totalement defaut avant le XIIIe siecle, elle ceux qui travaillaient a produire les ceramiques? reste la source privilegiee pour la decouverte et 1' etude des sites anterieurs. Elle 1'est egalement pour aborder les differents aspects de !'exploitation des terroirs et de la transformation des ressources natu- relles. Armelle Querrien C.N.R.S. 103 bd. De Magenta 75010 Paris France 142 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 /sabelle Catteddu Le site medieval de Saleux "les Coutures": habitat, necropole et eglises du haut Moyen Aget Situe en rive gauche de la Selle (seul affluent du IXeme s. mais toujours present clans le paysage. navigable de la Somme ), ce site de gage sur 4ha a livre L'habitat suit lui-aussi un mouvement d'extension. de nombreuses structures d 'habitat, cabanes exca- Au cours des IXeme et Xerne s. 1'habitat s 'etend vees, silos, fosses, biHiments et trous de poteaux, sensiblement au N et au S. Le Xeme ou XIeme s. s'organisant autour d'une importante necropole voient la construction de 1'eglise sur fondations cal- (plus de 1500 individus ont en effet ete degages et caires, en plusieurs etapes. La necropole continue de etudies). C'est au centre de cette necropole, qu'ont s 'accroitre et l 'habitat englobe progressivement la ete decouverts les restes de fondation de deux edi- necropole en s'approchant de l'eglise. fices religieux successifs: 1'un sur poteaux, 1' autre sur fondations calcaires. L'importance de ce site a ete renforcee par la L'habitat decouverte en bordure de la riviere, d'un amena- gement de berge avec structures en bois conservees 2• La repartition des structures d 'habitat semble Les differents indices chronologiques qui nous repondre a une volonte d'amenager des zones a voca- ont ete fournis lors de la fouille temoignent d'une tion specifique. Alors que les structures de stockage creation aux alentours du VIIeme s. ap. J.C. et d'une se concentrent clans la partie E du site, les batiments occupation s 'etendant jusqu' au Xleme s., sans dis- sur poteaux s 'etendent plus nettement au N. continuite apparente. Des traces d'activites domestiques ont ete recon- L'habitat etait subdivise par des fosses en plu- nues. Si aucun four (artisanal ou domestique) n'a ete sieurs parcelles geometriques au sein desquelles se retrouve clans les limites de notre decapage, quelques developpaient les structures. foyers isoles ont toutefois ete releves malgre un etat La mise en place de la necropole et du noyau d' arasement assez important du site. initial de l 'habitat semble etre simultanee clans le Temoins de 1'activite domestique: un mobilier courant du VIIeme s .. Si les secteurs degages clans ce ceramique bien represente, des dechets de scories,du fond de vallee restent occupes jusqu'au Xleme s., ils rnobilier en os et lithique bien caracterise. subissent des modifications importantes clans le de- Plusieurs fonds de cabane ont livre des amena- coupage de l'espace deja habite. En effet, au terme de gements internes et un mobilier temoignant de la notre etude, nous avons pu reconnaitre une unite pratique du tissage: fusa!oles, broches, ou latteurs a principale en bordure de riviere au VIIeme s. Une a pointe, peignes carder, aiguille en os, lissoir en petite necropole s 'organisait a 1'ecart, au SO, autour verre et pesons. Ces fonds de cabane presentaient des d'une tombe privilegiee en sarcophage, protegee par cavites regulieres marquant les emplacements d 'un un petite edicule en bois. metier a tisser vertical. Au cours des VIIIeme-IXeme s., une eglise en L' artisan at de 1' os est bien atteste. Comme clans bois est construite autour de ce meme edicule. On beaucoup de sites ruraux, cette activite devait etre assiste alors a un accroissement de la necropole et a pratiquee familialement clans chaque foyer, au fur et l'amenagement d'un enclos funeraire, comble autour a mesure des besoins. Des objets varies sont fabri- Le site des coutures a ete decouvert lors de sondages realises Sanef, I' Afan, et l'Etat (Service Regional de I' Archeologie de sur le tron9on de I' autoroute A 16, reliant Paris a Amiens. La Picardie). fouille s'est deroulee durant 9 mois, de mars anovembre 93, sur 2 C'est clans ce contexte, que nous avons fait intervenir un la commune de Saleux en Picardie, a5 km au SOd' Amiens. Cette maximum de specialistes en sciences paleoenvironnementales et fouille a fait l'objet d'une convention signee entre l'amenageur connexes, et ce, des le debut de la fouille. 143 I. Catteddu ques en os et en come: tabletterie, manche de cou- pices a l 'installation humaine. Toutefois les vestiges teau, peigne, elements vestimentaires ... decouverts ala fouille attestent une volonte de controle L' elevage et la culture sont bien illustres par les de ces contraintes et une reflexion sur les transfor- echantillons carpologiques 3 et archeozoologiques 4 • mations permettant a la fois une gestion de I' environ- La diversite des especes vegetales exploitees nement et une exploitation ades fins economiques. (polycultures) indique une gestion equilibree des Cette volonte est cependant soumise a des refle- terres arables et des ressources naturelles, forestieres. xions complexes qui mettent en jeu des mecanismes Le mode de stockage choisi semble etre le silo excave. au sein d'unites fonctionnelles, clans la vallee de la Selle. L 'exhaustivite de 1'echantillonnage carpologique a Au moins cinq actions anthropiques ont ete recon- permis 1' obtention d'un spectre tres etendu et une nues: bonne caracterisation des apports des vegetaux sur le - une chenalisation sur environ 100 m et une zone site. On constatera la predominance du ble tendre, gueable. A cet en droit 1'endiguement lateral aura it ma is egalement la presence de seigle, d, orge vetue, du entrainer des risques de debordements, mais la d' avoine, d' epeautre et de legumineuses. M is a part presence de biefs dans ce contexte de chenali- I' avoine, ces cere ales etaient sans doute conduites en sation perrnet de trouver cet equilibre; cultures d'hiver comme en temoigne le cortege im- une anse naturelle (ancien meandre de la riviere) portant d 'adventices d 'hiver. La cueillette jouait ega- remaniee par un remblais anthropique: celui-ci lement un role comme l' atteste la grande variete des joue un role d'endiguement vertical et facilite petits fruits sauvages cueillis dans la foret. La majo- l'acces a la riviere; rite des apports de plantes reflete soit des cultures, l'amenagement d'un bief d'amont, partant de la soit des milieux ruderalises locaux, ou des paturages riviere vers le site et les rangees de pieux; ou paissait le be tail. Le milieu forestier n 'est atteste un bief d' aval, partant d 'une vanne et deux ran- que par les produits de la cueillette. gees de pieux bordes de planches posees de chant, En ce qui cone erne 1' elevage, on constate une vers la riviere. Ces biefs seront endigues laterale- importante representation du boeuf et des caprines, ment al'aide de remblais afin d'eviter les divaga- puis du pore et surtout du cheval. Les proportions de tions laterales et les debordements vers 1'habitat; boeuf et d'equides correspondent a un important l'amenagement d'un vase d'expansion (bassin) besoin en matiere d'utilisation de force animale. Pour endigue lateralement, qui s 'elargit entre les deux la foumiture de produits cames, le faible apport du au biefs et qui debouche sur la vanne. Cette demiere pore est compense par un elevage de bovins large- perrnettait de control er le debit de 1'eau qui s 'en- ment toume vers la production de viande. Le role des gouffrait entre les alignements de pieux bordant le caprines etant de produire du lait ou de la laine. Le depart du bief aval. On remarquera ici la volonte mouton vient par ailleurs en seconde position a la d'utiliser la force tractrice del' eau, d' accelerer le place du pore habituellement a cette place. Une cours d'eau et de provoquer une force mecanique. grande stabilite des choix economiques peut etre vue Si les amenagements decouverts aSaleux, ont ete au travers de I'alimentation et de 1'elevage, saufpeut- realises en partie, afin de faire face aux contraintes etre pour les caprines. topographiques du lieu et de les controler, les volon- tes economiques sont evidentes (peche, vivier, mou- lin ... ). D'autre part, la chenalisation associee au gue La berge (exhaussement du lit) augmente la force tractrice de 1' eau utile aune navigation avalante. Un gue de cette L 'habitat eta it limite a1'E par la riviere de la Selle importance annonce egalement un lieu de passage et par une zone humide qui livra a la fouille des tout aussi consequent. amenagements complexes. Pour une meilleure com- Les echantillons dendrochronologiques 6 synchroni- prehension de ce secteur, nous avons fait appel a une ses ont restitue une moyenne de 148 annees consecu- equipe de plongeurs afin de realiser une fouille tives. La date d'abattage etait comprise entre 763 et 778. subaquatique 5 • Les resultats palynologiques7 sont tres constants. La presence d'un ancien meandre reconnu comme L 'espece la mieux representee est le houblon, associe une zone instable et marecageuse, et la proximite du a un couvert d'aulnes, saules et frenes typiques des versant E constituent des zones d'instabilite peu pro- milieux humides voire des tourbieres. Etude de V. Mateme, AFAN. Somme, equipe dirigee par M. Sueur. 6 Etude de J.H. Yvinec, C.R.A.V.O. Compii:gne, F. V. Bemard, Besanc;:on, AFAN, F. Groupe de Recherches Archeologiques Subaquatiques de la A.M. Munaut, Universite Catholique Louvain-La-Neuve, B. 144 Le site medieval de Saleux "les Coutures": habitat, necropole, et eglises du haut Moyen Age X X / X X X X \ \ X X X X .... ·v·S· q,: .• X 10 . t~ . ,, . I . ..,"' " <D 8' f/) E z Q) E a.: X .... 0 ,; :J :::> '5 ~ .c u w 0 I " 0 X ....J () <I; (") m <( ~ Cl) V) 0 ::>" ,..."' '0al Q) (\j ....J 0 ::: OJ '" (.) -' 0 145 I. Catteddu En dehors de cette zone fluviale, les environs de inferieurs semble correspondre a des positions des 1'habitat carolingien devaient avoir 1'aspect d 'un pay- membres superieurs asymetriques. Elle semble ega- sage ouvert ou croissaient quelques pins epars aux lement relative ades espaces vides. Les mouvements abords de prairies et champs. Prairies et cultures peuvent etre dus au transport du coffre. Quelques cas cerealit':res sont bien re presentees dans 1'environne- asymetriques en espace colmate peuvent laisser scep- ment du site. tique. Les attitudes donnees aux defunts sont-elles rectifiees apres le depot? Les observations faites sur le marquage des La necropole sepultures soulevent la question de la preservation de la sepulture. A Saleux, plusieurs groupes de sepul- Elle regroupait 1192 tombes pour un total de 1500 tures partiellement juxtaposees ont ete mis au jour. a 2000 individus, s'organisant a l'interieur d'un es- La disposition des individus et les relations stratigra- pace delimite par un fosse d 'enclos s 'integrant par- phiques suggerent que des marquages au sol (le plus faitement dans le reseau fossoye de !'habitat et du sou vent en matiere perissable ), indiquaient 1' empla- parcellaire environnant. Les tombes etaient disposees cement des inhumations. autour des edifices religieux, mais sont egalement Les reductions et ossuaires sont tres nombreux et recoupees par ceux-ci. Six sepultures ont ete rele- se rencontrent dans !es secteurs les plus densement guees au milieu de 1'habitat. occupes de la necropo!e: au S, a1'0 de la chapelle et L'etude de cette necropole comprenait egalement dans la nef. Ils se composent des os d'un ou plusieurs celle des modes d'inhumation et de 1'architecture des individus. Deux ossuaires plus importants sont a tombes, ainsi que des aspects anthropologiques 8 et noter a l'E de la necropole. paleopathologiques9 • L'importante densite des inhu- mations et le nombre de reductions, les nombreux recoupements et la rarete du mobilier ont gene con- Typologie et organisation des differents modes siderablement les tentatives de chronologies absolues d 'inhumation ou relatives et 1'etude generale de ces sepultures. Le sarcophage decouvert au centre de la necro- pole est unique dans cet ensemble. Les pratiques funeraires Les contenants de bois sont en majorite anterieurs aux sepultures en pleine terre. Plusieurs types de contenants ont ete reconnus: Ils se repartissent sur !'ensemble de la necropole cerceuil cheville, coffrage de bois maintenu par des mais se rarefient en peripherie de celle-ci. Les con- calages de pierre ou de terre, et monoxyle. Les cof- tenants sont egalement nombreux aproximite imme- frages et cercueils sont de forme rectangulaire ou diate de la chapelle avec une concentration notable au trapezoi'dale et sont plus souvent etroits que larges. S du choeur. La presence d 'un monoxyle atteste 1'usage de ce Des coffrages ont ete identifies avec certitude, en mode d'inhumation a Saleux. Quelques inhumations fonction des calages lithiques, les autres bloques avec en linceul ont ete proposees. Les sepultures en pleine de la terre n 'ont pu etre differencies. terre sont nombreuses. Les sepultures en pleine terre se repartissent sur Les fosses anthropomorphes se presentent sous 1'ensemble de la necropole, plus clairsemees cepen- deux types, soit une logette externe creusee dans le dant dans les zones peripheriques. Il faut egalement sediment a 1'extremite de la fosse, so it un calage a noter que les sepultures de ce type ceinturent le 1'interieur de la fosse ou du coffrage de bois. Les secteur funeraire. Elles presentent des variations de calages sont plus nombreux pour les inhumations en formes de fosses et de positions de membres supe- pleine terre. I! existe cependant des cas de calage rieurs. On remarquera egalement la posteriorite des cephalique dans les coffrages de bois ou lorsque les individus dont les mains sont en avant du thorax sur individus sont inhumes en linceuls. les autres sepultures en pleine terre. Elles se trouvent L 'etude de 1'espace de decomposition met en evi- surtout dans la peripherie E et S du choeur. dence 1' incidence de la nature structurelle de la tom be Les fosses anthropomorphes ou a calage cephali- sur la position des squelettes, en particulier des mem- que semblent posterieures aux sepultures en espace bres superieurs. La position flechie des membres vide. Etude d'identiftcation de N. Moreau et L. Staniaszek (AFAN) Etude des Docteurs C. Obry, E. Marasset, F. Berlemont, Clinique V. Pauchet, Amiens, F. 146 Le site medieval de Saleux "les Coutures": habitat, necropole, et eglises du haut Moyen Age Problematique de la chronologie de la necropole de tion sexuelle fait appara!tre un pourcentage d 'homme Saletu et de femmes apeu pres equivalent face a un nombre important d' indetermines. Ces resultats sont relative- L'handicap majeur dans !'etude de la necropole ment normaux dans le cas d'une population nature lie. de Saleux a reside essentiellement dans la proble- L 'age au deces revele une proportion plus importante matique chronologique. d'immatures par rapport aux adultes. L'age de mor- Si plusieurs sepultures ont pu etre datees assez talite le plus represente chez les enfants etant place precisement par le mobilier funeraire, les edifices de entre 2 et 5 ans. Si l'etude osteometrique montre une culte, le mobilier de comblement et les structures grande heterogeneite au sein de la population, quel- d 'habitat ont foumi des references pour 1' etablisse- ques traits dominants ont toutefois pu etre degages. ment d 'une chronologie relative. L'etude pathologique foumit de nombreux ele- La chronologie relative des tombes entre elles ments d'information. La frequence des atteintes de la repose surtout sur les recherches menees autour des sphere bucco-dentaire par exemple, va dans le sens orientations et des edifices de culte. Ce sont elles qui d 'une hygiene plutot mediocre. Les cas d 'arthroses et ont, le mieux, permis de degager la plupart de nos d'enthesopathies sont plus qu'abondants. Ces lesions conclusions. Cette etude doit encore etre affinee et degeneratives touchent le rachis, alors que certains renforcee, a la fois a travers un travail interne a la individus sont encore tres jeunes. Les fractures des necropole, mais surtout a 1' aide de comparaisons avant-bras, et sur le cote gauche, s'ajoutent a celles avec des sites offrant la meme problematique, ce qui des membres inferieurs. Certaines sont assez remar- a ce stade de notre travail et dans les delais impartis quables et ne sont pas toujours tres bien traitees. Les n' etait absolument pas realisable. cas d'arthrite sont egalement illustres. Cette etude A Saleux, !'utilisation des orientations est im- confirme que la population de Saleux souffrait de portante dans la chronologie ou la topochronologie carences et de troubles de croissance. de la necropole, mais elle ne peut etre systematique. A Saleux, !'etude de !'organisation du cimetiere Un role directeur dans la dynamique spatiale est a implique non pas une vue statique mais dynamique attribuer sans conteste aux edifices religieux et au de !'ensemble. Ces recherches ne peuvent etre me- sarcophage. Et cela, tant au niveau des orientations, nees que dans le cadre d 'une fouille rigoureuse, et que de 1'organisation spatiale en general. Toutefois, suppose une bonne connaissance chronologique des de nombreux facteurs humains (topographie, regles tombes. En effet, ceci exige la reconnaissance de la intemes aune population. 00) ont pu influencer 1'orien- fas:on dont les tombes appartenant aun meme ensem- tation de certaines tombes. ble topographique ont ete disposees au cours du Un grand nombre d' elements topographiques im- temps: s 'agit-il de simples juxtapositions ou existe-t- portants nous echappent en effet totalement: haies, il des surfaces reservees pour un groupe? palissades, levees de terre, chemins, etc ... A Saleux, La fa<;:on dont les diverses reductions de corps ont 1'organisation spatiale des sepultures no us a toutefois ete effectuees peut-etre significative. L' approche permis de distinguer des acces aux edifices, et plu- paleopathologique de type epidemiologique, prenant sieurs espaces de circulation. aussi en compte les differents indicateurs non speci- fiques de "stress" a quanta elle ete realisee. 11 est evident que ces regroupements familiaux ou La population presente aSaleux groupes selon l'age ou le sexe, ou la condition sociale ne vont pas concemer toutes les tombes. Les excel- Les etudes anthropologiques et paleopathologi- lentes etudes realisees a ce sujet, par des historiens, ques ont livre des informations sur la representation retracent a partir des textes et des fouilles, les diffe- de la population, mais aussi sur les agressions envi- rents comportements de l'homme devant la mort, et ronnementales, sur la prise en charge, la malnutrition, !'application des diverses mentalites aux necropoles. cyclique ou non, !'hygiene ... Nous n'oublierons done pas que les emplacements L' etude des indicateurs non specifiques de stress vont dependre, aussi, de facteurs plus materiels: la (hypoplasie de l'email dentaire et lignes de Harris) topographie du cimetiere, le sens de son developpe- sur la population de Saleux revele des carences assez ment, le hasard, ou d'une raison inconnue, des fac- repandues (carences et maladies infectieuses ou meme teurs topographiques, historiques, culturels, socio- a traumatiques) l'origine de troubles de croissance. economiques, et surtout religieux ... L' etude biologique de la necropole, favorisee par un excellent etat de conservation et la presence d' un echantillon complet, a pemis de composer des ima- ges precises de cette population. Ainsi la determina- 147 I. Catteddu Les edifices de culte batiment sur fondation calcaire. C'est a nouveau les positions des sepultures qui suggerent 1, emplacement Si tous les elements precites ont leur place, les des chemins d 'acces. Cet edifice est date par com- eglises et 1'ensemble du contexte religieux occupent paraison autour de la fin Xeme s.- An Mil (meme si sans conteste a Saleux une place primordiale ce plan est connu plus tot). Il est parfaitement oriente Au Vlleme s. et probablement durant une partie E-0 et va entra!ner a son tour une reorientation des du VIIIeme s. les tombes s'organisent autour d'un tombes. sarcophage. Certaines tombes ont conserve le mode Ainsi apres fixation de 1'habitat, un lieu de culte d' organisation en rangees. Le sarcophage eta it pro- s'implante sur la necropole fortifiant ainsi la christia- tege par un edicule en bois dont subsistent les traces. nisation de la population tout en repondant aux Son caractere unique au milieu de toutes ces tombes besoins spirituels immediats de la communaute. Et attire !'attention d'autant qu'il occupe une position plus concretement encore, elle contribue a !'organi- plus elevee par rapport au reste du site et qu'il sera au sation de 1' espace construit. centre des edifices religieux posterieurs. Son orienta- A Saleux, 1' eglise ne constitue pas dans un pre- tion est par ailleurs celle des sepultures les plus mier temps, 1' epicentre. El le est a la fois situee a anciennes. Plusieurs d'entre elles ont livre du mobi- proximite des champs et d'une ou plusieurs maisons, lier funeraire datable des Vlleme et VIIIeme s. Direc- de jardins ou cultures proches de 1'habitat. Mais tement au N du sarcophage, une sorte de seuil etait !'evolution de !'habitat, tel qu'il appara!t grace aux amenage dans le tuf. La tombe primitive avait par fouilles, placera progressivement 1, eglise au centre. ailleurs ete soigneusement videe de tous ossements. Les periodes qui nous concement sont difficiles a Quelques elements de mobilier funeraire etaient epar- definir notamment dans un espace micro-regional pilles au pied et en partie dans le sarcophage (agrafe aux nombreuses facettes. Les facteurs marquants de a double crochet, bague a chaton lisse, perle en pate la fin du VIIeme et le VIIIeme s., c'est-a-dire la dis- de verre, elements de tabletterie avec decor de croix parition du depot funeraire et 1'abandon de nom- inscrite ). breuses necropoles, sont associes, semble-t-il, a une Selon Charles Bonnet, 1'apparition de ces struc- nouvelle rupture dans 1'occupation du sol. Les pro- tures etablies a proximite ou sur des sepultures est a blemes rencontres dans le domaine de la datation du placer plus ou moins tard dans le Haut Moyen Age, mobilier ceramique ne sont pas etrangers aux diffi- selon que 1'on se trouve dans la vallee du Rhone et au cultes de comprehension de !'organisation des habi- sud des Alpes (des le Veme s.) ou dans les pays plus tats. Tandis que de nombreux sites d'habitat sont au N. (fin Vleme- Vlleme s.). Lors de !'edification abandonnes a ce moment precis, de nouveaux appa- des eglises ou des chapelles, elles sont transformees raissent a proximite de territoires deja fortement en chapelle annexe ou inclus dans les murs. Le sou- humanises. venir est maintenu. On assiste ensuite a une nouvelle rupture aux A Saleux, c 'est vers le VIIIeme s. qu'une eglise en alentours de la fin du Xeme s. ou du Xleme s. apres bois est construite a !'emplacement meme de l'edi- avoir observe une croissance du nombre des unites cule et autour de celui-ci. L'acces etait probablement d'exploitations, puis un passage des habitants de ces axial, a la fac;ade occidentale: deux doubles inhuma- habitats disparus, dans des villages ou hameaux. tions sont amenagees juste dans le passage, egale- Entre ces Vlleme et Xleme s., on cherchera a mieux ment restitue par un sentier d'acces borde de tombes. comprendre, en depit d'une problematique chrono- A !'entree E. de !'edifice, Charles Bonnet suggere la logique tres presente, la dynamique d'un village et presence d'un autel. En effet, un espace de 0,7 m X surtout sa naissance, et ce, a travers 1'habitat, la 0,5 m est depourvu de toute inhumation, !'ensemble necropole et 1, eglise. de 1'espace etant densement occupe. Apres 1'eta- Autant de parametre dont 1'etude est plus que blissement de cet edifice en bois, on assiste a un jamais d'actualite. Nous esperons des lors, que le site changement d'orientation radical des tombes. Celles- de Saleux, et sa richesse d'informations, pourront ci vont desormais respecter 1'orientation de 1'eglise apporter ql,.lelques elements de reflexion a cette lon- en bois. Toutefois il n' est pas exclu que certaines gue recherche. En effet, si au niveau regional, le site tombes continuent pendant un temps indefini de sui- de Saleux constitue un inedit, il re! eve une dimension vre celle du sarcophage. La duree du second edifice egalement nationale et europeenne, du fait de la semble couvrir egalement les IXeme et Xeme s. grande rarete d'etablissement de ce type. De nombreuses traces de reamenagement ont ete lsabelle Catteddu reconnues. La nef en bois rectangulaire a fonctionne lng. en archeologie a I'AFAN, responsable d'operation un moment avec un choeur carre en pierre, avant de 69 rue du General de Gaulle, 59!33 Phalempin passer a un nouveau plan parfaitement oriente, et a un France 148 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Rene Proos V enray - 't Brukske, an early medieval settlement on the sandy soils of Limburg Late in 1993, during investigations in the wake of west of the river-valley appears remarkably empty, new major roadworks east ofVenray, a large number devoid of roads and settlements. We will not be far of of traces of medieval settlement were discovered. the mark when assuming this to be the area in which Most of these consisted of buildings, wells and pits, the forebears of early Frankish kings like Childeric dating from between the end of the 5th to the begin- and Clovis had their power base. Prior to 1977, how- ning of the 8th century, and the period from between ever, archaeological proof of the existence of early the middle of the 1Oth to the beginning of the 12th Franks in this area was virtually lacking. Between century. The present paper will focus mainly on the that year and 1990, a total of four settlements dating early medieval settlement-traces. Up till now, we from the 4th and 5th centuries have been unearthed. know very little of the settlements from the period Neerharen-Rekem and Gennep have already been between the end of the Roman occupation to the mentioned and to these we may add Donk near Herk- beginning of the later Middle Ages. Excavations of de-Stad in Belgium 5 and Geldrop in the Netherlands 6. this kind of find-spot were quite rare in the Meuse- And to these four we can now in turn add Venray- valley: most of what we know stems from three 't Brukske, albeit that only part of this settlement settlements excavated in the 1970s and 1980s, name- could be excavated, due to the particular circum- ly Neerharen-Rekem 1, VoerendaaF and Gennep 3 • Of stances surrounding this major road-project. these sites, two (Neerharen-Rekem and Gennep) did The find-spot is situated to the east ofVenray, on not survive the 5th century, the third (Voerendaal) a site just before the point where the motorway cros- does seem to continue into the 8th century but has not ses the swampy grounds of the Oostrumsche Beek, a yet been published in any detail: small brook watering into the Meuse. On early 19th- On the basis of the scanty historical evidence century maps, one can clearly distinguish a large available, it seems probable that around the middle of 'bump' on this spot, presumably a low rectangular the 5th century the emerging kingdom of the Franks hill of about 600 by 300 m. Most of this hill is now extended its territory - which originally stretched gone and only a small part of it is still recognisable from Salland, Twente and Westfalia down into the east of the A73 motorway. Betuwe- into the area formerly known as Toxandria. The discoveries were made in a road-trench run- The total extent of this region in late-Roman times is ning north-south, about 300 m long and generally not not well-known; what seems to be certain is that large wider than 40 m. The extreme narrowness of the parts of the present Dutch provinces of North-Bra- excavation meant that in most cases only part of the bant and Limburg were part of it. On a recent map early medieval buildings could be unearthed; in most compiled by Brulet, charting all the known late-Ro- cases, however, this sufficed to identify and study man fortresses and defensive works, it is plain to see the houses. A number of structures - mainly wells - that main concern of the Empire was the upkeep of could be fairly well dated through the use of 14C and long-distance connections, be it land- or water-based 4 . dendrochronological techniques. The important East-West road running from Cologne Three chronologically separated entities could be to Boulogne was heavily fortified, and the Meuse~ distinguished in the excavation: the first is a mid- valley north of Maastricht also counted a number of Roman cremation cemetery, partly overlain by the fortresses. The area to the north of the road and the traces of the second entity, a settlement from the De Boe et al. 1992, 493-496 Brulet 1993. Willems 1992,526-533. Van Impe et al., 1992,559-562. Heidinga & Offenberg 1992. Bazelmans & Theuws 1990,33-37. 149 R. Proos Venray - 't Brugske: Plan of the major buildings. Scale 1:500. Venray - 't Brugske - North. . :. 0 10th-12th centuries. To the north of these and 0 ( JY Q. •'. 8 .. 'llo • separated from them by what must have been a low- .0 lying and moist gully, lay the early medieval settle- ment. The settlement belonging to the Roman burial ground has not been found yet, but judging from the period of the cremations (which runs well into the 3rd century), we may assume that the settlement was deserted by about the middle of that century. In the course of the first half of the 5th century, new people arrived on this spot which is well-suited to habitation, located as it is along the edge of a stream- valley. The surrounding countryside offered lots of possibilities for exploiting up arable lands and mea- dows. The uncultivated land around the edges of the cultivated area supplied the newcomers with wood for buildings and fuel. We have not actually found any I buildings from this period yet, but one of the wells - already remarkable for containing only wheel-turned late-Roman pottery - was positively dated between been dug right through each other. They both con- 400 and 440 AD by means of the 14C method. Two tained only wheel-turned pottery, presumably im- wells date from the second half of the 5th century; they ported from the Rhineland. But here as well, buildings are located quite close to the Roman burials, having dating from the same period are missing. 150 Venray - 't Brukske, an early medieval settlement on the sandy soils of Limburg CO•© ~ ~ a .;st ~ C9 0 ~ 0 0@ t c~ il ~ ~0 0 Ei> @ ' . ~ \ <11 ~ Q. ·~ 0 - •• \) 0 • --- --- 0 D ' • ~~ ~ <Q) 0 ~ --- © • ~ Venray- 't Brugske: house 1. Venray- 't Brugske: house 3. This image of the settlement slowly changed in In the course of the first half of the 7th century the the course of the 6th century. Both a small building, settlement consisted of three two-aisled buildings, probably a granary or a barn, as well as two separ- again orientated north-south. The northern house is ately located a-typical pits of a hitherto unknown accompanied by two wells, both dated dendrochro- function, contained pottery datable to the first half of nologically to 629/630, whereas one of the southern the 6th century. The only grave found so far dates houses has two Grubenhauser, as well as a small from around the middle of that century. It must have building, probably a barn, located in the immediate been a woman buried here, because in the grave a vicinity. large number of beads were found, along with a plain The possibility that the third and smallest two- iron buckle, a small knife and a large grey pot. aisled building is older cannot be ruled out; the few Unfortunately, both the beads and the top of the pot fragments of pottery found in this house were hand- went missing soon after the excavation, so the dating made and are difficult to date. The building has been of the grave rests solely on the shape of the buckle allocated to this phase because of the similarity in and the shape and fabric of the pot. orientation with its neighbour. During the second half of the 6th century the pic- A drastic change appears to have taken place ture becomes clearer. A large three-aisled building · during the course of the second half of the 7th appeared, orientated along a north-south axis, with century. New house with an east-west orientations entrances set in the middle of the long gables and were built and several small pits appeared here and opposite one another. Associated with the house are there, filled with iron slag, burnt bones and burnt a large well and a small pit-dwelling, a so-called pottery. A large well, dated dendrochronologically to Grubenhaus, and presumably also a palisade which 693, also took its place in this phase. The house with became derelict in the next phase. A small building the rounded end-gable (House #6) must have burnt of unknown function was built against the palisade. down to the ground quite quickly; its sudden demise 151 R. Proos :~'P..i €lP • 0 • Venray- 't Brugske: house 4. ~ ~ oO " • tlfiP ~,·~:.i • X Ill •• • i4) ,;!f:; ;'f.J tft~~l ';~ '•~ • 0 •• i~~~~ Cl ' 0 \'.~ e ,.t • 0 • e .. 0 0 • 4l , ·~ 0 '.. ·~ .:; ·-···~ . I- l -ITT T allowed us to reconstruct its plan because the post- axis, has probably been excavated in its entirety, the holes concerned contained large amounts of charcoal. groundplan as it is presented here is by no means Finally, we arrive in the 8th century. Only one certain. We are looking at a three-aisled, so-called house remains in this part of the settlement. It is a multi-purpose building, housing both the living building of the wide three-aisled type, the likes of which accommodations for people and a stable for cattle, as have come to light more recently in excavations in well as storage-space for the harvest. the south of the Netherlands. The rest of the settle- It must have been about 20 m long and 7 m wide, ment has probably been relocated in a northwesterly built by means of a large number of relatively small direction by way of the neighbouring Antoniusveld. posts forming the frame of a wattle-and-daub wall. On this Antoniusveld, quite an extensive excav- Towards the middle of the house two entrances can ation-campaign took place in the summer of 1996. A be discerned, set immediately opposite one another. large number of house-plans, this time dating mainly The southern half of the building seems to have been from the late Merovingian period to the 12th century, used for housing the cattle; at least three sets of post- were discovered here. holes seem to indicate the same number of cattle- boxes. A few posts located within the building, im- mediately south of the entrances, presumably indic- The Houses ate a wall which separated the stable from the living quarters of the humans. In the north-eastern gable, a The space available does not allow me to deal small part of the wattle-and-daub construction that with every building in detail here. However, a couple once made up the walls has survived. of the most noteworthy houses do merit closer The main problem with the house lies in its north- inspection. em part, because a large part of the western wall, Apart from being one of the oldest houses in the presumed to have stood here, has disappeared. But settlement, house #4 also posed a number of diffi- the southern part also poses a problem. It looks as if culties when it came to reconstructing its groundplan. behind the short gable, a second wall was placed here Although the building, orientated on a north-south later on, thus creating a small room of about one by 152 Venray- 't Brukske, an early medieval settlement on the sandy soils of Limburg • ~ ~~ 0 • 'lli • :P (J~~ () 1 :.; • "' 'J~ 9ij ~ c ~; :ill l!i1l CJ "' --- -- Venray- 't Brugske: house 6. excavated in Dalen (prov. ofDrenthe) 8 shows a lot of similarities with House #4; the main difference, how- ever, is the repeated occurrence of four entrances in houses of the Odoom-B type, whereas House #4 only seems to have two. Buildings of the Odoom-B type Venray- 't Brugske: house 5, are dated by Waterbolk in the 6th/7th centuries; Huijts9 also sticks to this periodisation, although Kooi, six meters. Perhaps we should see this room as a sort backed by the results of recent excavations in Peelo, of storage-room; its small dimensions suggest it recently proposed a slightly earlier date for both the cannot have had any housing- or stable-functions. Archaeological parallels for House #4 are hard to find. Construction-wise, there are quite a few simil- Waterbolk 1973. arities with the well-known houses of type Odoom Dalen House C, see Huijts 1992, 137, afb. 139. B7, in the north of the Netherlands; especially a house Huyts 1992, 137. 153 R. Proos Riverhine area and along the coast, a totally different X building-tradition had been adopted in the 7th cen- tury. When pushed, one could see Building 26 from ~~ Dommelen 11 as a parallel, but this building is about ~ X half a century younger. More easily comparable ..• S> • 7 ~ house-plans, in terms of both size and chronology, come from Germany 12 , France 13 and Belgium 14 . I These buildings vary in length between 7 and 14 m, ~ while their width lies between 4 and 7 m. All date ~ I from the 7th century. House #2 lies to the east of House #3 and part ~ overlaps it. It was orientated on a east-west axis and .;:.l\ ;;: about 6 m wide. The reconstructible length now measures 10.5 m, but it was most certainly longer than that. It is a one-aisled building; two possible entrances show themselves in the north- and in the south wall respectively; they are set opposite one another and are located on the spot where the post- holes were set together more closely. It seems as if House #2 was supplied with an extension on the northern side. These extensions or 'kubbingen' (to use the Dutch phrase) do show up more often in early medieval buildings. They are usually associated with i ~ specific activities or functions, such as for instance housing cattle 15 . Ceramics associated with the house point to a construction in the second half of the 7th century. T One-aisled houses occur in large parts of north- western Europe during the 7th and early 8th cen- turies16. Mostly, when fire-places are lacking, they are interpreted as barns, but this explanation does not hold very easily in Venray. The only fire-place found Venray- 't Brugske: house 9. here and identified positively as such was located outside any identifiable configuration; a second pos- Odoorn Band Odoorn C types ofhouses 10 . Anyway, sible fire-place lies within House #5, all other build- the ceramics found within House #4 point at a con- ings lack a fire-place. In other words, the absence of structional phase in the second half of the 6th cen- a fire-place within a partly excavated building- be it tury, but no later than around 600 AD. because ofpost-depositional processes or because of House #3 was probably built in the same period, or perhaps a little later. It is a two-aisled building, its main axis also lies north-south, and it measures 14 by 5.5 m. A possible entrance is located in the middle of ° 1 Kooi 1991-92 and Kooi 1993-94. 11 Theuws 1991. the eastern long gable, at the point where two post- 12 For instance at Speyer (Bemhard 1982); G1adbach (Wagner, holes are closely set together. A second entrance Hussong & Mylius 1938; Sage 1969); Lauchheim (Stork 1995) could have possibly been located in the middle of the and Burgweinting (Osterhaus 1987). northern small gable. However, it is quite possible 13 Juvincourt-et-Damary (Bayard 1989). 14 that a third entrance was located in the western long Rogge 1981. 15 wall; the traces of it must have been destroyed at the See for instance 'maison 8' at Juvincourt-et-Damary (Bayard 1989) or 'Haus 19' ofKirchheim near Miinchen (Christlein 1981, time when House #2 was built. In other words: House Geisler 1988), both dating from the 7th century. #3 did not exist any more by the time House #2 was 16 For example in Warendorf (Germany), where one-aisled erected. The ceramics of House #3 show the building houses of 14 by 4.5 m and 16 by 5 m were found (Winkelmann was put up late in the 6th century or - even more 1958); Speyer (Germany), where a one-aisled house of I0 by 6 m has been found (Bemhard 1982); Vreden (Germany) where a one- probable- in the first half of the 7th century. aisled house of 14 by 5 m stood in the 8th century (Reichmann House-plans comparable to House #3 are hard to 1982) and West Stow (GB) where a 7th-century one-aisled house come by in the Netherlands. North of the Central (Hall 2) of 9 by 4.5 m was located (West 1985). 154 Venray - 't Brukske, an early medieval settlement on the sandy soils of Limburg Venray - 't Brugske: Venray - 't Brugske: out-building B5. hay-stack. 0 To conclude, when looking at the settlement as a whole, it might well be termed remarkable to see the number and the variety of house-plans within a period of about two centuries. Furthermore, the high percentage of wheel-turned, imported pottery, both in 5th- as well as in 6th- and 7th-century wells and pits 24 stands in marked contrast to the situation north of the great rivers. A readily available explanation for this phenom- enon cannot be given at this moment. It may, however, well be wise to keep in mind that we have to deal with influences from all sorts of directions in the limitations of the excavation circumstances - this northern part of the Meuse-valley during the cannot be used in this instance as a negative proof period in which early states were formed. The against the existence of one-aisled houses. Another location of the region, right next to one major river argument against a barn-function for House #2 is the and in close proximity to another, guaranteed a con- occurrence of a separated space of about 3 by 5 m in stant influx of new ideas and goods. We may not be the eastern part of the building. Barns usually do not far off the mark when assuming the northern part of have an internal spatial division, while buildings with the Meuse-valley to have been some sort of cultural a combined living- and stable- function usually do. turntable, functioning simultaneously both as a buf- House #5, the next door neighbour of House 2, fer and as a serving-hatch. had a three-aisled ground plan, orientated east-west. It must have been about 11 m wide; it is difficult to reconstruct its original length, but the building must Literature have been at least between 10 and 12.5 m long. An entrance was not discernable and may have been BAZELMANS J. & F. THEUWS (eds.) 1990: Tussen zes located in the unexcavated eastern end of the house. gehuchten: de laat-Romeinse en middeleeuwse Judging from the pottery, the house had been built bewoning van Geldrop- 't Zand, Amsterdam. around the beginning of the 8th century. A building BERNHARD H. 1982: Die fri.ihmittelalterliche Sied- fairly well comparable in terms size and building- lung Speyer "Vogelgesang", OFFA 39, 217-233. tradition was unearthed a couple of years ago in Weert, B6HNER K. 1958: Die frankischen Altertilmer des about 35 km. to the south ofVenrayi7. Trierer Landes, Berlin. Other closely related house-plans are known in BRULET R. 1993: Les dispositifs militaires du Bas- Wijk-bij-Duurstede/De Geer 18 , Gassel 19 , Dommelen20 Empire en Gaule septentrionale, in: Fr. V ALLET & and Geldrop 21 • In Germany, this type ofbuilding has M. KAZANSKI (ed.), L 'armee romaine et les Bar- been excavated in Breberen 22 and Marl-Sinzig 23 • bares du 3e au 7e siecle. Actes du Colloque inter- 17 Roymans 1995, 20-21, fig. 17-18. excavated in Brenz a.d. Brenz (Baden-Wilrttemberg, Knaut 1990) 18 and Irlbach (Bavaria, Osterhaus 1993). Certainly remarkable is VanEs 1994,233, afb. 195. 19 Verhoeven & Vreenegoor 1991. the fact that two of the buildings in question (Breberen and Brenz 20 Theuws 1991, 360-362, fig. 11. a.d. Brenz) seem to have been early churches (cf. Bohner 1958; 21 Bazelmans & Theuws 1990,33-37, afb. 14-15. Knaut I990). 22 24 Taken in its entirety, about 95 % of the pottery found in the Bohner 1958, 461, Ab b. 18. 23 Trier 1981, 219-220. Closely related types have also been settlement turned out to be imported. 155 R. Proos national organise par le Musee des Antiquites STORK I. 1995: Furst und Bauer, Heide und Christ. Nationales et l'URA 880 du CNRS (Saint- 10 Jahre archiiologische Forschungen in Lauch- Germain-en-Laye, 24-28fevrier 1990), 135-148. heim/Ostalbkreis, Stuttgart. DE BOE G., DE BIE M. & VAN lMPE L.: Neerharen- THEUWS F. 1991: Landed property and manorial or- Rekem. Die komplexe Besiedlungsgeschichte ganisation in Northern Austrasia: some considera- einer vor den Kiesbaggem geretteten Fundstatte, tions and a case study, in: ROYMANS N. & F. in: Spurensicherung. Archiiologische Denkmal- THEUWS (eds.), Images of the past. Studies on pjlege in der Euregio Maas-Rhein. Ausstellung ancient societies in Northwestern Europe, Am- aus An/ass der Offnung der Grenzen innerhalb sterdam, 299-397. der Europiiischen Gemeinschaft zum 1. 1. 1993. TRIER B. 1981: Neue Ergebnisse der archaologischen Aachen, 14. Juli-13. September 1992, Kunst und Hausforschung in Westfalen, in: A. VAN DOORSE- Altertum am Rhein 136, Mainz, 477-496. LAER (ed.), De Merovingische beschaving in de Es W.A. VAN 1994: Wijk bij Duurstede-De Geer, in: Scheldevallei: handelingen van het internationaal W.A. VANEs & W.A.M. 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The Netherlands 156 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Dries Tys Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast 1 Taking into account the importance of the excav- 2 The formation of the landscape, the High Mid- ation of the shrunken village ofWal-Raversyde it was dle Ages worthwhile to subject the landscape in which the vil- lage emerged and developed to a historical exam- At the end of the lOth century, the landscape seems ination. More particularly, we paid attention to the to have been very much as it originated after the so- exploitation of the physical landscape and the use of called post-Roman inundation-phase between the 4th the cultural landscape thus created, looking also at and 8th century A.D. (formerly referred to as the the evolution of the physical presence of humankind Dunkirk !!-transgression; Baeteman & Denys 1997, in that landscape from the High Middle Ages to the 8). During these inundations, the causes of which are Early Modern Times. yet to be fully explained, a tidal channel which separ- ated a strip of land from the mainland was formed in the peat-moor between the present towns ofNieuw- 1 A brief word about methodology poort and Ostend (Prof. Baeteman pers. comm.). Af- ter the flooded coastal area evolved into salt-marshes, We focused on the settlement itself, using a retro- the separate strip of land eventually formed the so- gressive and interdisciplinary reconstruction of the called geographical entity of Testerep, on which the historical landscape in and near Wal-Raversyde. The research-area is located (Fig. 2). The salt-marshes on starting point of this reconstruction was the mid- Testerep were used to herd sheep. The wool of these 19th-century land registry plan of the Section Raver- sheep was probably an important factor in the devel- syde of the municipality ofMiddelkerke. At the same opment of the textile industry in the rising Flemish time, this plan provided us with the circumscription towns of that time and also constituted the basis of of the research area. Starting from there and making the economic power and wealth of the major abbeys. good use of the many historical sources (18th-cen- The donation in 992 and 995 of two terrae ad oves 2 tury drawn and painted maps and various 18th- and or 'sheepland' on Testerep to the Ghent St.-Peter's 17th-century copies of parochiallandbooks from 1628 abbey laid the foundation of the domain of the St.- and 1534) we succeeded in reconstructing in some Peter's abbey on Testerep. This domain is the most detail the 17th- and 16th-century organisation of the important part of the landscape examined and can be plots in the research area. On the strength of the data reconstructed without problems on the map of the found in the extensive archives of the abbey of Saint- research-area (Fig. 1). Peter's in Gent, which owned by far the larger part of Until the 11th century, these sheeplands on Tes- the area, and of the many geological and particularly terep were constantly threatened by flooding from archaeological data (surface finds on the beach and the tidal channel on the landside. Eventually this systematic excavations by the Institute for the Archeo- problem was controlled, probably at the latest around logical Heritage), we were able to further reconstruct 1100 A.D., by the construction of the so-called Kaai- the evolution of the larger part of the landscape go- dijk ('quay-' or 'embankment'-dike). This Kaaidijk ing back as far as 992 A.D. divided the research area into two zones: a now well- protected oudland ('oldland') zone on Testerep and I wish to thank my brother M. Tys, for the English transla- FA YEN A. 1906, Liber tradition urn Sancti Petri Blandi- tion of this text, S. Moemaut for the drawing of the figures I, 4 a niensis. Livre des donations faites I 'abbaye de Saint-Pierre de and 5 and Prof. Dr. F. Verhaeghe for his help in general. Gand, depuis ses originesjusq 'aux X!ieme siec/e, avec des addi- tionsjusq'en 1273, Gand, 1906, 95-nr. 100 and 96-nr. 102. !57 D. Tys 0 fOO 200 300 400 .100m NOORDZEE LEFFINGE Fig. 1. - The main parts of the research-area. Above the "Kaaidijk" we find the "oldland", the original Testerep. Underneath the "Kaaidijk" we find the "new land", the reclaimed tidal channel. The largest part of the area is formed by the domain of the Abbey ofSt.-Peter's (Gent), which exists of original land on the "oldland" and recovered land on the "new land". an unprotected wet or flooded one (which would be- channel by Count Philip of Alsace between 1165 and come the nieuwland or 'newland') along the channel. 1173, which united Testerep with the mainland again Recent geological findings show that Testerep was (Verhulst 1995, 53-54). What remained of the old not ravaged by floods of any great importance after tidal channel was a large ditch called Groat Ge!eed the early Middle Ages (Pieters 1993, 251 and 255). (Fig. 2). The reclamation of the channel meant an im- The investment in a defensive dike screening the portant extension of the agricultural area. In the 'oldland' suggests that the latter area had an eco- meantime, the research area went through an impor- nomic value well worth protecting. Besides, these tant evolution during the course of particularly the lands no longer consisted of salt-marshes, but now 12th century. Although the sources leave somewhat consisted of salty and other meadows. However, in to be desired for this period, we can establish that contrast to prof. Verhulst's (1995, 91) theory, we feel during that phase: that this never put a stop to specialised sheepherding, 1) specialised sheepherding made way for cattle- since the domain ofSt.-Peter's was transformed into breeding and agriculture, a berquaria (a sheepfarm that was let in exchange for 2) the population of the area grew considerably a certain tribute), probably at the end of the 11th cen- leading to the emergence of the first villages on Tes- tury and at least until 1133 3 • terep, even before the reclamation of the channel was The open, unprotected zone along the tidal chan- completed, nel and the channel itself evolved into a cultural land- 3) the St.-Peter's domain was leased by several scape in the 12th century. The 'newland' (or novae individual agricultural enterprises 5 and terrae) zone of Testerep was partly formed by the 4) cropfarming began to intensify. gradual and passive drying out of the wet and flooded Why did sheepherding disappear to be replaced by lands ofSt.-Peter's in the first quarter of the 12th cen- cattle-breeding and farming? Did cattle-produce and tury4 and partly by the active reclamation of the tidal industrial crops bring in more on the urban markets? DE HEMPETINE T. & VERHULST A., De oorkonden der Idem. Graven van Vlaanderen ljuli 1128-september /191). Regering See the description of the domain in the Liber lnventarius van Diederik van den Elzas Ouli 1128-januari 1168), Brussel, Omnium Bonorum from 1281 (Rijksarchief Gent, fonds St.- 1988, 51-54, nr. 25. Pietersabdij, f050v 0 and 114v0 -ll5r0 ). 158 Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast ... D Z. 'W« ,r.... d" ler .81rup Fig. 2. -Rough reconstruction-map ofTesterep and the tidal-channel which separated Testerep form the mainland. After the reclamation of the tidal-channel remained a large ditch, called the "Groot Geleed". Was it perhaps the growth of the population which the original landing-place should be the one located led to an increase of the demand for cereals (and thus on what is now the beach. Until the end of the 1970, also for fertiliser)? Or could it have been the arrival the remains of this village could be seen on the beach, of English wool, which may have been of higher where they were thoroughly researched by A. quality? These are questions which our sources do Chocqueel, E. Cools and A. Mortier. This hyde pos- not answer and which are part of a complex problem. sibly originated at the same time as the other hyde- In any case, the development outlined above, testifies places along the Flemish coast around the mid-13th to the favourable conjuncture in the High Middle century, albeit within the framework of the seignorial Ages, which according to prof. Thoen (1988, 1075- policy of Countess Margareth ofConstantinopel who 1077), resulted in Flanders from the early commerc- aimed at promoting the Flemish ports. Anyway, it is ial orientation and limited impositions on the econ- worth noting that the original village was located on omic surplus. Countal territory, west of the domain of St.-Peter's. According to the findings on the beach, the village moved more to the east during the 14th century (E. 3 Settlement in the 13th and 14th century: the Cools, pers. comm.), while a rudimentary landbook origins of Walraversyde of the domain from 1357 proves that in that year part of the village was located inside the borders of the It is, however, within the context of this new agri- domain 7 . Unfortunately, there is no other historical cultural structure that Walraversyde originates in the information about the 13th- and 14th-century village second half of the 13th century. The oldest written to confront with the archeological finds on the beach. testimony of the village dates from 1290, when les Therefore, as we will see later, our knowledge of the poisonniers de Wiltravenszeide are indebted to the 13th- and 14th-century Walraversyde is very weak in city ofYpres 6 . The place-name means the hyde, land- comparison with our knowledge of the 15th- and ing-place or wharf, of a certain Walraf and is com- 16th-century village. parable to the toponyms Lombardsyde and Koksyde. This 13th-century hyde could be situated along the bank of what remained of a small tidal channel that 4 Settlement in the 13th and 14th century: the ran into the sea in the research-area, or as Chocqueel agricultural structure of the domain ofSt.-Peter's called it une petite baie naturelle (Chocqueel 1950, 88 and E. Cools, pers. comm.). The settlement along We have more data concerning the agricultural inhabitation of the domain of St.-Peter's behind the village. This settlement was densely built and popul- ated. According to the landbook of 1357 some 50 WYFFELS C., Analyse des reconnaissances des dettes passees farmsteads and houses were to be found in an area of devant les echevins d 'Ypres (1249-1291. Editees se/on le approximately 194 hectares. Many of them probably manuscrit de t Guillaume Des Marez. Brussel, 1991, nr. 5204. 7 Rijksarchief Gent, Fonds St.-Pietersabdij, Reeks I, had a moat. Like Veurne Ambacht this area had a Goederenbeheer Brugse Kwartier, Rek. 806d. great density of isolated Einzelhofe in the mid-14th 159 D. Tys century 0/erhaeghe 1981, 109-111). Besides, most of not as favourable as before, which was generally the moated sites in Veurne Ambacht had originated caused by falling incomes and rising impositions between the end of the 12th century and the mid-14th (Mertens 1967,51-52 and Thoen 1988, 1030). More century (ibidem, 106). This might be an indication for specifically, the crisis hit the area a first time with the the development ofmoated farmsteads and houses in outbreak of the war between the town of Gent and the the domain. At the same time, the agricultural lands Count of Flanders, between 1379 and 1385, which were cut up rather strongly amongst many, mainly had major consequences for the Flemish coast. The smaller, leaseholders (see Fig. 6), whilst the majority sources tell us that the fields and the farmsteads at the of the agricultural enterprises in that area were small domain of St.-Peter's were temporarily abandoned (between 1.5 and 4 hectares) and submarginal (less during the years of war 9. Together with the burdens than 1.5 hectares) ventures. This evolution was prob- and destructions caused by war, this meant a great ably influenced in a positive way by the favourable loss of income for the different holdings in the area. economical conjuncture of the High Middle Ages, The war and the intensive use of the dunes in the dec- with high incomes and low taxes and other liabilities. ades before the war had weakened the strength of the This situation favoured particularly the smaller, more dunebelt so much that the village and the domain suf- intensive and commercially oriented agricultural fered from severe sand-drifts. The weakening and enterprises, that had strongly grown in number before drifting of the dunes made Walraversyde and the do- 1357 (Verhulst, 1990,67-74 and 85). main very vulnerable to storms and floods. Therefore The excessive fragmenting of the holdings and it is not surprising that the flood of 1393 became a the increasing liabilities in the 14th century may have large disaster for the whole of the central part of the caused such problems that pauperization and 'pro- Flemish coastal area. The domain of St.-Peter's alone letarisation' took place within the group of small en- lost no less than 35 ha to the inundations and sand- terprises, which resulted in a growing number of sub- drifts resulting from the flood of 1393. The dunes marginal holdings (ibidem, 84-85 and 115). From even drifted all over the village and into the domain, that time onwards, the sources do not refer any longer where they formed a new but very weak dunebelt. to these small holdings as farmsteads. But the term The village had no other option than to be- probably used is plaetsen daer zy up woenen 8 or 'places where in its totality- rebuilt behind the new dunebelt, on they live', in other words cottages. Also the appear- lands which belonged to the domain. The remainders ance at that time of the parochial institution called the of this relocated and newly built Walraversyde are 'table of the poor' (in both the parishes of Sint- nowadays the object of the systematic excavations of Mariakerke and Middelkerke) is an indication of a this site, directed by Marnix Pieters of the Institute certain pauperization of the agricultural population. for the Archeological Heritage. What remained of the Possible solutions for the subsistence-problems of old, drifting dunebelt, was washed away by the sea, the inhabitants of the submarginal and small ventures so that the ruins of 13th- and 14th-century Walraver- consisted of performing wage work on the larger syde came to lie on the (new) beach before the dunes, holdings, the exploitation of the clay and peat in the where they remained visible until 1980. underground, or maybe even fishing at sea. It is not This severe crisis had important consequences for impossible that the development of Walraversyde both the village and the domain. During the first was influenced by the 14th-century subsistence pro- years of the 15th century, the rentholders of the do- blems in the domain and its surroundings. main were not able to pay their rents because of their poverty ('mits den aermoede van den volke') 10 . The structural character of the consequences of the crisis 5 The crisis of the late 14th and early 15th cen- is shown in the landbook of the domain from the year tury and its consequences on landscape and settle- 1463 11 • This landbook shows how the agricultural ment structure of the domain had been changed completely in comparison to the situation in 13 57. Only 6 out of The situation changed completely as a result of the 50 14th-century farmsteads and houses still several closely connected events at the end of the existed in 1463, together with several moats and 14th century. The village as well as the domain suf- ruins of vanished farmsteads and cottages. Thus, an fered heavily from a severe crisis between 1360 and important phenomenon of Hofivustungen had occur- 1420. In this period the conjuncture in Flanders was red in the domain in the years between 1357 and Idem. 10 Idem, Rek. 832a, F 8 V0 • Idem, Rek. 837/2 and I. 314, F 5 r0 -7 r0 • 11 Idem, Rek. 841 p. 160 Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast 0 20 40 60 80 lOOm Duinen Duinen Zeedijk Zeedijk ;;;: --r.s<6!7 r::l- r.:, - t-;.,- 61- I 97 I - •.. 'CI.EJ i.!!.J I~~; 60 I :~~ I 1 98 1 ~ ~J I I I I I I OD Fig. 3.- Reconstruction-map of the village of Walraversyde according to the landbook of 1534. The squares show us how many houses stood on esch plot in the village, while the dotted squares symbolise the houses which had disappeared by the year 1534. The mill was situated on plot M and the brewery of the willage on plot BR. The rectangular symbols stand for farmsteads and the Roman numbers indicate the different streets, paths and rivelets in the village. On the north- side, the village is edged by the sea-dike. 1463. The fragmenting of the domain of a century ban proletariat of, for instance, Bruges, and maybe a earlier had equally disappeared and the land was now few settled in the new village ofWalraversyde, work- concentrated in the hands of four larger landowners ing as fishermen or earning a living as wageworkers and their agricultural enterprises (more than 10 ha.) on one of the larger farms. (see also Fig. 6). The smaller and the submarginal en- In the 15th century, Walraversyde probably had a terprises disappeared almost completely from the mixed economy which included not only seamen, but area. An explanation for this structural change can be also craftsmen and wageworkers. There was prob- found in the crisis we mentioned earlier. It is possi- ably a close relation between the large and probably ble that high impositions, high costs (cf. the damage concentrated 15th-century village and the open agri- of the war and the storm), important losses because cultural area with only a few isolated farmsteads of the temporary leaving of the domain during the (most of which still exist today) behind the village. crisis, a high mortality and a low reproduction forced At the top of the social structure in the village prob- most of the farmers into such a poverty that particu- ably stood the masters of the fishing-fleet, who prob- larly the peasants of the small and the submarginal ably not only owned their ship but also worked as ventures were forced to sell and abandon their hold- traders and even pirates. These 'skippers' had an im- ings and/or that most small farms and cottages fell portant part in the foundation and enlargement of the into decay. In the first decades of the 15th century, chapel of St.-John, which was built in the new village the abandoned and ruined holdings may have led to around 1435, and also in its possessions (Vlietinck such a supply of land that its value dropped; this in 1889, 14-15). In the 15th century, the fishing fleet of turn favoured the concentration of the abandoned Walraversyde became one of the five major sea-fish- lands into the hands of four larger ventures. The ing fleets in Flanders (the others were those of Dun- question which arises is what happened to the inhab- kirk, Newport, Ostend and Heist). Apart from the his- itants of the abandoned farms and cottages. Some torical data, the recent excavations in this 15th-cen- probably perished, others might have joined the ur- tury Walraversyde also offer us vital information 161 D. Tys about the village. The fruitful confrontation of the shrunken village, and, as we said earlier this process archeological and historical data makes it possible to was already engaged by the beginning of the 16th reconstruct successfully not only the topographical century. situation and spatial pattern of the village but also the Although the war and the temporary abandonment social-economical conditions of its inhabitants (e.g. of the area probably led to a great loss of income for Pieters, Ervynck, Van Neer & Verhaeghe 1995). the domain, it seems that the larger farms had over- come this difficult period without too many pro- blems. On the contrary, in the 16th century the prop- 6 Difficulties between c. 1470 and 1570: the erty of this larger holdings had increased even more shrinking of Walraversyde in comparison with the situation in the 15th century (see Fig. 6). This means that the agricultural structure At the end of the 15th century, the area had to deal which had come into existence in the previous cen- with the violence of war once again. The war bet- tury had been consolidated, notwithstanding the ween the regent Maximilian of Austria and a coal- emergence in the domain of a few smaller farms. It is ition between Bruges and Gent (between 1483 and very striking that the lands of this larger farms were 1493) took part for a great deal between Nieuwpoort equally concentrated topographically around the and Ostend. The domain and the village lay right farmsteads themselves. It is possible that we are deal- between the fighting parties and were probably ing with an early example of re-parcelling. deserted for several years. Once again, the conse- The shrunken village ofWalraversyde did not re- quences of this desertion were important, though not cover in the 16th century. Quite to the contrary, the as important as in the previous century. The historical village had again to deal with limited sand-drifts, the sources tell us that many houses had been abandoned village-brewery closed its doors and the fishing-fleet and were 'delapidated and ruined' (syn vervallen suffered from the increased danger at sea. Indeed, ende te rui'ne) as a direct result of the conflict 12 . during the 16th century the Channel and the North Another source, the landbook of the parish ofMiddel- Sea were terrorised by different belligerent parties kerke of 1534, describes in detail how many houses and the Flemish fishermen were obliged to arrange stood on each plot in Walraversyde at that time 13 (see for armed convoy-ships to protect their fleet (Coor- Fig. 3). It also describes more particularly which part naert 1970, 140-145). of the village had been abandoned in the previous years. It is striking that in 1534, in comparison with the location of the village in the 15th century, almost 7 The Eighty Years' War and its consequences: the complete north-eastern part of the village had the end of the village of Walraversyde disappeared (see Fig. 3). This is also the part of the village which has been the subject of the recent sys- The lack of safety at sea was only a prelude to the tematic excavations by the Institute for the Archae- disaster which followed with the Eighty Years' War, ological Heritage (see Pieters 1993, 1994 and 1995). which started in 1567. Throughout the coastal area, This archeological research proved - independently the war situation lasted for 40 years. It started with a from the historical evidence - that the houses in the blockade of the Flemish ports by the Watergeuzen. north-western part of the village were probably As a reaction, mercenary troops were sent to the abandoned before the end of the 15th century (idem coast, where they started to plunder and loot them- 1994, 295). Thus the historical and archeological data selves (Geldhof 1982, 55-56). During the following do not contradict one another and their confrontation years, the war hit the coastal plain very hard. Wal- confirmed the hypothesis that the whole of the north- raversyde and the domain were almost completely eastern quarter of Walraversyde was deserted and deserted between 1571 and 1581 (see Fig. 5). 1581 ruined before the first years of the 16th century be- was the year in which the dikes that surrounded the cause of the war against Maximilian of Austria. It Calvinistic bastion ofOstehd were breached in order seems that this part of the village was abandoned to defend the town. From then onwards and for sev- rather systematically, but this problem needs further eral years, the domain was flooded by the sea 14 , investigation. Anyway, the result of the events of the which made the area uninhabitable. During the fol- . late-15th century.was that Walraversyde became a lowing years, war raged on and ravaged the vicinity 12 Idem, Rek. 840h, p. 415. original from 1534. 13 14 Rijksarchief Gent, Fonds St.-Pietersabdij, Reeks I, Private collection Van Der Heyden (Leffinge), ommeloper van de parochies Middelkerke en Mariakerke, 1666, copy of an Goederenbeheer Brugse kwartier, rek. 845a, f" 37 V 0 • 162 Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast 0 20 40 60 80 lOOm Duinen Fig. 4.- Reconstruction-map of the remains of the village ofRaversyde after the Spanish War, according to the landbook of 1628. In comparison with the situation in 1534, the largest part of the village had disappeared. Only a small number of village-houses around the chapel remained. In the north-west of the village, the dunes had craned the sea-dike and bured several houses. Along these dunes a new path was drawn, called the "slaghe van den dune". ofOstend completely. In 1598, the sources tell us that village, as well as the first attempts of recovery in the the domain lay waste, because of the 'destruction of area 17 • The landbook describes how almost all the these parts through troubles and war' (verwoestinghe houses in the village from before the conflict had dis- van selver kwartiere deur de troubelen ende oor- appeared (Fig. 4). Most of the plots on which the vil- loghe15). While in the last decade of the 16th century lage of Raversyde once stood, were now fields and the larger part of Flanders and its coast started to re- meadows. The plots just behind the old seadike and cover, Ostend and its surroundings remained a battle- the seadike itself had been covered by the sand of the field and this until 1604. Only in that year, Spinola 's drifting dunes. The present Duinenweg ('Dunes' troops succeeded in capturing the last stronghold of road') still follows the edge ofthis late 16th and early the Calvinist troops in the Southern Netherlands. For 17th-century sand-drifts (Fig. 4). The village ofRaver- the first time in 40 years (some) peace returned to the syde had not, however, disappeared completely. region. During the siege of Ostend, the abandoned Around the mill and the ruined chapel a few houses village ofRaversyde, as it was called from the begin- remained. In contrast to some of the other villages ning of the 17th century onwards, served as military which had suffered from the war, the shrunken camp for Spinola's cavalry (Vlietinck 1889, 39-40). village of Raversyde did not recover. A lot of re- The first year in which the St.-Peter's abbey search has yet to be done on this problem, but with started to collect again the rents in the domain behind some caution we would venture to bring forward Raversyde, and thus also the first year in which the some interesting explanatory elements. According to domain was taken into use again, was 1610 16 • In us, one of the most important explanations is to be 1628, a new landbook of the parish of Middelkerke found in the enormous economic damage caused by shows the effects of the war on the domain and the the war along the coast in general and in Raversyde 15 Idem, F 67 v0 • 17 Rijksarchief Brugge, Ommelopers verzameling Mestdagh, 16 Idem, rek. 845c, F 27 V 0 • nr. 923, 1628. 163 D. Tys % 19th century, when Raversyde and its surroundings 100% finally got new impulses from rising coastal tourism. 100 At the same time, some local historians and anti- quarians started to become interested in the history 80 and the remains on the beach of the old fishermen's 60 village (see Vlietinck 1889). In the 20th century, this led to further archeological research on the remains 40 of the village on the beach. Particularly the work of A. Chocqueel, who gathered a lot of surface finds be- 20 tween 1930 and 1950 (see Chocqueel 1950) and of Mr. and Mrs. Cools, who brought the site to the atten- 0 tion of universities and media, was very important in 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 this respect. Although around 1980 the remains on Fig. 5.- The evolution of the un-paid rents (in%) between the beach disappeared under sand-depositions as a 1576-1581, including the part ofthe domain that had been result of the building of new breakwaters, the site of deserted and abandoned in these difficult years. Raversyde remained within the sphere of scientific interest; eventually, this finally resulted in the above- mentioned systematic excavations of the remains of in particular. Because of the war, Raversyde lost its the village behind the dunes since 1991 (Pieters most important economical activity, namely its fish- 1997). At the end of the 20th century, these remains ing at sea. Other ports had taken over the part of of the landscape and settlement ofRaversyde will be Raversyde, while none of the by now more than 30 preserved in a touristic and educational park, ready to years older fishermen from before the war returned to confront the 21st century. the village after the hostilities had ended. With the disappearance of sea-fishery, one of the most import- ant factors which could have had a positive influence 9 Conclusions, problems and questions on a possible recovery of the village had been lost. Another factor which could have had a positive in- The historical study of the landscape and settle- fluence was the chapel of St.-John. Several attempts ment of Raversyde and its surroundings was fruitful of the few remaining villagers to renovate the ruined and led to several interesting problems. We succeed- chapel failed. The church governors of Middelkerke ed in a partial but not unimportant reconstruction and played a dubious part in this matter. During the war, interpretation of the social and particularly economic they had been given the care over the 50 ha owned by history of the inhabitants and the users of the land- the chapel (English 1960, 230). The economic value scape and settlement studied. Our work reveals the of these lands was great, certainly in the years of re- existence of an interaction between landscape and covery after the war. So, when the remaining vil- settlement and the social and economic situation and lagers ofRaversyde demanded that the lands of their evolution of its users. chapel be returned to their community, in order to We saw how the feudal owners of the salt-marshes allow them to start rebuilding the chapel, Middel- started to manipulate the possibilities of the natural kerke refused and even tried to hinder any attempt at landscape and tried to manage the exploitation there- a renovation of the chapel and thus also the recovery of as they saw fit. The consequence of the construc- of the community of the village (idem, 231-233). tion of a defensive dike was that the area evolved into Middelkerke succeeded in its attempts and kept the a cultural landscape with the potential to change from lands. The chapel was never rebuilt. Raversyde re- sheepherding to other agricultural activities. We also mained an agrarian hamlet in close relationship with saw how the feudal owners abandoned direct exploit- the old domain behind the shrunken village. ation of the domain, leaving the area to a number of more individual users, who availed themselves of the opportunity to start new agricultural enterprises. 8 New impulses to a memory The potential of the landscape as well as the im- portant socio-economic evolution of the second half of In 1735, the old chapel, used as a shed, collapsed the 12th century influenced the emergence of a new during a winter storm. Only the tower remained, un- agrarian structure with new villages and other forms of til it was pulled down in 1860. By this time, rural settlement. As said earlier, we do not know the Raversyde had become almost legendary, nothing exact causes of this important but complex develop- more than a memory. This changed at the end of the ment and many problems remain to be solved. 164 Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast 6,5% 1,1% 1357 1463-1464 32,5% 14,6% ,5% 46, 11,6% 1,3% 1,1% ea. 1534 1628 9,8% 50,8% Fig. 6. - The evolution of the tribute-ratio 1 holding less than 1 gemet (0.44 ha). in the domain ofSt.Peter's in 1357, 1463, I'll 2 holding between 1 and 5 gemeten (between 0.44 and 2.2 ha). 1534 and 1628. 11 3 holding between 5 and 10 gemeten (between 2.2 and 4.4 ha). !?a 4 holding between 10 and 20 gemeten (between 4.4 and 8.8 ha). 0 5 holding more than 20 gemeten (more than 8.8 ha). llilll 6 village of Raversyde. We saw how within the context of this new agrar- the larger part of the area, survived. Thus, a new ag- ian structure, the number of mainly smaller farms and ricultural structure, in which the agricultural areas holdings grew significantly. Probably already by the available had been concentrated in the hands of a few end of the 13th century, several more 'proletarian' isolated larger farmers, emerged in the beginning of holdings emerged, the own lands of which did not, the 15th century. In the following decades and centu- however, raise enough surplus to allow them to sur- ries this concentration-movement, which started only vive. We can ask ourselves what caused this late much later in the other parts of Flanders (Verhulst 13th- and 14th-century 'proletarisation'. Again, not 1990, 137-140), went on until after the Spanish War enough is known about the causes of this develop- when almost all of the lands were concentrated in the ment and these need to be studied more closely from hands of the larger landholders. both a historical and an archaeological point of view. We can ask ourselves many questions concerning The same holds true for the submarginal farms and this evolution, questions which are closely related to holdings themselves. At any rate, the submarginal those concerning the origin and evolution of the and small farms in the coastal plain seem to have 'proletarised' and fragmented agricultural structure been structurally vulnerable. The first severe crisis in before 1400. What were the fundamental causes of the coastal plain after the phase of prosperity of the these structural changes? Maybe further geological, High Middle Ages resulted in the complete ruin of pedologal, archaeological and historical research the submarginal and smaller farms and holdings. Af- related to the topographical situation of the late 13th- ter this crisis only the larger farms, which controlled and 14th-century submarginal and small holdings (see 165 D. Tys Verhaeghe 1984, 154) and an investigation of the the chapel, particular situation of the impositions in the coastal the remaining houses of the 17th-, 18th- and 19th- plain may contribute to a better understanding of the century hamlet, causes of 'proletarisation', progressing concentra- the effects of the late-14th-, late-15th- and late- tion, and so on. In this context, maybe the possible 16th-century wars on other villages in the area, role and the social and economic background of the the evolution of the medieval and post-medieval (urban/patrician?) landowners in the research area agricultural structure of the coastal plain on a more can be examined. than local scale and This debate should not let us forget the close rela- the moated sites and Hofwiistungen in the area. tionship between the landscape and settlement in the As we have seen, it is only through an inter- domain and in the village ofWalraversyde. We saw disciplinary approach, linking and confronting of the how a small channel -a remnant of the earlier natu- archeological and historical data that we may arrive rallandscape- probably was at the origin of the fish- at a better understanding of the above-mentioned ermen's village of Walraversyde. As a result of a problems and discussions about the landscape and complex set of conditions including warfare and settlement in and around Wal-Raversyde. some natural phenomena, this 13th- and 14th-century village was abandoned and (probably systematically) rebuilt at the end of the 14th century. Maybe some of Bibliography the inhabitants of this new and presumably larger vil- lage formerly lived on the deserted 'proletarian' AUGUSTYN B. 1992: Zeespiegelrijzing, transgressie- small and submarginal farms and houses. Therefore, fasen en stormvloeden in maritiem Vlaanderen tot it is not impossible that the structural changes dis- het einde van de 16de eeuw. Een landschappe- cussed earlier also had an influence on the rebuilt vil- lijke, ecologische en klimatologische studie in lage. We can ask ourselves what the exact relation historisch perspectief, Brussel. was between the 13th- and 14th-century village and BAETEMAN C. & DENYS L. 1997: Holocene shoreline the fragmented agricultural structure on the one hand and sea-level data from the Belgian coast, in: as well as between 15th-century Walraversyde and ERONEN M., FRENZEL B., PIRAZZOLI P. & WEISS the later, more concentrated agricultural structure on M. ( eds), Sea-level changes during holocene the other. times, Paleoklimat Forschung I Paleoclimat research Wars seem to have played an important role in 21, in press. the evolution ofWalraversyde. At the end of the 15th CHOCQUEEL A. 1950: Les civilisations prehistori- century, the war between Maximilian of Austria and ques et anciennes de la Flandre Occidentale the Flemish towns resulted in a first shrinking of d'apres l'examin d'objets leur ayant appartenu, Walraversyde, while the events of the Eighty Year's Bruxelles. War hit the village very hard and made Raversyde COORNAERT M. 1970: De verdediging van de kust disappear as a village, leaving a small hamlet that van Noord-Vlaanderen vanaf 1300 - VI, Rand de would never recover from these woes. The question Poldertorens 12, 4, 138-148. is whether or not these wars can be considered as the ENGLISH 1960: De kerk van Raversyde, De Biekorf fundamental causes of the evolution of Wal-Raver- 61,229-234. syde as we outlined it. In this respect, we can ask our- GELDHOF J. 1982: De politieke en religieuze situatie selves why it seems that only Walraveryde suffered in het Brugse Vrije, 1578-1584, in: Brugge in de so severely from these wars. Put otherwise, why did Geuzentijd. Bijdragen tot de Geschiedenis van de the other villages in the area recover after the Eighty Hervorming te Brugge en in het Brugse Vrije tij- Year's War and why did Walraversyde not? Are the dens de 16de eeuw. Herdenking Oostvlaamse syn- causes for the shrinking ofWalraversyde in the 16th ode (8 en 9 mei 1582). Brugge, mei 1982, 55-70. and 17th century of a specific type or of a more gen- GOTTSCHALK M.K.E. 1977: Stormvloeden en rivier- eral and structural nature or even a combination of overstromingen in Nederland I, !I & Ill, Assen. both? Are these causes to be found on a economic MERTENS J. 1970: De laat-middeleeuwse landbouw- level (agriculture and/or fishery) or do we have to economie in enkele gemeenten van het Brugse look for them elsewhere? Vrije, Publikaties van het Belgisch centrum voor What seems obvious is that only further historical landelijke geschiedenis 28, Gent-Leuven. and archeological research can be of help and among PIETERS M. 1993: Archeologisch onderzoek te the priorities, we may mention: Raversyde (stad Oostende, prov. West-Vlaanderen). the 15th- and 16th-century village behind (and Interimverslag 1992, Archeologie in Vlaanderen underneath) the dunes, 2-1992,247-264. 166 Landscape and Settlement: the Development of a Medieval Village along the Flemish Coast PIETERS M. 1994: Laat-middeleeuwse landelijke het Belgisch Centrum voor Landelijke Geschie- bewoning achter de Gravejansdijk te Raversijde denis 108, Gent-Fukuoka, 165-184. (stad Oostende, prov. West-Vlaanderen). Interim- TYS D. 1996: Een historische landschapsstudie van verslag 1993, Archeologie in Vlaanderen 3-1993, middeleeuws en later (Wal)Raversyde (einde 1Ode 281-298. tot begin-17de eeuw), Univesiteit Gent, onuitge- PIETERS M. 1995: Een 15de-eeuwse sector van het geven licentiaatsverhandeling. verdwenen vissersdorp te Raversyde (stad Oostende, VERHAEGHE F. 1981: Moated Sites in Flanders, feat- prov. West-Vlaanderen). Interimverslag 1994, ures and significance, in: HOEKSTRA T.J., JANSSEN Archeologie in Vlaanderen 4-1994, 219-236. H.L. & MOERMAN I.W.L. (eds.), Liber castello- PIETERS M. 1997: Raversyde: a late medieval fishing rum. 40 variaties op het thema kasteel, Zutphen, village along the Flemish coast (Municipality of 98-121. Ostend, Province of West-Flanders), in: DE BOE VERHAEGHE F. 1984: The late medieval crisis in the G. & VERHAEGHE F. (eds.), Rural settlement in Low Countries: the archaeological viewpoint, in: Medieval Europe. Papers ofthe 'Medieval Europe SEIBT F. & EBERHARD W.E. (eds.), Europa 1400. Brugge 1997' Conference Vol. VI, Zellik, 1997. Die Krise des Spiitmittelalters, Stuttgart, 146-171. PIETERS M., ERVYNCK A., VAN NEER W. & VER- VERHULST A. 1959: Historische geografie van de HAEGHE F. 1995: Raversyde: een 15de eeuwse Vlaamse kustvlakte tot omstreeks 1200, Bijdra- kuil, een lens met p1atvisresten, en de betekenis gen voor de Geschiedenis der Nederlanden 14, 1, van de studie van de site en haar bewoners, 1-37. Archeologie in Vlaanderen 4-1994,253-277. VERHULST A. 1964: De hospites van de abdij Voor- PREVENIER W. & BLOCKMANS W. 1983: De Bour- mezele te Bredene en het superaratum of overhert. gondische Nederlanden, Antwerpen. Bijdrage tot de bewoningsgeschiedenis van de THOEN E. 1988: Landbouwekonomie en bevolking in Vlaamse kustvlakte, in: Hulde-album Archivaris Vlaanderen gedurende de late Middeleeuwen en Dr. Jos De Smet, Studia Historica Gandensia 10, het begin van de Moderne Tijden. Testregio: de Brugge, 331-339. kasselrijen van Oudenaarde en Aalst, Gent (= VERHULST A. 1966: Histoire du paysage rural en Publikaties van het Belgisch Centrum voor Flandre de l'epoque romaine au XVI!Ie siecle, Landelijke Geschiedenis, 90). Bruxelles. THOEN E. 1994: Le demarrage economique de la VERHULST A. 1990: Precis d 'Histoire Rurale en Flandre au Moyen Age: le role de la campagne et Belgique, Bruxelles. des structures politiques (XIe-XIIIe siecles). VERHULST A. 1995: Lands chap en Landbouw in Hypotheses et voies de recherches, in: VERHULST Middeleeuws Vlaanderen, Brussel. A. & MORIMOTO Y. (eds.), Economie rurale et VLIETINCK E. 1889: Walraversijde. Een gewezen economie urbaine au Moyen Age, Publikaties van visschersdorp op de Vlaamse Kust, Oostende. Dries Tys (F.W.O. Vrije Universiteit Brussel) Krommenelleboog 47 C 9000 Gent Belgium 167 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Marnix Pieters Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, Province of West-Flanders, Municipality of Ostend) Since the spring of 1992, a team of the Institute of constitutes the body of a late medieval dike. The the Archaeological Heritage (lAP) of the Flemish initiative for the lay-out of this dike is said to have Community working in close collaboration with the come from John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy Flemish Employment and Vocational Training Ser- (1405-1419). vice (VDAB) and with the Provincial Government of The dike formerly marked very sharply the transi- West-Flanders has been carrying out archaeological tion to the low-lying polder area. Since post-medieval excavations at Raversijde. The excavation site is times, however, important amounts of wind-blown partly located in the Provincial Domain ofRaversijde sand have been deposited on a 50 to 60 m wide strip and yielded remains of a late medieval fishermen's running parallel to the dunes, thus levelling out the village known in historical sources as 'Walraver- transition from dunes to polder. Close to the dunes, sijde'. this sandy layer- which is devoid of medieval struc- So far some 3/4 of a hectare ofthis medieval settle- tures and tapers out away from the dunes- can reach ment has been investigated, revealing the ground-plan a thickness of about 1 m. At a distance of about 100 of about twenty houses with their associated infra- m from the dunes, the sandy top-layer is completely structure and a variety of mobile artefacts. assimilated into the actual plough-layer. The contribution by Dries Tys (see elsewhere in The upper part of the polder soil is generally heav- the present volume), concerning among other things ily clayey. These clays can fairly well be used to pro- the historical and environmental setting of the area, duce bricks. Their CaCO -content gives rise to the is referred to and used as a starting point for the ar- variable but mostly yelloJ.,ish colours of these typi- chaeological exploration of the 15th-century habita- cal 'polder-bricks'. Furthermore, as saline peat is tion zone under excavation behind the so-called used as fuel, spontaneous glazing occurs frequently Gravejansdijk, a 15th-century dike (Fig. 1). in the kiln and gives some bricks a partially greenish After a brief and mainly geophysical analysis of the glazed outlook. environment of the site, the different types of archae- More sand-containing deposits are met at a depth ological structures will be described and commented of I to 1.5 m. In turn, these deposits cover strongly on. In a next paragraph the material culture of the in- stratified clayey deposits, constitute the most easily habitants is briefly looked at together with a screen- and regularly available source of drinking-water with- ing of the different categories of organic finds and in the habitation zone. Furthermore, a 1 m thick peat- their interpretative possibilities. Finally, in a last para- layer is present at a depth of2 to 2,5 m (Fig. 2). This graph, a synthesis of the presently available inform- important source of fossil fuel, already partly exploit- ation is made in order to highlight the specific nature ed in the Roman period, has been thoroughly exploit- of the settlement and to outline future research. ed in medieval and post-medieval times. The peat- digging played a very important role in shaping the landscape and explains several characteristics of the Environmental setting present-day topography. Before being inhabited, the investigated zone was The excavations are located in a relatively flat used for agricultural activities. A buried plough-layer polder area, 3 to 4 m above sea-level. Today, the site is encountered systematically underneath the build- is separated from the sea by dune-belt culminating ings. Close to the dunes, evidence for a phase of peat- locally at an altitude of 20 m above sea-level and digging has also been registered underneath the build- about 100 m wide at its base. A massive, 3 m high ings and traces of peat-digging have equally been and at least 20 m wide man-made clay-accumula- observed below the so-called 'Gravejansdijk'. tion situated just landwards of the actual dunes, 169 M. Pieters The 15th-century inhabitation lain deposit. The origins of these ditches probably date back to the phase of the agricultural use of the So far nineteen buildings with brick wall-found- area. The infilling of the ditches with all kinds of ations have at least in part been investigated. For only refuse certainly happened at a time when the draining half of these, a complete or nearly complete ground- function the ditches was no longer required. Anyhow, plan could be examined. These ground-plans are pre- their orientation (NW-SE/NE-SW) apparently has served in the soil mainly as a network of robbery determined the orientation of the buildings. The lat- trenches. From the study of the few preserved walls ter run parallel or at square angles to one another. The it can be deduced that these foundations have been predominant ground-plan has a rectangular shape. In constructed using recycled materials. The very its basic form, it reflects a 12 m long and 6 m wide heterogeneous mixture of all kinds of bricks - some volume. Internally, the available space is subdivided of with preserved remains of plastering- illustrates into two rooms, a large one occupying two thirds of this very clearly. The bricks not only show variable the total surface and a smaller one occupying the re- dimensions (23-28 by 10-14 by 5-7 cm) but some of maining third. The rectangular lay-out varies essen- them also have different morphological characteris- tially in terms of its length which ranges from 12 to tics (curved or asymmetrical bricks and bricks with 17.5 m. Apart from one exception with a width of 8 which have been profiled in a specific way). Further- m, the width of the constructions is relatively stable more, we found that these foundations had been built at 5,5 to 6 m. without the use of lime mortar, although the robbery When looking at the ground-plan of the different trenches regularly yielded whitish mortar fragments. buildings (Fig. 2), it is obvious that three of them di- The latter suggest that the walls (or at least some verge from the above described basic rectangular parts of the walls) were plastered at a higher level. In model. Building 4 with its circular annex is a single- addition to providing a better isolation, a whitish room building. The buildings 1 and 13, the two larg- plastering of the walls also enhances the brightness est ones of the group, are more complex. In both within buildings which only had a few small win- cases, however, the composing basic ground-plan dows or even none at all. model can be recognised in the overall plan. Both A kind of beige clayey sand is used as cement. buildings also display other characteristics which sin- The foundation ofthe walls is generally very shallow. gle them out. First of all, they have a brick-floored Sometimes, the picture seems to be one of the walls fireplace, which in the case of building 1 most prob- not having any subsoil foundations at all, but having ably supported a stove or oven. The localisation of a been built from the ground-level upwards, In one of heating device close to an internal wall suggests that the buildings, the original living-floor is still present these walls at least were sufficiently heat-resistant. and shows that in fact the base of the corresponding Secondly, both buildings are equipped with a few walls is at the most only 20 cm deeper. This means supplementary conveniences such as a brick-built that if we take into account the 15 cm thick layer of well, a vaulted latrine, a kind of a small, and a cir- clay that has been brought in the building during or cular underground cold storage facility(?) or floored after its construction, the walls did not have any real spaces, both inside and outside the building. subsoil foundation. In the area closer to the dunes, outdoors brick Generally, only one to three courses ofbricks have pavements which are 1 to 1.5 m wide and adjoin the been preserved in situ. In a few cases, however, up to walls are the rule rather than the exception. This is eleven courses can be found, reaching a height of up probably due to the better conservation of the archae- to 80 cm. The walls are generally 35 to 50 cm thick ological structures in this area and this allows us to and consist of a kind of cast work with only the vest- assume that the buildings generally had such out- ments constructed with complete or half bricks. The doors brick pavements adjoining the walls. One of lowermost layers can reach a thickness of up to 70 cm these pavements has semicircular (radius 4.5 to 5 m) (2.5 bricks). lay-out and a considerable surface (about 30 m 2); it In the zone which has been investigated most consists of a layer of canted bricks and is partially intensively, the buildings are grouped in three differ- bordered with natural stones. The brick surface shows ent areas separated from one another by ditches which traces of significant wear and one is tempted to as- are 3 to 4 m wide (Fig. 2). The infilling in these ditches sign to this pavement a special function; but up till can be separated into two parts which are different now, no hard archaeological evidence confirms this genetically. The upper part results totally from hu- hypothesis. man intervention by man and consists mainly of So far, only one building has yielded information ashes mixed with all kinds ofhuman refuse. The lower concerning the entrance. Its location in the south- part is strongly clayey and corresponds to a water- eastern corner of the building is understandable 170 Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, West-Flanders, Ostend) lilllilli] 1 ~2 0 lOOm Fig. 1.- Location of the excavated part (darker zone) of the late medieval habitation zone (greyish area) with indication of the church-site. 1. Excavated; 2. Approximate village area. from a climatic point of view, since less than 10 % Besides the floored fireplaces, circular or oval of the winds in this part of the country blow from surfaces burnt in situ are met frequently in the build- this direction. ings. They are often flanked by pits filled in with Some buildings have buttresses, external as well ashes or heated sediments, mostly sands. On three as internal ones. At present, no regular pattern can be occasions dug-in pots have been found. As a rule, discerned as to their position. While the internal but- these were filled with ashy sediments. In one of them tresses may have been intended as direct supports for a coin was found at the bottom of the pot as if it had parts of the roof, the external ones had to counter the been hidden there deliberately. lateral pressure exerted by the roof-construction. No evidence for the housing of cattle (such as As fragments of tiles and slates are very scarce traces of trampling or high phosphate accumulations) among the archaeological finds, the roofs were prob- can be detected in the area actually under study. If ably thatched. The observation of lots of charred re- cattle-raising belonged among the activities of the mains of galingale (Cladium mariscus) among the villagers it surely did not take place in that part of the plant remains could mean that this plant, a member of settlement which has already been excavated. the family of the Cyperaceae and well-known in the Judging from the regular and very homogeneous region, has been used as thatching material. nature of the general lay-out, it appears that the area 171 M. Pieters nmrD lfiL_j [ill I 1111111 2 C'lJ 3 f:§3 4 Fig. 2.- General simplified ground-plan of the excavated area with indication of the 1: ditches, 2: buildings, 3: wells and 4: peat-exploitation pits. with the ditches was inhabited only for a limited pe- Only one of them reached a depth of 4 m and per- riod oftime. The occurrence of only a few and mostly forated even the above-mentioned peat-layer. slight modifications of the buildings is a second ar- Below the water-table the barrels- originally her- gument in favour of this hypothesis. On the other ring-barrels- are very well preserved. These construc- hand, at least three phases can be observed in the area tions which are rather characteristic for a fishermen's closer to the dunes and this may point to a longer pe- village are also very useful as actual archaeological riod of inhabitation. indicators. As these barrels are made from oak, which Besides the buildings with a brick base, at least according to the dendrochronological analysis grew in three wooden buildings are present in archaeological the Gdansk area (Poland), they are extremely useful as record of Raversijde which has been investigated up a dating tool. So far about 22 of them have been ana- to now. The numerous post-holes in the zones con- lysed and provided us with dates ranging from the late cerned do not, however, allow us to identify a clearly 14th to the late 15th century. Remarkably enough, the defined ground-plan. A combination between both exceptionally deep well also provided the oldest date types of construction- wood and brick- is also pos- (1389-1401). A possible hypothesis could be that this sible. On one occasion a brick base building with a well had been installed as a kind of a test to explore the wooden annex has been documented. subsoil when settling the area. On several places, 25 to 70 cm wide eaves-drips These deeper structures also are a valuable source occur; these gullies drain the rain-water dripping of information on the material culture of the inhab- from the roof to the ditches or to some large man- itants, particularly where the more organic and perish- made depressions in the area. To the south of build- able part of it such as wooden and leather objects are ing 4 a sewer connects three gullies and drains the concerned. During the period when the wells were in collected water to the ditch. use, lots of small animals (amphibians, small mam- Another vital condition for the inhabitants is the mals and insects) were trapped in them. Their remains supply of drinking-water. Apart from three wells are very helpful in reconstructing the local environ- constructed with bricks, the water-supply is predom- mental conditions. inantly ensured by means of barrel-wells. So far, When a barrel-well got out of use, apparently no nearly 50 of them have been investigated. In general recycling whatsoever was planned for. The remain- they are about 2 m deep and reach the sandy aquifer. ing inconvenient was simply filled in. 172 Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, West-Flanders, Ostend) When analysing the spatial distribution of these appropriately closed at the upper part, such a struc- wells while at the same time taking into account the ture could indeed serve perfectly well as a cold store. dendrochronological information, two groups of five A rectangular brick structure, 1.4 m long and 0.8 wells each deserve special attention. It looks as if in m wide, can be interpreted as the lower part of a both groups the wells constitute a chronological se- smoke oven to treat fish. The cement in the joints quence having replaced each other at given time-in- between the bricks of the floor is coal-black, while tervals. This in its turn could shed some light on the the cement in the joints of the walls has the normal duration of the occupation of the associated build- beige colour. Recently, a second and nearly identical mgs. structure has been unearthed but in this case, the ce- The bottom fill of some of these wells clearly sug- ment in the floor and in the walls did not show the gests that the inhabitants preferred unpolluted water. same differences in colour. Frequently pure sand-bodies have deliberately been Roads have not yet been found. Only a pathway introduced into the wells in order to cover the base metalled with natural stone and close to building 13 which had already been partially polluted by organic has been unearthed. matter (leaves, branches, small animals). As the small When looking at the general ground-plan two large diameter of the wells excludes a thorough cleaning- features have not yet been discussed. One of these has as is possible with the brick wells which have a larger been excavated nearly completely and proved to have diameter (80 to 100 cm) - the introduction of sand a surface of more than 500m2 • When looked at in sec- could be a means to ameliorate temporarily the qual- tion, it becomes clear that these features have a com- ity of the water. plex origin. After the extraction of the peat and part of The barrels themselves are relatively small: 72 to the clay and the partial filling in of the pit, the remain- 75 cm high and with a diameter halfway between top ing depression was recycled as a household refuse and bottom of 51 to 62 cm. These dimensions re- dump and as a drainage basin. By doing so, the inhab- present a volume of something in between 110 and itants in fact lived around their proper refuse dump. 150 litres. The barrels frequently show marks on the stave with the generally more or less square bung- hole. When the original lid of the bung-hole was not Material culture and organic finds preserved, the bung-hole was closed with another stave, with a piece of leather or with the bottom or The small finds include a wide range of materials. cover of a barrel before the barrel was sunk into the Among the artefacts, ceramics constitute the bulk of soil. So far, only in one case a bottom or cover of a the finds. The ceramics mainly consist of common barrel was left in its original position and used as red and grey wares produced in the region roughly in well-bottom. the 15th century. The red wares largely predominate The wells lead us to another type of structure: la- (with percentages up to 80 %). The following forms trines. So far five such structures have been invest- occur: cooking pots, skillets, bowls, plates, dishes, igated. Two of them are constructed with bricks and pitchers, jugs, storage jars, dripping pans and lids. are clearly integrated into the architectural concept of More exceptional are anthropomorphic whistles, col- the respective buildings (buildings 13 and 14). Three anders, fire-covers and oil-lamps. Among the grey other latrines have a barrel as an underground recep- wares now and then potsherds occur which are cover- tacle. These barrel-latrines are not recycled barrel- ed with a sticky black substance, which can be ident- wells as can be inferred from their shallow depth. ified as tar or pitch. These objects probably have Two of them are paired and obviously represent a something to do with a known treatment of fishing- communal latrine arrangement. nets with tar or pitch. From the analysis of the remaining typical filling Brickwares also figures among the ceramics but is clear that the latrines were used exclusively as toi- only in very small quantities. Among the imported lets and not as household refuse dumps as is fre- wares, two European regions are very well repres- quently the case in urban contexts. ented: Germany and the Iberian Peninsula, more spe- Besides these shallow barrel-latrines, two shallow cifically Andalusia. Stoneware from Siegburg, Lan- circular brick structures with an inner diameter of gerwehe and Raeren is present on the site. Most of the about 40 cm and an approximate depth of 1 to 1.2 m stoneware products cannot, however, be readily as- have been investigated as well. These structures were signed to a specific production centre: they can only completely filled in with brick debris after having be identified in a general way as coming from the been abandoned; they are provisionally identified as Rhine area and/or from the adjoining Aachen-Raeren cold stores. One of them contained a grey ware region. Among the Siegburg products, green glazed pitcher standing at the bottom of the structure. When examples occur regularly. The Iberian pottery in- 173 M. Pieters eludes the well-!mown majolica but coarser products since the fishermen of Walraversijde participated in from the Mediterranean region are also present this late medieval trade. among the finds. The actual picture emanating from Apart from objects related to fishing and therefore the ceramics points to people with a moderate stand- typical for coastal, estuarine or riparian sites, other ard of material living. artefacts such as spindle whorls and weights allow us Further research on the ceramics as well as cross- to identify more widely spread domestic industries fitting and spatial analysis of the finds should allow such as spinning and weaving. Apart from these, no us to detect socio-economic differences - if any - other crafts can at present be discerned in the archae- between the inhabitants of the excavated part of the ological finds. village. A first approach of the infilling of the ditches Dress accessories such as buckles, pendants, bad- already highlighted the promising heterogeneity of ges and combs (in wood as well as in ivory) form the material. another important group of small finds. Objects re- Among the non-ceramic items, objects related to lated to leisure (such as dies, marbles, mans and tops) fishing dominate the finds collection: sinkers in lead, or to religious beliefs (such as pilgrims badges, limestone and brick, a sounding-lead, barbed iron bracelets and clay figurines) also occur regularly. fish-hooks between 4 and 12 cm in length, smaller Among the organic finds - particularly wooden copper-alloy fish-hooks, disgorgers copper-alloy, ones - brooms are equally well represented. antler marlinespikes, wooden netting-needles and Some exceptional finds such as a fragment of one cork floaters. One of the netting-needles is nicely of the oculars of a pair of spectacles, a measuring-rod decorated with a very typical drawing of three entan- and a visor, are to be related to the categories of peo- gled fishes. Other finds can indirectly be related to ple frequenting the village. The pair of spectacles and fishing activities: the presence of pit-coal and of lots the measuring-rod are probably related to the pres- of natural stones. The Belgian coastal area is very ence of merchants while the visor undoubtedly be- poor in natural stones. Independent from historical longed to an armed fisherman. This is not contra- research, the petrologic study of an assemblage of dicted by the fact that the authorities regularly sum- nearly 100 natural stones excavated in one of the moned people from Raversijde to assist in the de- ditches concluded that they came from the northeast- fence of the coast. em coast of the British Isles somewhere between From the small finds, it can be concluded that the Northern England and the valley of the Humber. The area under study had already been left at the end of pit-coal probably came from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the 15th or in the beginning of the 16th century. The Fig. 3.- Decorated container in so-called 'brick-ware' typical for the Belgian coastal area. Scale 42%. 174 Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, West-Flanders, Ostend) numismatic evidence is quite clear. Most of the coins date from the period of John the Fearless (1405- 1419) and of his son and successor Philip the Good (1419-1467). The calcareous and humid soil environment results in very good conservation conditions for bone mater- ial; sometimes even the cartilaginous parts are con- served. In the zone along the dunes with the best con- servation conditions even a few starfish-skeletons have been preserved. The first archaeozoological analyses reveal the consumption of sheep, cattle and pigs. The meat menu is further supplemented with chicken, goose and duck and occasionally with rabbit and red deer. The villagers also consumed lots of shellfish such as mussels, oysters and whelks. For the moment no con- sumption remains of crab or lobster have been found. It is clear that in the actual context special atten- . .: ·, ,'• .. tion has been paid to the fish remains. Apart from .\ :' .. .. • i··:'! ~; ·:: . r, ,. eel and carp, the fish remains nearly exclusively . ·t : ... ] consist of sea-fish. The already identified species t··: are cod, glounder, haddock, herring, plaice, tuna, thomback and whiting and different species of sharks. Typical for the site is the presence of occa- sional catches as sharks that so far have not been found on inland sites. A second feature is the joint occurrence of small and large specimens joint. Nor- mally, the smaller specimens are absent from pure consumer sites. One of the pits -the first which has been studied in any great detail -contained a lenticular deposit of fish-bones. Thousands of plaice remains, belonging to approximately 130 individuals have been investig- ated and it was shown that the skeletons are incom- plete. Only head and tail elements, together with stomach contents, had been deposited; cut marks be- hind the head and near the caudal fin occur fre- quently. The high concentration of these remains and the absence of any admixture of other fauna! remains or archaeological objects indicate that the deposit re- Fig. 4.- Wooden netting-needle decorated with three en- flects a single event. It is believed that these fish tangled fishes. Scale 1:1. bones are the remnants of plaice processed for future consumption and export inland. A first study of macro-botanical remains revealed Finally, an entomological study of the beetle re- the presence of the following consumption plants: mains from one of the barrel-wells pointed to a wheat, oats, barley and broad b~an. All these species grassy environment. could be grown in the vicinity of the site. The analysis of the parasite remains of the infilling of one of the barrel-latrines revealed the presence of Synthesis eggs of Trichuris sp., Ascaris sp. and Trichostron- gylus. The presence of the last parasite is most prob- At the end of the 14th or in the beginning of the ably related to the presence of sheep in the immedi- 15th century, a formerly agricultural zone of Wal- ate surroundings. All parasites discovered indicate a raversijde became a building ground. The buried precarious - at least when compared to our present plough-layer and at least part of the ditches are the standards- hygienic level. reminders of this agricultural phase. It is plausible 175 M. Pieters that at that point in time, the settlement which had well in with people whose activities took place been heavily damaged by numerous storm-tides, was mostly out of doors. partly relocated landwards in the safer environment The large depression resulting from peat- and behind the 'Gravejansdijk'. clay-digging activities places the lay-out of the area Not only the regular and homogeneous lay-out of under study in a specific context. It is quite possible the building-ground under study, but also the chro- that the building activities on this terrain started with nological data provided by the barrel-wells and by the the digging of a large pit in order to extract peat and small finds suggest this area to have been inhabited clay to be used for the construction of the buildings mainly during the 15th century. The abandonment of which in fact seem to be located round about the re- the area studied is probably related to the uprising of maining depression. the Franc of Bruges against Maximilian of Austria in The typical barrel-wells are quite an important the last quarter of the 15th century. This uprising was part of the archaeological story as they provide us very severe, particularly in the countryside. It was a with the possibility to follow the chronological evol- period of military troubles combined with pestilence ution of the inhabitation. Apart from their importance and ensuing socio-economic problems. in terms of chronology, they also allow us to gain a The buildings investigated can be described as measure of insight in the environment of the area. follows. The walls have a brick base with a minimal The material culture is quite characteristic, first height of 80 cm. Although we suggest that above their and foremost all because of the presence of numerous brick base, the walls of these buildings were essent- objects and finds directly related to fishing. An im- ially in wood or wattle and daub, it cannot be exclud- portant amount of other finds are indirectly related to ed that some walls were constructed in brick up to the these fishing activities.That fishing was an important roof. Whatever the case, the roof was thatched. The part of the activities can also be deduced from the whitish mortar remains found regularly in the rob- remains of fishes themselves. bery trenches probably indicate that the walls had a The presence of natural stones coming from the whitish finish. The buildings predominantly have a northeastern coast of the British Isles, of pit-coal, of rectangular ground-plan, which in its basic form con- a considerable amount of imported wares from the sists of a 12 m long and 6 m wide volume internally Mediterranean (such as ceramics from Andalusia), of subdivided into two rooms. The largest of the latter cork floaters and of ivory combs also has to be men- generally contains the fireplace. Some indications tioned. Similarly, some finds such as a fragment of a such as the absence of internal points of support for pair of spectacles point to special characteristics of the roof and the presence of a few internal buttresses the site. could be interpreted as pointing to a cruck-con- A first detailed analysis of the material culture of struction, but we could just as easily imagine a roof the inhabitants allows us to suggest that in socio-eco- which was in essence supported by the walls (inter- nomic terms, the inhabitants seem to have a standing nal as well as external ones). which was slightly above the rural average in the re- Two of the buildings two can be singled out by gion. their larger size and by the presence of several addi- Much archaeological research still remains to be tional conveniences as a brick well and a brick la- carried out. First of all and as the excavations are still trine. It is possible that those buildings belonged to in progress, the full exploitation of the archaeologi- people of a slightly better socio-economic status than cal data, including the cross-fitting and spatial analy- the average inhabitant. This must, however, still be sis of the small finds is yet to come. The same holds checked through confronting the architecture with its true for the contributions from the different partner associated refuse. sciences. So far, the partner sciences have in fact led Evidence for the housing of cattle could not be only to first assessments. A first general assessment found. The buildings do not have a surrounding garden concerning the zone with the ditches is planned in the or enclosure as seen frequently in medieval villages course of 1998. (e.g. in Wharram Percy). Secondly, as the archaeological strategy is in fact Nevertheless, we may assume that at least some regulated by the rhythm of the realisation of the villagers engaged in agricultural/horticultural or stock- touristic infrastructure, an important part of the vil- breeding activities in the immediate vicinity of the lage- including the church and the adjoining church- village. The fact that fishing and associated activities yard, the windmill, the brewery, the main street and played a very important part in the life of the vil- different satellite habitations outside the nucleated lagers may explain the dense built-up of the area with area- has not yet been touched by excavations. We buildings standing very close to one another. The hope that this important hiatus can be taken care of rather elementary houses ofWalraversijde fit in very by the next edition of MEDlEY AL EUROPE. 176 Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, West-Flanders, Ostend) References PIETERS M. met bijdragen van F. BOUCHET, A. ERVYNCK & M. VAN STRYDONCK 1994: Een Archeologie du village deserte, Cahiers des annates 15de-eeuwse sector van het verdwenen vissers- 27, 1970, 2 vol, Paris. dorp te Raversijde (stad Oostende, prov. West- BERESFORD M. 1954: The Lost Villages of England, Vlaanderen). Interimverslag 1994, Archeologie in London (reprint of 1987 by Alan Sutton). Vlaanderen IV, 219-236. BERESFORD M. & HURST J. 1990: Wharram Percy. PIETERS M., ERVYNCK A., W. VAN NEER & VER- Deserted Medieval Village, London, English Her- HAEGHE F. 1994: Raversijde: een 15de-eeuwse itage. kuil, een lens met platvisresten, en de betekenis CHAPELOT J. & FOSSIER R. 1980: Le village et la voor de studie van de site en haar bewoners, maison au moyen age, Hachette. Archeologie in Vlaanderen IV, 1994, 253-277. CHOQUEEL A. 1950: Les civilisations prehistoriques PONCELET L. & MARTIN H. 1947: Hoofdtrekken van & anciennes de la Flandre occidenta!e d'apres het Belgisch Klimaat, Verhandelingen Koninklijk l 'examen d 'objets leur ayant appartenu, Bru- Meteorologisch Instituut van Belgie XXVI. xelles. TYS D. 1996: Een historische landschapsstudie van DE GELAEN E. 1973: De gevolgen van de opstand Middeleeuws en Later (Wal)Raversyde (einde- tegen Maximiliaan van Oostenrijk voor het Vlaamse JOde tot begin-17de eeuw), onuitgegeven licen- platteland, Handelingen van de Koninklijke tiaatsverhandeling Universiteit Gent. Geschied- en Oudheidkundige Kring van Kortrijk TYS D., this volume: Landscape and settlement. The (Nieuwe Reeks) XL, 183-244. development of a medieval village along the DEGRYSE R. 1983: Vlaamse kolenhandel en de Scho- Flemish coast. nense kaakharing te Newcastle upon Tyne (1377- VAN DOORSELAER A. & VERHAEGHE F. 1974: Excav- 1391 ), Handelingen van het Genootschap voor ations at the XIVth century village of Roeselare Geschiedenis CXX-314, 157-188. (Sint Margriete) (East Flanders, Belgium), Disser- DE PAEPE P. & PIETERS M. 1994: Petrology and tationes Archaeologicae Gandenses XV, Brugge. Provenance ofUnworked Stone from the Medie- V AN NEER W. & ERVYNCK A. 1993: Archeologie en val Fishing-Village at Raversijde (mun. of Oost- Vis, Herlevend Verleden 1, Zellik. ende, prov. of West Flanders), Archeologie in VAN NEER W. & PIETERS M. in press: Evidence for Vlaanderen IV, 237-251. processing of flatfish at Raversij de, a late medie- FosS !ER R. 1995: Villages et Villageois au Moyen val coastal site in Belgium, in: Proceedings of the Age, Paris. 71h Meeting of the International Council of PIETERS M. 1992: Archeologisch onderzoek te Archaeozoology. Raversijde (stad Oostende, prov. West-Vlaande- V AN UYTVEN R. 1980: Crisis als cesuur 1482-1494, ren). Interimverslag 1992, Archeologie in Vlaan- in: Algemene Geschiedenis der Nederlanden 5, deren II, 1992,247-264. Haarlem, 420-435. PIETERS M. met een bijdrage van DE BUYSER F. ZADORA-RIO E. 1995: Le village des historiens et le 1993: Laat-middeleeuwse landelijke bewoning village des archeologues, in: MORNET E. (ed.), achter de Gravejansdijk te Raversijde (stad Oost- Campagnes medievales: l'homme et son espace. ende, prov. West-Vlaanderen). Interimverslag 1993, Etudes offertes aRobert Fossier, Paris. Archeologie in Vlaanderen III, 1993,281-298. Mamix Pieters Instituut voor het Archeologisch Patrimonium Doomveld 1, bus 30 B-1731 Asse-Zellik Belgium 177 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference - Volume 6 Christopher Loveluck Flixborough - the character and economy of a high status Middle Saxon settlement in northern England Introduction together with an extremely rich artefact assemblage and a vast collection of vertebrate remains. Although Between 1989 and 1991, excavations at Flix- the full extent of the settlement was not uncovered, borough on the south bank of the Humber estuary, in the quality and range of evidence from the site has northern England (Fig. 1), revealed remains of a Mid- provided a hitherto unprecedented opportunity toes- dle Saxon settlement which have proved exceptional tablish archaeological criteria for defining the nature to date. The finds have included the foundations of and character of high status Middle Saxon settle- over twenty buildings and other structural evidence, ments, both within the area of the Humber estuary N t 0 Kms Wharram Percy • 20 Garton on the Welds • • Driffleld Beverley• NORTH SEA Barrow • Burnhom GH Rlby e Hollon le Fig. 1. -Location of Flixborough and other Anglo-Saxon sites situated in the hinterland ofthe Humber estuary, discussed in the text. 179 Chr. Loveluck and more widely in England, and to illustrate nearly ways, linking different building plots; and activity all the facets of the economy of such a settlement, areas, associated with craftworking, ovens or dis- especially animal husbandry, craftworking and in- posal pits. The extent of the superimposition ofbuild- dustrial activities, and trade and exchange links. ings and other structural features seems to be a reflec- The Anglo-Saxon remains at Flixborough were tion of the concerted planning of settlement layout, first indicated as a result of an archaeological evalu- whether by an individual or collective authority. This ation in advance of sand quarrying in 1988. During spatial organisation was probably influenced by the this work, Mr Kevin Leahy (Keeper of Archaeology, unstable soil conditions towards the steeper slopes of Scunthorpe Museum, North Lincolnshire) uncovered the spur, thus promoting the re-use of a limited eleven unfurnished inhumation burials. Following number of suitable building plots. inconclusive geophysical survey results, further evalu- Hints of the size of the area covered by Anglo- ation was undertaken as a control exercise by the Saxon settlement evidence have also been provided Humberside Archaeology Unit (now the Humber during the excavations and further evaluation and Archaeology Partnership). This resulted in the dis- survey work. The partial recovery of the foundations covery of substantial, well-preserved Anglo-Saxon of several buildings, running beneath the eastern settlement remains. As a consequence of these finds, edge of the excavated area, together with the discov- English Heritage funded the excavation of a sample ery of pits and gullies, containing Middle Saxon cera- of the probable Anglo-Saxon settlement area, with a mics, on the gentle southern slope of the spur, view to defining the character, date and importance demonstrate that the Anglo-Saxon settlement area of the site. The settlement evidence was predomin- continued to the east and south of the excavated re- antly Middle Saxon, dating between the 7th and early mains, probably encompassing the cemetery found in 1Oth centuries AD. There are, however, additional 1988 (Fig. 3). In addition, a scatter of Mid to Late indications that the area in the immediate vicinity of Saxon pottery, collected during fieldwalking to the the excavations constituted a continuous settlement north of the excavations, and the identification of a focus from the Romano-British period to the High strong magnetic anomaly immediately to the east Middle Ages. The following account provides a sum- also suggest Anglo-Saxon activity to the north and mary of the preliminary analysis of the Flixborough east of the excavated area. remains, undertaken to assess their importance. The Preliminary stratigraphic analysis and a spot-dat- detailed post-excavation analysis and publication ing exercise, based on the ceramic evidence from the programme is being canied out over the next five site, has allowed the provisional dating of the major years (Loveluck 1996). phases of activity within the excavated area. Other than sporadic traces of a Romano-British settlement in the vicinity, suggested by several pits and various Settlement morphology and occupation sequence finds, the earliest evidence for a settlement located on the spur is provided by the Anglo-Saxon remains. The heart of the Middle Saxon occupation at Flix- Between the 7th and early 9th centuries, three major borough was situated on a windblown sand spur, phases of construction are apparent from the super- overlooking the floodplain of the River Trent, 8 kilo- imposed buildings and other structures (Fig. 4). A metres to the south of the Humber estuary. The foun- major episode of refuse dumping then occuned dur- dations of a series of at least twenty buildings were ing the first half of the 9th century, after the vast uncovered, many of which were constructed on long- majority of earlier buildings had been demolished. lived building plots, superimposed over the founda- Subsequent to this dumping phase, a new series of tions of their predecessors (Fig. 2). Periodically, buildings was constructed on the same alignment as however, the use of the excavated area for habitation their antecedents, between the mid to late 9th cen- was interspersed with major phases of refuse dump- tury. These buildings were in turn demolished, with ing. This cyclical exploitation of the spur for housing the onset of a second major dumping phase, charac- and dumping has provided unprecedented stratified terised by the deposition ofvast quantities of animal deposits from a Middle Saxon rural settlement. The bones. This horizon was followed by the accumul- refuse and demolition spreads, in particular, yielded ation of dark soils over large parts of the excavated exceptional artefact and animal bone remains, both in area. These dark deposits contained pottery, bone and regard to their quality and quantity. In addition to the metalwork, among other finds and may have resulted buildings and refuse dumps, other components from the levelling of middens on the periphery of an within the settlement structure include a boundary adjacent habitation focus, during the early decades of ditch, running on an east-west alignment, from the the 1Oth century. The discovery of an oven and pits, western limit of the occupation area; metalled path- containing 12th-century Beverley ware, and a 13th- 180 Flixborough- the character and economy of a high status Middle Saxon settlement in northern England 0 50 m site north Later Medieval Ditch 0 0 Middle Saxon Ditch Fig. 2.- Provisional Plan of the main Anglo-Saxon settlement features recovered during the 1989-/991 excavations. century ditch cuting across the north of the excavated 13th-century church of All Saints. After the 14th cen- Middle Saxon settlement remains, suggests that the tury, however, the spur previously occupied by the excavated area remained on the periphery of a settle- Middle Saxon settlement was inundated by wind- ment during the Anglo-Norman period. ·The Late blown sand, up to 2 metres deep in places, and there- Saxon and Medieval focus may lie immediately to fore abandoned for settlement purposes. the east of the excavations, around the now ruined 181 Chr. Loveluck fieldwalked Middle Saxon material / / / / / / / / / I / I / / / / / / / / ./"/ ,,." ~'/ ,.. .... " // / / cropmarks / / /1'/ / N I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I \ site of I I I I .f, \ \ .-1-"-1--~~ Little I or I I N. Conesby ~/ ~~~ ~"( I . s1le of ' 1 1 X ! Deserted (~ 1\ I +All Saint's \ Church II V Medieval ~ 1988-91 \ ................\ t f\ Village \.~~~Grave \ I I I I I I Yard \ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I \ I I I I \ f f E I /1 I 0 I " I I "'f' \ ,// / f I : :/ I 11 Middle Saxon features 1/ I Jl ~ .. ESCARPMENT I /1 1994-<:>95 I I tl 11 Ill Ill IJ I ~/ IJ I 11 I If I lt I f I 100 200 M Fig. 3.- Distribution ofAnglo-Saxon settlement and cemetery remains from Flixborough, discovered between 1988-1995. The buildings range from 9 metres by 5.30 metres to 19.70 metres by 6.50 metres. Internal fired clay hearth bases were also The buildings at Flixborough represent a signifi- present in the majority of cases, often located in the cant addition to the relatively small body of informa- eastern halves of buildings. ·with one exception, how- tion on rural architecture in the Middle Saxon period. ever, the foundation plans did not indicate the loca- Complete or partial building foundations and struc- tion of doorways. Figure 5 illustrates one example of tural remains such as daub, charred timber fragments each of the different architectural styles exhibited and structural ironwork allow for the identification of among the building plans. Buildings 1, 10 and 13 are a series of construction techniques, between the 7th exceptional in that they are the only examples of their and lOth centuries AD. Variants of post-hole, contin- foundation types. Overall, however, there does not uous trench and sill beam foundations are evident appear to be any chronological progression in the use among the buildings. All can be characterised as hav- of particular earth-fast foundation styles, during dif- ing a "hall" -type design and were constructed on a ferent phases in the occupation sequence. north-west to south-east alignment. Their dimensions 182 Flixborough - the character and economy of a high status Middle Saxon settlement in northern England I I / : A olte north I I I I A slto north I I I I I I I .. " .I 1, Ditch I ··~I J Ditch I I I I I I / I I I I I I / / / I / / I I I I I '1, --- I ---_.-"" ............ I I Buildin~.~ • I I I I I 0 I 4 I I I I I ( ~ 0 I I I I I I I ·' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I \ I 7th-Early 8th century Early-Mid 8th century PHASE 3.10 PHASE 3.20 I Ir ollo A north :. • 8 Ditch I Ditch I ~ ' I (;, /Building / I / / 13 / I / / / I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 2 I I I I I I I Mid-Late 8th century century PHASE 3.31 I r I A ulta norlh Dllch I / I I / I / / I I I I I I 4 I I I I I I I I I I Mid-Late 9th Century PHASE 3.40 Fig. 4.- Provisional Phasing of the Anglo-Saxon occupation sequence. 183 Chr. Loveluck Flixborough 1989-91 building plans J;~l ~0,Q~ -r s 4 o e a .J ~;:; b Fig. 5. - The different foundation styles exhibited by the buildings: a) Building 5, Continu- ous trench and stone post- pad; b) Building 1, Gravel and c d stone cobble sill for walls and external post-holes; r;tl 6:!::>~, c) Building 13, post-ho- ~ ,o les; d) Building 3, Post-holes 0 ~ in trench; e) Building 7, Continu- Q~ ous trench and stone e f cobble post-settings; f) Building I 0, Continu- 0 30m ous trench and wooden HEARTH sill beam. Detailed discussion of the buildings would be pre- ence. Building 1 was subsequently replaced by build- mature at this stage in their analysis, though some ing 10, which was also rectangular in shape, with a noteworthy points can still be made about the re- continuous trench earth-fast foundation, containing mains of individual buildings- especially numbers 1, the ghost of a timber sill beam. It was 11.80 metres 7, 10 and 13 (see Fig. 5). Among this group, building by 5.80 metres in size, with a fired clay hearth base 1 has been identified as a possible church or mortu- in its eastern end. Both buildings 1 and 10 provide ary chapel, based on parallels at other Anglo-Saxon rare examples of earth-fast and raised sill beam bases sites such as Yeavering, Whithorn and more locally, for the support of timber superstructures, in Middle Burnham (Hope Taylor 1977, 73-74; Hill 1991, 18 Saxon contexts. The cobble and padstone footing for and Coppack 1986, 39-41, see Fig. 1). Its remains building 1 is similar to the gravel and dry stone wall consist of a rectangular building, 13.60 by 6.20 me- footings ofbuildings also thought to have had timber tres in size, with a cobble and padstone wall footing superstructures at Middle Saxon sites, such as Hartle- at ground level, possibly for a timber sill, and a series pool, Dunbar, Whitby and Whithorn (Daniels 1988, of opposing post-holes in its long walls. The position 204; Holdsworth 1991, 315-316; Rahtz 1976, 461; of a doorway was also located in the middle of the Cramp 1993, 65-66 and Hill 1991, 18-23). Building southern long wall - the only doorway location cur- 1 at Flixborough, however, is larger than all the rently identified at Flixborough. Four east - west stone-founded buildings at the latter sites, with the aligned graves were cut into the floor of this building, exception of"hall" 1Ob at Whithom which appears to containing three adults and an infant, while an addit- be of a similar size (Hill 1991, 21 ). ional burial was located outside the building, to the Buildings 7 and 13 also merit description because south. Building 1, however, does not seem to have of their exceptional nature. The former is the largest remained an ecclesiastical building throughout the building found at Flixborough, being 19.70 metres by lifetime of the Middle Saxon settlement. Construc- 6.50 metres in size. It was rectangular and possessed tion of hearths and the accumulation of occupation a continuous trench foundation with limestone post- deposits over the original floor surface indicate its settings, regularly spaced along its long walls. The use as a dwelling, during the later stages of its exist- character of the foundations and the size of this build- 184 Flixborough- the character and economy of a high status Middle Saxon settlement in northern England ing are almost identical to those exhibited by build- ing. Unlike other buildings from the site, large quan- ing A from the Mid to Late Saxon phase of the settle- tities of daub with wattle impressions were also dis- ment at Raunds-West Cotton, in Northamptonshire covered along the wall lines ofbuilding 13, suggesting (Cadman & Foard 1984, 81 ). Buildings with very sim- the existence of wattle and daub wall panels for this ilar characteristics and dimensions were also found at building. It also shared a characteristic with buildings Wicken Bonhunt, Essex and North Elmham, Norfolk 5 and 7, in that it did not contain a hearth. (Rogerson & Wade 1973, 143; Marshall & Marshall 1991, 37-41; Wade-Martins 1980, 137). The lack of evidence for external post-holes, to provide founda- The artefact and environmental evidence tions for raking timbers, suggests that the weight of the roof was placed on the long walls of building 7. Moving from a consideration of the structural evi- Unusually among the Flixborough buildings, this hall dence to the artefact and biological remains from does not possess a hearth on a floor at ground level. Flixborough, the value of the exceptional collection This absence may be accounted for by the possibility of finds is greatly enhanced by their discovery in that building 7 had a raised floor or more than one stratified contexts, good preservation conditions and storey. Building 13, in contrast, provides the only by the recovery strategies employed during excav- building at Flixborough with mainly post-hole found- ation, particularly with regard to environmental re- ations. It is 13.50 by 6.50 metres in size and is mains. The circumstances of site formation, invol- broadly rectangular, with double rows of post-holes ving use of the spur for habitation phases and major along the long walls, representing the walls and rak- refuse dumping episodes have ensured the survival of ing timbers (Millett & James 1983, 242-245). Large stratified deposits, containing an exceptional range post-holes, presumably for roof support, are also evi- and quantity of Middle Saxon artefacts, and a vast dent positioned on the central long axis of the build- collection of fauna! remains in the form of animal e I - • - . . OF=) "'"<:. I rgr:: Fig. 6. - Selection of 7th- to 9th-century gilded copper-alloy and silver dress accessories, recovered during the excavations (Scale 1:1). 185 Chr. Loveluck --- • ; ; • I( I -- • -· ~ -11 - I I l -~~- • \) Fig. 7.- Selection of 7th- to 9th-century gilded copper-alloy and silver pins from the site (Scale I: 1). bones. The preservation of the animal bones was dence; regionally-produced pottery, and a large quan- especially promoted by a calcareous component with- tity of lead artefacts and melt. Industrial debris from in the sand, forming the spur, and by the subsequent iron, lead and fine metalworking was also present, inundation of the settlement, beneath further sand together with less conclusive evidence of deposits. As a consequence, some of the dumps and glassworking in the form of a glass tessera, cull et and occupation horizons had never suffered acid leach- possible glassworking residues. The site also yielded ing, resulting in the exceptionally good preservation imports from southern England, e.g. the largest col- ofbone and shell (Canti 1992, 18). lection oflpswich-type ware, north of East Anglia, as It is difficult to summarise the nature and wealth well as a large quantity of imports from northern of the artefact and fauna! assemblages due to their France, the Low Countries and Germany. The im- sheer size, and they are best discussed within the pre- ports included wheel-thrown ceramics, glass vessels, liminary consideration of the economy and character coinage and lava quem stones. In addition, iron, cop- of the settlement below. Nevertheless, it is appropri- per-alloy and silver styli were recovered, found in the ate to note that thousands of well-preserved artefacts fills of ditches or pits and within rubbish dumps. Two were recovered, including decorated dress accesso- inscribed artefacts were also found, comprising a ries (Fig. 6 and 7); domestic utensils; horse riding lead plaque with the inscribed names of seven indi- gear, harness and possible horseshoes; an exceptional viduals and an alphabet ring, showing the first eleven collection of iron tools, relating to agriculture and a letters of the la tin alphabet (Fig. 9). The lead plaque range of crafts (Fig. 8); textile-manufacturing evi- was pierced by a series of rivet holes along its outer 186 Flixborough - the character and economy of a high status Middle Sax on settlement in northern England ~·~.""'0: ~-.~i: :. .~ .... ; '· ....:· •': ,1: '; ; ~· ,,; ~~; .. :·... · ...... .··,·: ~ ·.~·:· -11111111 \ Fig. 8.- Carpentry, metalworking and leatherworking tools, found during the excavations (Scale 1 :2). edges which suggest that it may have come from a ' large quantities of artefacts being deposited a consid- reliquary. It had been discarded within an occupation erable length of time after their manufacture- this is deposit, probably associated with building 10, from particularly the case with the refuse deposits. The lat- the mid to late 9th-century phase of occupation. The est Anglo-Saxon finds from the area of the excava- alphabet ring was unstratified. tions consist of Late Saxon wheel-thrown ceramics, It is evident from the artefactual remains that comprising Torksey and Torksey-type wares and Lin- there is a significant degree ofresiduality among the coln wares, dating from the mid 9th to early 1Oth cen- finds. A small quantity ofRomano-British pottery and tury. A lOth-century silver penny ofEdward the Mar- metalwork was recovered, together with a collection tyr (975-979 AD), recovered as an unstratified find of Early Anglo-Saxon dress accessories, including. adjacent to the excavation, may also indicate a nearby 6th-century small. long brooches and a great square- Late Saxon phase of occupation. headed brooch and 7th-century annular brooches and The recovery procedures relating to environmental a "safety pin" -type brooch (see Fig. 6). The occur- remains were arranged with the Environmental Ar- rence of the Romano-British and early Anglo-Saxon chaeology Unit, University of York, prior to the ex- material probably indicates the existence of as yet cavation. Three methods of collection were under- undiscovered Romano-British and Early Anglo- taken, involving the hand-collection of vertebrate, Saxon settlement foci, in the vicinity. A high level of shell and certain plant remains, and the taking of residuality is also demonstrated in the deposition of "bulk-sieved" and "general biological analysis sam- finds manufactured in the 8th and 9th centuries, with ples" (Dobney et al. 1992, 24-26). The overall hand- 187 Chr. Loveluck . ti'< ...... . Fig. 9. - The inscribed lead plaque and copper-alloy alphabet ring, together wit a silver stylus from Flixborough. (Scale 1: 1). collected bone assemblage weighs 5000 kg and a pre- plant remains were limited to small amounts of wide- liminary assessment suggests the presence of ap- ly dispersed charcoal fragments, together with spora- proximately 35,000 identifiable bones and a further dic charred seeds and herbaceous stem fragments 140,000 bone fragments. A broad species diversity (Dobney et al. 1994, 213-215). Insect remains were was indicated among this material, with domest- extremely sparse in the samples investigated, although icated and wild animals represented (Dobney 1994, snail shells were more numerous. These snail remains 190-193 ). The range and importance of this assem- provide the only substantial source of information on blage is discussed within the consideration of the environmental conditions in the vicinity of the settle- provisioning of the settlement below. Partial analysis ment. Despite the more limited plant and invertebrate of a small proportion of the bulk-sieved samples (86 remains, they still allow for some appreciation of ag- out of a total of 1759) also demonstrated that the re- ricultural and horticultural practices, alongside the mains of birds were present in the majority. Fish exceptional evidence for animal husbandry and ex- bones were also common and in some cases abundant ploitation of wild fauna! resources, provided by the in certain contexts, providing indications of the con- vertebrate remains. sumption of a wide range of riverine and marine fish (Dobney 1994, 194-195). In contrast to the excellent bone preservation, the The economy soil conditions proved hostile to the survival of more delicate organic remains. Hand-collected plant and The combined evidence yielded by the environ- invertebrate remains comprised only small quantities mental and artefact remains from Flixborough pro- of hazelnut shell, plum stones, egg shells of fowl and vides an exceptional opportunity for the investigation snail shells, although a large quantity of sea shells- of the full range of activities constituting the econ- mainly oyster - was collected, along with a few omy of the Middle Sax on settlement. pieces of charred timber and a significant amount of The inhabitants of the settlement were sustained charcoal. Within the examined bulk-sieved samples, by the products of a mixed agricultural regime, in- 188 Flixborough- the character and economy of a high status Middle Sax on settlement in northern England volving a combination of arable cultivation and ani- craftworking activities. Well-preserved tools and in- mal husbandry. This was supplemented by additional dustrial debris have been identified relating to textile food procurement strategies, such as wild fowling, manufacture, carpentry, leatherworking, ironworking fishing and the hunting of other wild fauna. Arable and non-ferrous metalworking (Fig. 8). All four stages cultivation and grain processing are indicated by the of textile manufacture are represented: iron spikes recovery of an iron coulter, charred seed grains of from heckles or carding combs reflect fibre prepar- cereals and pulses, and a large collection of rotary ation of wool or flax; spinning and weaving is quem fragments. The majority of the querns were demonstrated by spindle whorls, pin-beaters and over imported from the Eiffel region of Germany. The 750 loom-weights, and the embellishment of cloth is tending or importation of orchard fruits is also sug- indicated by the presence of shears, needles and gested by the presence of plum stones. Preliminary thimbles. Carpentry is reflected primarily by an ex- analysis of a sample of the vertebrate remains indi- ceptional collection of woodworking tools, although cates that cattle, sheep/goat, pigs, geese and chickens dressed charred timber fragments also provide hints predominate among the domesticated animals, al- of carpentry techniques. The tools comprise axes and though significant quantities of horse and a small adzes (including T-shaped varieties), shaves, spoon number of cat bones were also recovered. Detailed bits for drills, rasps, wedges and chisels. Many of analysis will provide information on the extent of re- these artefacts were recovered as a hoard, housed in liance on different livestock for dietary purposes, age two large lead tanks (Leahy 1994, 352). Specialist ranges and seasonality relating to animal slaughter iron tools also provide the evidence for leather- and butchery techniques. Conclusions will also be working, namely "slickers", for cleaning and stret- drawn on the extent to which the inhabitants relied on ching tanned hides; "lunette" knives and "creasers", the consumption of stock raised within the confines for the finishing of leather products (Ottaway 1994, of the settlement's immediate territory or whether it 105). The metalworking evidence is provided by a was provisioned by a combination of native produc- combination of tools and manufacturing debris. Both tion, renders and/or exchange. iron smelting and smithing remains were recovered. The wild fauna and flora exploited by the settle- Smelting was indicated by the presence of smelting ment were derived from a variety of environmental slags, while smithing was indicated by smithing slag habitats. The bones of a large number of now extinct and partly worked objects. A collection of tools asso- European Cranes, together with those of various ciated with ironworking includes punches, files and ducks, suggest wildfowling in the Trent floodplain; a small pair of tongs - although the latter item could while the remains of deer, hare, woodcock and hazel- also have been used for non-ferrous metalworking. nut shells indicate exploitation of woodland or more The one fragment of iron ore recovered suggests the open landscape. Large quantities ofboth riverine and exploitation of bog iron rather than the nearby marine fish, as well as oyster shells and net-sinkers, Frodingham ironstone deposits. Copper-alloy and also demonstrate access to foodstuffs from the adja- leadworking evidence is provided by sheet metal cent river and the open sea. The majority of these wild offcuts, melt and scrap artefacts, together with seven resources may have been derived from the immediate fired clay mould fragments. Further analysis of the hinterland of the settlement, but as with domesticated moulds should demonstrate whether they were used livestock, they could also have been imported from for the casting of copper-alloy or other fine metals. other landholdings as renders, exchanged commodi- In addition to the evidence for the character of the ties or as resources for which there were common agricultural regime and specialist craftworking activ- rights of access (Hooke 1981, 36; Loveluck 1994,333- ities, the range of imported commodities found at 334). As a whole, the patterns of consumption of do- Flixborough shows that its inhabitants were exten- mestic and wild faunal resources at Flixborough will sively integrated within exchange networks with ultimately be compared with those derived from the other parts of England and continental Europe. The study of analogous material at other Mid - Late Sax on pottery wares, coinage and raw materials, such as sites. These will include rural settlements, such as lead, indicate regular contact with areas linked by the Wicken Bonhunt; craft and trading centres, such as East Midlands and Humber river systems, while the Fishergate in York, and larger nascent towns, such as presence of four variants ofMaxey-type ware reflects Hamwic, with a view to examining the applicability either its regional exchange, or a common pottery tra- of assigning interpretations of site status and charac- dition throughout Lincolnshire and Northampton- ter from vertebrate remains (Crabtree 1994, 50; shire, in the 8th and 9th centuries (Vince & Young O'Connor 1994, 141, and Bourdillon 1994, 123-124). 1994, 56-62). Northumbrian stycas and Late Saxon The products of the agricultural economy provid- Torksey-type and Lincoln pottery wares also demon- ed most of the raw materials for the settlement's strate inclusion within trans-Humber and Lincoln- 189 Chr. Loveluck shire exchange networks between the 9th and early In total, the Flixborough settlement has yielded an lOth centuries. In addition, the large quantity of lead exceptional range and quantity of imports in compar- recovered suggests links with the Peak District and ison with most Middle Saxon rural settlements. How- Upper Trent valley. The Humberht charter, dated to ever, this apparent wealth may partially be a reflec- 835 AD, records the regular export of Peak District tion of the fact that it is the most extensively exca- lead to Canterbury, as a render to the Archbishop vated Middle Saxon settlement in the hinterland of (Hart 1981, 111 ), and the relative abundance of lead the Humber. It has already been demonstrated that on Mid - Late Saxon settlements at Flixborough, Flixborough is not unique in the region, with regard Riby, Lurk Lane-Beverley and Thwing (see Fig. 1) to its range of imports derived from other parts of probably reflects the role of the Rivers Trent and England, and this is also the case with imports from Humber in the transport of this commodity to other continental Europe. Rescue excavations at Riby, in parts of eastern England at this time. The discovery north Lincolnshire, also recovered northern French of the large Ipswich- type ware assemblage at Flix- black-burnished ware pottery, Eiffel lava quems and borough, consisting of a variety of types and forms, a Frisian "porcupine" sceat from Middle Saxon also reflects the role of the Humber estuary as a trad- settlement remains, within a series of enclosures ing interface with south-eastern England. Other sites (Steedman 1994, 222; Didsbury 1994, 246-249; Booth with Ipswich-type ware in the hinterland of the estu- 1994, 272). The similarity in the distribution patterns ary include Riby, Bolton le Clay, Barrow-upon- of continental imports on both banks of the Humber Humber, Lurk Lane-Beverley and Wharram Percy is also demonstrated by the presence of lava quems (Didsbury 1994, 237; Hayfield forthcoming; Watkins and glass vessel fragments from the Middle Saxon 1991,71-73 and Didsbury pers comm.). monastery at Lurk Lane, Beverley (Foreman 1991, The collection of commodities derived from con- 106; Henderson 1991, 124), the recovery of a Mero- tinental Europe also reflects trade and commun- vingian pottery vessel from a 7th-century cemetery in ication routes along the east coast of England. From Driffield (Mortimer 1905, 294), and by the occur- the end of the 7th century, the inhabitants of Flix- rence of northern French black-burnished ware and borough were in receipt ofwheelthrown Seine valley Tating ware at Wharram Percy (Slowikowski 1992, pottery, together with other wheelthrown red and 29). Taken as a group, all the above settlements ben- black-burnished wares from northern France or Bel- efited from integration within the same long-distance gium, while small quantities of Badorf ware were exchange networks, running along the North Sea also imported during the 9th century (Hodges 1981, coast to the Humber estuary and its feeder rivers 68- 84; Blackmore & Redknap 1988, 235). Other (Loveluck 1994, 312). imports include the previously mentioned Eiffel lava quem stones and fragments of 89 glass vessels. The only comparable collection of vessel glass from The character and status of the settlement Northern England is that derived from Fishergate, the Middle Saxon trading and craftworking settlement at The apparent similarity between the archaeolog- York (Hunter & Jackson 1993, 1333-1339). The sil- ical remains from Flixborough and material derived ver coinage from Flixborough also reflects links with from excavations at documented Middle Saxon mon- southern England and north-western Europe. The astic settlements has previously led to the suggestion coins include early 8th-century sceattas, ultimately that Flixborough was a monastery (Whi twell 1991, derived from Frisia, and West Saxon broad penny 247; Yorke 1993, 146). Prior to any acceptance of this coinage, minted between the mid 9th and late 1Oth interpretation, however, it is first necessary to briefly centuries AD. Only one Mercian penny was ident- examine the development of the criteria for defining ified - a late 8th-century issue of Offa. The West the nature of Middle Saxon rural settlements. With a Saxon coinage, including issues of Aethelwulf (855- few exceptions, before the 1980s the vast majority of 865 AD), Aethelberht (858-865 AD), Alfred (871- Middle Saxon sites which had been subject to exca- 880 AD) and Edward the Martyr (975-979 AD), ap- vation were major monastic centres, such as Monk- pears to have been the only coinage reaching wearmouth, Jarrow and Whitby (Cramp 1969, 21-66; Flixborough after the mid 9th century. These West Cramp 1976, 229-241; Peers & Radford 1943, 27- Saxon issues indicate the maintenance of links with 88). As a corrollary to their documented possession southern England at a time often characterised by of royal patronage, the structures and finds recovered Scandinavian disruption. Surprisingly, Anglo-Scan- from these monasteries were seen as characteristic of dinavian coinage was not recovered, despite ceramic high-status monastic settlements. Analysis of the re- evidence suggesting occupation into the 1Oth cen- mains seemed to corroborate the textual evidence tury. provided by Bede and other clerics, confirming that 190 Flixborough- the character and economy of a high status Middle Sax on settlement in northern England these religious foci were also craftworking centres, Wade-Martins 1980,54-55, Beresford 1987, 24; Rahtz enjoying extensive contacts with continental Europe. 1979, 49-51 ). In the light of this observation, the pre- One of the legacies of the above excavations has been vious identification of the Flixborough boundary to indicate broad categories of evidence which are ditch as a monastic vallum must be viewed with ex- thought to characterise Middle Saxon monastic set- treme caution. The nearest architectural affinities to tlements. These include the possession of a character- the buildings at Flixborough, in terms of foundation istic settlement morphology, involving a planned lay- style and building size, are also found at sites such as out within an enclosure, centred on a religious cult Raunds-West Cotton, Wicken Bonhunt and North focus; the use of new building media, such as stone Elmham, which have been interpreted as manorial architecture; indications of specialist craftworking centres for secular or ecclesiastical magnates. In con- and long-distance exchange; and evidence ofliteracy, trast, the use of a gravel and stone footing for the represented by styli or inscriptions. Before the mid probable church at Flixborough is akin to smaller 1980s, all the excavated sites viewed as monasteries buildings in the monastic settlements at Hartlepool also possessed textual evidence to reinforce their and Whitby. However, buildings with gravel, cobble identification, thereby conditioning the interpretation and dry-stone footings do not appear to be exclusive of the archaeological remains. to monasteries. The documented Northumbrian royal Flixborough, with its planned layout, a probable centre at Dunbar, in Lothian, also possessed a phase church, evidence for craftworking and luxury im- of buildings with these footings (Holdsworth 1992, ports, together with a collection of styli, would fulfil 43-44). most of the above criteria for defining a monastic set- The use of the presence of imported commodities tlement. However, if the Flixborough remains are as evidence for monastic character is also question- examined alongside those from other Middle Saxon able. Like Flixborough, the putative magnate settle- rural settlements, such as Wicken Bonhunt, Essex; ments of Wicken Bonhunt and North Elmham have Saint Peter' s-Northampton; Raunds-West Cotton, yielded quantities of wheelmade Frankish pottery, Northamptonshire, and more recently excavated sites from northern France and Belgium (Rogerson & at Brandon-Staunch Meadow, Suffolk and Riby, Wade 1973, 143; Hodges 1980, 424-426). Other sug- north Lincolnshire, it is evident that the long-held gested high status centres, such as Saint Peter's- archaeological criteria for identifying monastic settle- Northampton and Riby, have also yielded imported ments must be re-assessed in order to advance the Frankish pottery or other imports (Oakley & Hunter archaeological interpretation of the full spectrum of 1979, 298; Steedman et al. 1994). As a consequence, Middle Saxon rural settlements. the occurrence of imported commodities on Middle Sites like Flixborough, Brandon, Saint Peter's- Saxon rural settlements should not be relied upon as Northampton, Wicken Bonhunt and Riby provide a an indicator of monastic character. Similar reserv- contrast to monastic settlements, such as Jarrow, ations should also be held over the use of specialist Whitby and Hartlepool in that there is no documen- craftworking evidence as a trait linked to monaster- tary evidence to influence interpretation of site char- ies, outside proto-urban centres. It is sensible to ex- acter and status. The former sites are also materially pect that Middle Saxon "secular" magnate settle- wealthy rural settlements- although Flixborough and ments would also have supported dependent artisans, Brandon appear particularly rich- exhibiting a series and that they would have been fully integrated into of similarities in settlement morphology and struc- regional and longer distance exchange networks - tural characteristics; evidence for craftworking; trade especially if they were located in key trading zones, and exchange and in three cases, literacy. The evid- such as the Humber Estuary. ence for common traditions in aspects of spatial or- In conclusion, the similarities in structural charac- ganisation can be illustrated in the widespread use of teristics between Flixborough and the Middle Saxon major enclosure boundaries to structure settlement sites seen as manorial centres, together with the com- layout at Flixborough, Brandon, Riby and Wicken mon occurrence of imported commodities from con- Bonhunt (Fig. 2; Carr, Tester &Murphy 1988, 373; tinental Europe and evidence for craftworking on Steedman 1994, 221; Wade 1974, 175-176). Indeed, these settlements, lead to the conclusion that the the weight of evidence from these sites and others, Flixborough remains are more likely to represent a such as Raunds, Saint Peter's-Northampton, North wealthy manorial centre rather than a monastery. Elmham, Goltho and Cheddar, suggests that many Nevertheless, the recovery of the collection of styli Middle Saxon rural settlements had at least, a loosely does suggest a significant ecclesiastical component planned morphology, within or associated with en- within the social fabric of the settlement. This may closures or linear boundaries (Hamerow 1995, 16; have taken the form of resident clerics to serve the Cadman & Foard 1984, 81-83; Williams 1984, 27; religious needs of the inhabitants and provide assist- 191 Chr. Loveluck ance in estate administration. An ecclesiastical, ment and Economy in Anglo-Saxon England, CBA though not a monastic component, has also been sug- Research Report 89, York, 120-125. gested for the Saint Peter's settlement, at North- CADMAN G. & FOARD G. 1984: Raunds: Manorial and ampton. This site has produced a stylus and the re- Village Origins, in: FAULL M.L. (ed.), Studies in mains oflarge earth-fast timber buildings, succeeded Late Anglo-Sa;wn Settlement, Oxford, 81-100. by two mortared stone buildings. One of the stone CANTI M. 1992: Research into Natural and Anthro- buildings appears to have been the Middle Saxon pre- pogenic deposits from the excavations at Flix- cursor of Saint Peter's church. The settlement is in- borough, Humberside, Ancient Monuments terpreted as part of the administrative centre (caput) Laboratory Report 53/92, English Heritage. of a royal estate, with an associated Minster church CARR R.D., TESTER A. & MURPHY P., 1988: The (Williams 1984, 27). Middle Saxon settlement at Staunch Meadow, Following the brief summary of the archaeolog- Brandon, Antiquity, Vol62, No. 235, 371-377. ical evidence from Flixborough and the preliminary COPPACK G. 1986: St. Lawrence's Church, Bumham, thoughts on its interpretation, outlined in this paper, South Humberside: The excavation of a Parochial the current programme of detailed analysis involving Chapel, Lincolnshire History and Archaeology a multi-disciplinary team, funded by English Herit- 21, 39-60. age, will result in a far more comprehensive char- CRABTREE P.J. 1994: Animal Exploitation in East acterisation of the settlement and its economy. The Anglian Villages, in: RACKHAM J. (ed.), Environ- publication of the site will hopefully coincide closely ment and Economy in Anglo-Saxon England, with the completion of the analysis of the West CBA Research Report 89, York, 40-54. Heslerton Anglo-Saxon settlement, with its Middle CRAMP R.J. 1969: Excavations at the Saxon monas- Saxon phase, together with the prospective public- tic sites ofWearmouth and Jarrow, Co. Durham: ation of the Brandon, Thwing and Wicken Bonhunt an interim report, Medieval Archaeology XIII, 21- Mid- Late Saxon sites. In conjunction, with the long- 66. standing information on monastic settlements and the CRAMP R.J. 1976: Monastic Sites, in: WILSON D.M. recently published reports on the Hamwic and Fisher- (ed.), The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England, gate proto-urban centres, the detailed analysis of Cambridge, 201-252. 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Excavations at Lurk Lane, Beverley, 1979-82, MARSHALL A. & MARSHALL G. 1991: A Survey and Sheffield Excavation Reports 1, 105-114. Analysis of the Buildings of Early and Middle HAMEROW H.F. 1995: Shaping Settlements: Early Anglo-Saxon England, Medieval Archaeology Medieval Communities in Northwest Europe, in: XXXV, 29-43. BINTLIFF J. & HAMEROW H.F. (eds.), Europe Be- MILLETT M. & JAMES S. 1983: Excavations at tween Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, British Cowdery's Down, Basingstoke, Hampshire, Archaeological Report, International Series 617, Archaeological Journall40, 151-279. Oxford, 8-37. MORT!MER J.R. 1905: Forty Years' Researches in HART C.R. 1981: The North Derbyshire Archae- British and Saxon burial mounds of East York- ological Survey, to AD 1500, Sheffield. shire, London. HA YF!ELD C. forthcoming: The Pottery, in: FORE- 0AKLEY G.E. & HUNTER J.R. 1979: The Glass, in: MAN M.F. (ed.), Excavations at St. Chads, Bar- WILLIAMS J.H., St. Peter's Street, Northampton, row-upon-Humber, Lincolnshire. Excavations 1973-1976, Northampton, 296-302. HENDERSON J. 1991: The Glass, in: ARMSTRONG P., O'CONNOR T. 1994: 8th-11th century economy and TOMLINSON D. & EvAns D.H., Excavations at environment in York, in: RACKHAM J. (ed.), Lurk Lane, Beverley, 1979-82, Sheffield Excav- Environment and Economy in Anglo-Saxon Eng- ation Reports 1, 124-130. land, CBA Research Report 89, York, 136-14 7. HILL P .H. 1991: Whit horn 4 - Excavations 1990- OTTAWA Y P.J. 1994: Ferrous Metal Assessment Re- 1991, Interim Report, Whithorn Trust, Stranraer. port, in: WH!TWELL J.B. et al., Flixborough Mid- HODGES R. 1980: Characterisation and Discussion of dle Sax on Settlement Excavations 1988-91 - Ma- Identified Imported Sherds, in: WADE-MARTINS terial Assessment Report, Humberside Archae- P., Excavations in North Elmham Park, 1967- ology Unit report, for English Heritage, 96-106. 1972, East Anglian Archaeology Report 9, Vol II, PEERS C. & RADFORD C.A.R. 1943: The Sax on Mon- Norfolk Museums Service. astery ofWhitby, Archaeologia 89, 27-88. HODGES R. 1981: The Hamwih pottery: the local and RAHTZ P. 1976: Appendix C: The building plan of imported wares from 30 years' excavations at the Anglo-Saxon monastery ofWhitby Abbey, in: Middle Saxon Southampton and their European WILSON D.M. (ed.), The Archaeology of Anglo- context, Southampton Archaeological Research Saxon England, Cambridge, 459-462. Committee Report 2 = CBA Research Report 37, RAHTZ P. 1979: The Sax on And Medieval Palaces At London. Cheddar, British Archaeological Reports, British HOLDSWORTH P. 1991: Dunbar, Current Archaeo- Series 65, Oxford. logy No. 127, VolXI, No. 7, 315-317. ROGERSON A. & WADE K. 1973: Wicken Bonhunt, HoLDSWORTH P. 1992: A multi-period settlement on Note, in: Medieval Britain 1972, Medieval Arcltae- the Lothian coast, Medieval Europe 1992, Rural ology XVII, 143. Settlement- Pre-printed Papers, Vol 8, York, 41- SLOWIKOWSK! A.M. 1992: Anglo-Saxon and Medie- 46. val Pottery, in: MILNE G. & RICHARDS J.D., HOOKED. 1981: Anglo-Saxon Landscapes of the Wharram: A Study of Settlement on the Yorkshire West Midlands: the Charter Evidence, British Ar- Wolds, VII- Two Anglo-Saxon Buildings And As- chaeological Report, British Series 95, Oxford. sociated Finds, York University Archaeological HOPE TA YLOR B. 1977: Yeavering- An Anglo-Brit- Publications 9, 27-38. ish centre ofearly Northumbria, HMSO, London. STEEDMAN K. 1994: Excavation of a Saxon Site at HUNTER J.R. & JACKSON C.M. 1993: Glass, in: Riby Crossroads, Lincolnshire, Archaeological ROGERS N.S.H., Anglian and Other Finds from Journal151, 212-306. Fishergate, The Archaeology of York- the Small VINCE A.E. & YOUNG J. 1994: Pottery Assessment, Finds Series 17/9, York, 1331-1344. in: WHITWELL J.B. et al., Flixborough Middle LEAHY J. 1994: The Flixborough Hoard, Current Saxon Settlement Excavations 1988-91, Material Archaeology No. 14, 352. Assessment Report, Humberside Archaeology LOVELUCK C.P. 1994: Exchange and Society in Early Unit Report for English Heritage, 56-67. Medieval England, 400-700 AD, unpublished WADE K. 1974: Wicken Bonhunt, Note, in: Medieval Ph.D. thesis, University ofDurham. Britain 1973, Medieval Archaeology XVIII, 175- LOVELUCK C.P. 1996: The Anglo-Saxon Settlement 176. and Cemetery Remains From Flixborough - Re- WADE-MARTINS P. 1980: Excavations in North vised & Summarised Assessment and Updated Elmham Park, 1967-1972, East Anglian Archae- 193 Chr. Loveluck ology Report 9, Vol I, Norfolk Museums Service. WILLIAMS J.H. 1984: A Review of Some Aspects of WATKINS G. 1991: The Pottery, in: ARMSTRONG P., Late Saxon Urban Origins and Development, in: TOMLINSON D. & EYANS D.H., Excavations at FAULL M.L. (ed.), Studies in Late Anglo-Saxon Lurk Lane, Beverley, 1979-82, Sheffield Excav- Settlement, Oxford, 25-34. ation Reports 1, 61-103. YoRKE B. 1993: Lindsey: The Lost Kingdom Found?, WHITWELL J.B. 1991: Flixborough, Current Archae- in: VINCE A. (ed.), Pre-Viking Lindsey, Lincoln ology No. 126, Vol XI, No. 6, 244-247. Archaeological Studies 1, Lincoln, 141-150. Dr Christopher Loveluck Humber Archaeology Partnership The Old School Northumberland A venue Kingston upon Hull HU2 OLN UK 194 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 M. A. Aston The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England Introduction courses, and also where appropriate to involve the local people and keep them informed of progress Shapwick is a parish of 1284 hectares in the with the research. middle of the county of Somerset in south-west Eng- land mid way between the small market towns of Bridgwater and Glastonbury. Today there is one vil- Background lage running north-south for two kilometres in the centre of the parish and the land is worked from six As a result of the last fifty years of research on ru- farmsteads, one in the village and five out in the fields ral settlements in Britain a general model can be pro- (Fig. 1). The population is just over four hundred. posed for the development of villages and farmsteads About one third of the parish is low lying fen land, from the post-Roman to the post-medieval period part of the Somerset Levels, while the rest is on the (500 to 1500ad). This model suggests that from a va- rising land of the Polden Hills running west out to the riety ofRomano-British settlement types a predomi- river Parrett (Fig. 2). The geology of the area is recent nantly dispersed pattern of hamlets and farmsteads peat and alluvial deposits in the north of the parish developed by the Anglo-Saxon period. Even though while in the south the base is liassic rocks, principally large nucleations existed in the late Roman period limestones and clays. nothing like this seems to have existed in later centu- The parish was owned by Glastonbury Abbey ries. Over much of the country the dispersed pattern from 729ad to 1539; from probably the twelfth cen- has persisted through to the present day, although it tury the land was split between two manors, the is possible to demonstrate that there have been larger belonging to the abbot and the smaller to the considerable changes in detail. Elsewhere the settle- almoner. From the sixteenth century there have been ment pattern was dominated by much more nuclea- a large number of owners of the two manors. They tion in the middle ages and later; usually this is often seem to have been at odds with each other over associated with the most fully developed common land matters and it may have been this litigation that field systems. The 'village belt' of England runs from produced the profusion of documents and maps which east Somerset and Dorset in the south, up through the have survived for the post-medieval period. Now the midland counties of Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Lei- parish and each of the farms, though not most of the cestershire and Northamptonshire, and through to the village, is owned by Lord Vestey and it is through the north east, Yorkshire, county Durham and Northum- kind co-operation ofhis land agent for the estate, Bill berland. Again this general picture is very variable in Robbins, that the project has been able to take place detail. so successfully. Villages are now seen as rather late developments, The project was set up with three main objectives. being founded only in certain areas. The date range is Firstly to test the hypothesis that Shapwick is a plan- quite wide with some archaeologists suggesting vil- ned village, where the village and its medieval com- lages may have been founded in the ninth or tenth mon fields were laid out to replace a more scattered centuries, others saying the eleventh and twelfth cen- pattern of hamlets and farmsteads with their own field turies and some historians seeing the process going systems. Secondly to develop further the methodo- on to the thirteenth century. While we can be more logy and the field techniques for what has come to be specific for certain areas and for particular examples, called landscape archaeology, especially map analysis, in general we seem to be looking at the period 800 to field work techniques and geophysical and geochem- 1200ad as the main period for village foundation. ical prospecting. It was also intended to use the pro- How this was achieved was very variable but two ject to teach students of all ages and on all sorts of important strands can be distinguished - the planned 195 M. A. Aston Fig. 1. - General map of the Location of Shapwick location of Shapwick. ewens SHAPWICl< • e,l Glo<tonbury Brldgv.<~ter est~t 8TAUNTON i Sweet track ,.li / // LEVELS 0 working farms lkm village and the polyfocal (or agglomerated) village. of the colonisation model was based on an assumed The former was the result of planting a new village, chronological development for placenames and the deliberately laid out to a regular plan on a new site, first documentary references to particular settlements; the latter the growing together of a number of sepa- neither of these forms of evidence need necessarily rate centres, such as the church, manor house, mill, a be related to the date of foundation of a settlement. green or a ford, with the addition of planned blocks With the new model there is an assumption that ham- of properties. let and farm sites are much older and more persistent There is little room in this model for the process than was formerly thought; villages are added in some of colonisation with new farmsteads built on former areas at specific times and replace the pattern of older forested or marshy lands. This clearly happened and hamlets but there is otherwise relatively little found- there are some clearly documented examples but much ation of absolutely new settlements except for a few 196 The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England LZr]g~----------~L~0------------~41~-----------4~2------------~L~l------------~LL~-----------;'~z SHAPWICK PARISH in 1904 LO )9 39 ]8 Ftom Ordoonc.e $U(vey 6" 1m1te Mops Sec.ond Ed1hon 190!. MA•lon December 1993 37 J~9------------7,,0,-----------~,I------------~,~2------------7.o~----------~,~,--------~--~4S 37 Fig. 2. -Map of the parish of Shapwick in 1904. medieval farms and large numbers of post-medieval as the basis for a ten year project which we are now farms following enclosure. some eight years through. For some time the author was engaged in looking for a parish or area where some of the ideas in this model could be tested in the west of England and The Shapwick Project specifically in the historic county of Somerset. A number of parishes were looked at and in the end There have been two main objectives to the pro- Shapwick was picked because of the research already ject, one involving a close examination of the village carried out by Nicholas Corcos. He had suggested and the other to look in great detail at the develop- that the village looked as if it had been planned from ment of the landscape of fields in the parish. While the evidence of eighteenth century maps, that the these exercises have often run concurrently often more common fields were very regular with similarly sized work is going on in one than the other. holdings in each of the two medieval common fields, and that certain furlong names as recorded in a sur- vey of 1515 were of a 'habitative' type (cote, wick, The Village worth, ton and so on), that is they looked as if they should really be attached to settlements rather than The village has been examined to see if there is areas of fields, suggesting a different field system if any evidence that it was planned at a particular date. not a more dispersed pattern of settlement. On the To do this it is necessary to identify changes in the basis of this evidence Shapwick was chosen in 1988 plan particularly those of recent centuries, allow for 197 M. A. Aston -----.. ----, Fig. 3.- Plan of the village SHAPWICK of Shapwick in 1764-5. VILLAGE 1764-5 estate maps 0 100metres 0 500 feet these, and remove them in order to get at a more Map Analysis (Figs. 3 and 4) original plan. To do this a great deal of map analysis has been undertaken, together with an examination of When the project began it was known that there all the historic buildings in the village. This been was at least one map earlier than the tithe map of carried out along with morphological analysis of the 1839 but as work progressed it became clear that village's plan of streets, lanes and properties as well there were very many maps of the eighteenth century as a series of small scale 'opportunistic' excavations including several of the village and others of the early undertaken as circumstances presented themselves. enclosed areas of the fields and of the last remaining 198 The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England Fig. 4. - Plan of the village of Shapwick in I 885. SHAPWICK VILLAGE 1885 OS 25inch SH Shopwick House KL Kent Lone HF Home Form OH Down House CF Church Farm SMC SI Mary's Church NF New Farm s School KF King's Farm LF Lawn Farm LH Lawn House V Vicarage SM Smithy HF Hilt Form M Shapw1ck flour mill a Quarry SP Spring .... f ' .. ,o 1' ..... ...... ' f ' ...... ...... p pump w well .....' ...... '! . f •• 0 100 metres 0 500 feet bits of the common fields with furlongs and strips. was constructed to the west and eventually many of From these map sources it could be shown that there the roads left as cul-de-sacs to the east of the park had been substantial alterations to the village plan in were stopped up and removed. Elsewhere in the vil- the decades before around 1800. These consisted lage a more direct north-south route was created by principally of the removal of a large area of the north cutting a new road through some houses and plots on end of the village, with several streets closed off and the eastern side of the southern half of the village. many houses demolished to create a park to the east The fine series of maps enable us to see these changes and south of the main manor house. A by-pass road and many other alterations in great detail. 199 M. A. Aston this has been assumed to be a seventeenth century building; it has transom and mullion windows. Clear- ly it has been altered in the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. However on examination it was found to have late fifteenth century roofs over the main hall area and each of the cross wings. Further- more, a formerly detached building to the west was shown to be a detached medieval kitchen with smoke blackened timbers. Various buildings were added to link up these units in succeeding centuries. Dendro- chronological dates have been obtained, by Dan Miles, for the medieval buildings; the hall (Fig. 5) produced a felling date for the oak trees of spring I I 1489, and the detached kitchen of spring 1428. A L.______J I survey of 1515 says that the manor house was inside L a moat and there is indeed a moat to the north of the house near the gardens. This is very small and it was always felt that it was too small for the site of the abbot's manor house. Now that a fifteenth century house has been identified within the hotel house this must be the house that had a moat around it. There is little trace of this on the surface but a very detailed earthwork survey by James Bond has identified much Fig. 5. - Reconstruction drawing of the manor house roof of its course (Fig. 6), the area of the island is recorded (lane Penoyre). in 1515, and although it is not clear from geophysical surveys, a trench dug for an electricity cable located Historic Buildings Analysis the moat edges, probable bridge supports or retaining walls, and showed from the very rich collection of One building in the village, the second smaller finds in the moat that it was probably backfilled in manor house, now a school, had been the subject of a around 1625; it seems to have constructed made in building survey before the project began. The Somer- the thirteenth century. set Vernacular Buildings Research Group were there- Also, if this is the house mentioned in 1515, fore approached and asked if they would consider which seems to be the case, then we know that it had surveying all the other buildings in the parish. This a garden. This cannot have been in front of the house they agreed to do and they have now finished this to the south as a great barn, probably the farmyard, phase of the work and published a monograph on all and part of the village lay in that area; it is most likely the buildings of the parish dating to before the end of to have lain to the north where there were two fish- the nineteenth century. ponds, the smaller moated site and later on the ban- Some surprising results came from this work. The quetting house. In order to test out this idea a geo- only thatched cottage in the village, Forsters, which physical survey was carried out in the field north of was known to be late medieval with an inserted floor the house. While this revealed rectilinear anomalies and stacks in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which probably do represent garden features, the and unlike most houses in the village seems to have dominant features are curved lines and linear anoma- survived substantially unaltered, turns out to have lies on a different alignment to the gardens. An exca- late medieval smoke-blackened thatch still remaining vation was carried out in 1993 which showed that on the north side of the roof. This is of rivet wheat beneath a layer of topsoil there was an extensive late (triticum-) and is one of only a small number which Iron Age and Romano-British site with house foun- have been identified in southern England by John dations and gulleys and a mass of pottery, bone and Letts in an English Heritage project. Most of the rest metalwork; this probably represents a 'lake village' of the housing stock in the village was rebuilt or type of site such as those at Glastonbury and Meare. substantially altered in the decades around 1800 when Geophysical survey has so far failed to define this there seems to have been an attempt to make an estate site in any direction though it is unlikely to go much or 'closed' village along with the emparking scheme. further to the north or south. The most interesting building is the main manor The examination of the manor house and the adja- house now a hotel. Since the late eighteenth century cent structures provides a very good example of the 200 The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England multidisciplinary nature of this project, the methodo- the village closes and the common fields which was logy and the wide variety of techniques being em- in existence in or by the tenth century; there were also ployed. a number of features with tenth century pottery and some evidence for twelfth century buildings. Ex- cavations in July 1996 failed to locate any buildings Excavations within the Village area of the tenth century adjacent to the line of the pipe trench but did identify boundaries on the same align- A number of excavations have been carried out ment as most of the boundaries in the village today, within the village. The earliest was on the site of the associated with pottery of this early date. new sports hall at the school. This showed how thor- Very limited excavation has taken place at the ough the demolition ofbuildings had been when the south end of the village but nevertheless this suggests park was created in the late eighteenth century; the that although the area was in use by the tenth century, earliest evidence of occupation was twelfth century judged from the few pottery finds of that date, no pottery. Another opportunity was provided when the structures have been identified so far, local water authority put in a new sewerage scheme The most extensive excavations took place in which involved a wide trench across the park through 1994, 1995 and 1996 in the middle of the village the area of the former village. Excavations were car- between the church and the smaller manor house. ried out before construction began and these revealed There, it is clear that the village alignments were in the foundations of a number of post-medieval houses existence by the tenth century and that one building together with evidence of a boundary bank between of that date at least was aligned on one of the lanes on N L1 SHAPWICK, Somerset: EARTHWORKB AT SHAPWICK HOUSE 0 Metres so CJeond l'ft4 Fig. 6. -Plan of the earth works of the moat at the manor house (lames Bond). 201 M. A. Aston 42 Nr-----------~4~0----------~41____________~42__________~4~3--------·--~44~--------~45 SHAPWICK PARISH in 1754 and 1762 ·· ... '•, '•, ···. ·· .... 41 '•, ·· .. 41 ·· ... '•, ··· ... 40 39 39 38 38 Comp1ted lrom lhGo ten mops of 1754 from SCRO 00/SG 36 c/206 '----'f.-,--'\_ of 1754 ond the nine mops of post 1762 of ouo~ of common field SCRO 00/SG 39 c/206 cl760 M As.ton Oe<ember 1993 J/39 40 J1 41 42 43 44 45 Fig. 7.- Map of the parish ofShapwick in 1754 and 1762. the same orientation. The were then many changes in Pottery of the tenth century occurs from one end of the early middle ages before this part of the village the village to the other while twelfth-thirteenth was abandoned and became an open croft. century pottery is only found in the central area. Lit- tle is found after the fourteenth century and it is as- sumed that it is being taken out to the fields along Test Pits with the manure. It is obviously very difficult to carry out a lot of archaeological excavation in a village that is still oc- Analysis of the Village Plan cupied and in use with houses, gardens, lawns, drives and so on. The project has therefore adopted the All of this research is used to generate models of strategy of digging one metre square test pits, where the how the village may have developed and we are we were allowed to, in peoples gardens. The strati- on the third version as our ideas change and we ob- graphy is recorded together with any finds, a section tain more information. Currently it is felt that the is recorded and the nature and depth of the bedrock whole of the area of the medieval village was used, noted. Twenty one of these were dug in the spring of and had pottery abandoned in it by the tenth century. 1995 and a further 12 in spring 1996. Surprisingly, However as we shall see (below) it would be very since this did not seem like a very productive exer- difficult for us to recognise any occupation earlier cise when we were carrying it out, the results have than this date as there is no earlier Saxon pottery in proved to be very useful, enabling us to map occup- Somerset as in so many parts of the west of England. ation in different parts of the village at different times. There does not appear to be anything Roman under 202 ""l a?" CO BEERWA Y FARM, SHAPWICK, SOMERSET. () "" ~ MAGNETOMETER SURVEY OF THE OLD CHURCH SITE. ~ "';::;· !::.. N "' ;::: Greyscale of magnetometer data overlain ~ on earthwork survey. ~ ~ ::;.. ""0 ~ '"' ~ ;::: ;:; ~ ~ ~ t;] ::: ~ c:;· ~ ~ ..., ~- ~ ;1 ~ C/.l ::r "' "d ::E ;:;· ;>;" ....'"t:l .3. ~ "~ C/.l 0 -4.5 ·1.5 1.4 4.3 3 ~ nT -------__ _ .... ------ "' "~ - -:...::....::-=- tr1 0 ~m ::l ANCIENT MONUMENTS LABORATORY. IJQ N j;J 0 ::l w a P- M. A. Aston -25-40 1]]40-45 ~45-5 ~50-55 155-75 1>75 • • • • • lOO metres Fig. 9.- Plot of heavy metal over the old church site. the village, except perhaps at the north end. Analysis The Parish of the pattern of streets, lanes and property bounda- ries suggests that these were fitted in between several A great deal of research has been carried out in the pre-existing parallel roads running east west along rest of the parish, principally on the 'upland' part away the Polden Hills. While the layout of the lanes is dif- from the low-lying peat and fen land of this part of ferent at each end of the village, with large open en- the Somerset Levels. Most of this work has involved closures to the south and a pattern of narrow ladder- fieldwork on ploughed land. like lanes in the north, there is at the moment no clear evidence that these were laid out at different times. While some of the lanes may have been planned along Map Analysis with the properties between, it is likely that the layout of the larger units of the village were conditioned by The fine series of maps means that it is possible to pre-existing boundaries, possibly by the lynchets and analyse the changes in the pattern of fields, wood- field boundaries of a prehistoric or Romano-British lands and lanes over the last quarter of a millennium. field system across the area (see below). The earliest map of the whole parish is of 1787; the Within the pattern of roads and lanes the tene- tithe map dates to 1839 and then from the 1880s there ments seem to be of very regular and consistent sizes. is a fine series of large scale Ordnance Survey maps Little research has been carried out so far on this as- (for the early 1900s and the 1930s) before the last pect of the village plan, but it looks as if a regular modem metric mf'p of 1971. However it has proved module of length of one hundred feet or multiples possible to construct a map of the 1750s and 1760s thereof has been employed to lay out the properties from a series oflarge scale map lets Fig 7)- ten maps between the lanes. In the middle ages the 'rope' of of 1754 showing areas of enclosed land and nine twenty feet was the standard measurement in Somer- maps of post-1762 showing the remaining areas of set and so the modules may have been based on this. strips in the common fields. This is important for More analysis of the village plan is clearly desirable. several reasons. It gives us a clear view of what at 204 The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England t Roman pottery • Fragments: o1 4-5 6-8 17 Fig. 10.- Sladwick pottery distribution and geophysical survey. least part of the common fields looked like, including rived from the pre-existing pattern of furlongs and the likely size and density of the strips, and it hints strips by a process of piecemeal enclosure which is that much of the pattern of the enclosed fields is de- well documented in the parish. 205 M. A. Aston BC AD 0 500 1000 1500 2000 ASHCOTT ? • ?__._?\ \ ?\ \ \ s s \ \ \ \ \ \?~"" """"""""'\ CATCOTT \ 0"" """" """"s: Black land ENWORTHY + ~ ~ ~ _-_- ---~ ~ ~~A;bc=h=e-s_t=e=r======~?~~~~~?----t:•_o_o~t CHURCH! : 0 0 0 0 0 0 re occupied 0 0 sites 0 0 0 0 Old Church ?----0---?---' SLADWICK Fig. 11. - A model for the development of the settlement pattern in the parish of Shapwick. Field Names them) and so enable us to carry out further research on those fields using archaeological techniques (see Furthermore, and of the greatest importance, is below). that these maps contain large numbers of field names. The best source for these is the tithe map of 1839 but earlier maps contain additional or previously used Botanical Survey names so that a very detailed picture can be built up of the minor names used to describe features in the A full survey has been made of the hedges in the landscape of the parish. There are no maps before the parish and work has begun on the hedgerow trees and middle of the eighteenth century but there many the woodlands, only one of which, Loxley Wood, is documents which mention the same or additional of early origin. The theory that hedges can be dated field names. Since one of the main objects of the by the number of woody shrubs in them does not project is to locate any early settlements from the oc- seem to work in Shapwick - many of the hedges currence of 'habitative' names, it is clearly of great created in the eighteenth century enclosures have the importance to locate these as closely as possible on highest numbers of species. Under the direction of the ground within the pattern of the later fields. This Mike Martin further analysis has been undertaken of is being done by a complicated process which has the complete species count for all hedges, both sides been developed using the survey of 1515 which lists of the hedge with all species listed. These data have every tenant, tenants holding, plot ofland and its area, been subjected to a multi-variate analysis, Twinspan, and comparing all of these aspects with names and which seeks to identify the most different group of areas on the tithe and modern maps. As we !mow the species from the rest, then the next most different and whereabouts of some of the names recorded in 1515 so on. This shows that the hedges along the streams, from later sources, and as the clerk recorded the plots along the roads and on the parish boundary are dif- mainly in a clockwise sequence, we can often suggest ferent from the rest but generally it does not help with where a furlong or field name not recorded on later dating. At the moment we do not !mow the date when maps may be located; frequently the areas of the fur- many of the hedges were created and we cannot see longs can be compared with modem hectares to help if there is a direct relationship between numbers of in this process. This rather long-winded process is species and date of hedge. It is clear that the reasons necessary in order to locate those 'habitative' names for variable numbers of species in hedges are numer- which have not survived as later field names (most of ous and at the moment little understood. 206 ~ a;'Q" - N •RON AGE A POST-ROMAN and ANGLQ-SAXON ~ (1) c ~ levels -<: (1) ROMANO- BRITISH Levels ~ ;:: .--·· ·- -----.3·-··--. _ _ B - - (:-_:_~~#;~~~)::'~- (1) ;:::: ~ ;:;. /I) '0(~"" •±"" '""''"' (1) V, levels ~ ~ EDBUSCOTT ;:: (1) HJ.WO""' ~ 1::. ;:::: !::>.. iS"' ;:::: GASHCOTT !::>.. t; (1) EARLY LATE MEDIEVAL '"1:::! ~ MEDIEVAL E ~ D ~ ;=· ;:;. Levels Levels (1) \,..Ll-'- '"1:::! I 4D PRE-MEOIEVAL ...1::.<::;· SETTLEMENT +CHURCH ;::,-.. .:{--. PRE-MEDIEVAL ;1 ~ fiELDS 1111 MANOR 0 (I) §;F 9 9 WOODLAND ::r" {3 *MILL .§ ;t ·>: MARSH / / ./. flll E A S\. T :e()" ;::;· b!MEOIEVAL ?;- ?;" =MEADOW SETTLEMENT ...."'Cl ~- 0 §:;. (I) 0 30 .... "' -~ 3 Kll OMfTRES M Asron August 1996 t'I1 ;:l (IQ N 0 iiO ;:l --..! Q. M. A. Aston Field Survey, Finds Analysis flints, there are several new Romano-British settle- ments, and there are extensive scatters of medieval Most effort as far as fieldwork is concerned has pottery and post-medieval finds all probably repre- been expended in field by field survey as areas are senting phases and areas of manuring. Of greatest ploughed for crops. From the beginning it was de- interest are the finds of late Saxon material which cided to cover as much of the 'upland' part of the might just hint at the possibility of pre-village settle- parish as possible (some 800 hectares) by fieldwalk- ments in the fields, under the common field areas and ing as land was ploughed, to collect all material in- away from the present village (see below). dicative of human activity. It was decided to collect even the most recent material, partly because this had not been done before and we were interested to see The Early Church Site what it might indicate, but also because many of the people taking part in the fieldwalking exercises had Rather unusually the church was moved in Shap- little experience of the finds of different periods. By wick in the fourteenth century. The old church site asking them to pick up everything they have inadver- has never been forgotten by local people; there are tently brought in much material of great interest and eroded earthworks in the field and the field name on importance that they might have ignored or discarded the tithe map in 1839 was 'old church'. The church if they had been allowed to be selective. may have been established there in the eighth century Initially a number of areas were sampled with ten when the estate was granted to Glastonbury abbey, metre squares, but very rapidly we switched to lines and it was probably the minster church for many set- 25 metres apart with 25 metre long stints fitted rather tlements along the Polden Hills in the middle ages. In randomly into the fields using the field boundaries as 1327 the abbey petitioned the bishop of Bath and the base lines. For each stint a collection time of ten Wells for permission to move the church and in 13 3 1 minutes is allowed and it is clear, from observation of the new church in the village was consecrated by the fieldwalkers working, that a strip about 2.5 metres bishop. The old church was dedicated to St Andrew wide is examined; this means that in effect a ten per (as is the cathedral at Wells) and the new one to St cent sample is being taken from the surface of each Mary (the dedication of Glastonbury Abbey). field. So far over eight years, 86 fields have been It was decided early on in the life of the project to fieldwalked over an area of several hundred hectares. use the church site to test out various techniques and This represents over 60 percent of the 'upland' area ideas. It was used in 1990 to test out geophysical and probably a larger area than has been walked in equipment to see if satisfactory results could be ob- almost any other English parish as part of an archaeo- tained from a site on this geology. Over the years logical field survey. many different techniques have been carried out in All of the stints are numbered and the finds bag- this field. Surveys of the slight earthworks have been ged. They are then washed and dried at a cottage conducted by the Royal Commission on Historic provided by the estate and eventually transported to Monuments for England and by James Bond. These King Alfred's College, Winchester where Christopher show that the church stood on a mound adjacent to a Gerrard and his students and colleagues sort and ana- spring, all within a large embanked and ditched en- lyse all the material. As well as the record of the closure, with ridge and furrow of the common field fields, lines and stints, and the fieldwalkers involved, system beyond. In 1993 six trenches were cut across we also record the field conditions, wet, dry, plough- these earthworks partly to confirm the site of the ed and so on, weather conditions, sunny, dull or rain- church but also to clarify the condition of the buried ing and details of slope, lynchets and drainage. We remains which are ploughed occasionally. These also feed in all that we know of the former history of trenches hinted at Roman occupation in the vicinity, the field from the early maps and other documents. located the church and the probable priests house and All of these data have enabled Chris Gerrard, prob- the complex sequence ofboundary construction with ably for the first time in a field survey project, to several pre-medieval phases. allow for the ideosynchrasies and foibles of individ- Subsequent field walking across the field revealed ual fieldwalkers, as well as the effects of weather and prehistoric flints, Roman pottery and building mate- field conditions, on the numbers and types of arte- rial suggesting a villa, late Saxon and early medieval facts retrieved from the fields. pottery perhaps indicating a Saxo-Norman manor and The results of this work are still being analysed extensive later pottery deposits. In early 1996 a fur- but it is clear that a number of new archaeological ther geophysical survey by English Heritage pro- sites have been identified and other areas of activity duced an extraordinary pattern of anomalies which defined. A number of fields have high densities of have not been investigated further so far but are very 208 The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England difficult to explain with what we know of the site called 'Henry' west of the village. The latter was cal- (Fig. 8). led 'Ennery' and 'Enworthy' in earlier times and so both are 'habitative' names of the type mentioned above with 'wick' and 'worth' endings indicating The Early Settlement Sites settlement sites. At 'Henry' nothing beyond a few pieces of tenth century pottery has been found in ex- If we are to demonstrate that the settlement pat- tensive fieldwalking across the area and the same is tern in the parish changed and that there was a scatter true for geophysical scanning over all the fields that of farms or hamlets out in the parish before the have ever been in the area of 'henry' field names. A village was created, we need to find the post-Roman/ survey near Manor Farm however located a small pre-medieval sites out in the fields. This is a difficult area of anomalies which might be a settlement site. task for two main reasons; firstly so many of the Soil sampling for heavy metals will be carried out fields are almost permanently pasture, and secondly, over this area in 1997. and much more problematically, for the critical period More progress has been made with 'Sladwick' 400 to 900ad no pottery was used in this area - it is (fig 10). Here the field name survived to be recorded aceramic - and hence it is not available to be found in medieval documents and on maps of the eighteenth in the ploughsoil in fieldwalking campaigns. and nineteenth centuries. The field is in a low lying This is a problem in many parts of the world area next to a low ridge, though there is slight rise at where we have a 'dark age' - how do you recognise one end of it. Fieldwalking located a few Romano- archaeological sites when there is no pottery on them? British and late Saxon sherds but little else - though When this is combined with a society which used few this might suggest an aceramic phase between Roman inorganic objects, built in wood , apparently without and late Saxon. Geophysical and geochemical sur- postholes, rarely used stone and, in general, left few veys were carried out independently using the same traces for archaeologists to find, it makes it very dif- twenty metre grid; they both produced features over ficult to recognise human activity. But absence of a low mound at the western end of the field- the geo- evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence. physics a set of rectilinear lines and blocks and the In this project we have adopted a strategy which soil sampling a concentration of lead. Excavation in involves both geophysical and geochemical analysis 1996 located two substantial walls built in a clear of field samples. The basis for this is that it may be Romano-British style and forty of so Roman sherds possible to detect anomalies in the ground by geophys- in an area ten metres square. What does this repre- ical methods, where there are not necessarily any sur- sent? While at first sight this evidence might suggest face finds, while at the same time locating concentra- a late Roman site there are really far too few Roman tions of phosphates and heavy metals which may finds from it to make this a satisfactory explanation. indicate residues of human and animal activity. This But if the site was occupied in the fifth century, walls builds on research by Mike Martin over many years may still have been built in Roman fashion even if in which he has shown that heavy metals such as lead, pottery was in diminishing supply. We have nothing zinc, copper, cadmium and so on do concentrate in as yet to compare with this site with as there are no the soil where there is human occupation. Our ideas lowly farmstead settlement sites of this date known in about the way heavy metals move through the food the west of England. chain and build up in the soil are still evolving; it is It is clearly important to identify more 'habitative' hoped that further investigation of the course of heavy names from the documentary sources so that this type metals through the food chain will form the basis of of work can be carried out in other parts of the parish. postgraduate research beginning in 1997 or 1998. Even if we can only locate names to the nearest hun- This approach has been applied to several fields dred metres, this will be enough to bring in geophysi- where we were clear that there were archaeological cal and geochemical surveys to locate any anomalies, sites of different periods and where we could see if as well as the use of conventional fieldwork tech- there were concentrations or not. The field with the niques, to locate any sites. Ideally the whole parish church site shows up clearly (fig 9) as does a Ro- should be looked at in this way so that a complete mano-British site at 'Abchester' and also the fields view, and one that was objective rather than one dic- around the manor house. This has given us the confi- tated by what we think we know already, could be dence to try out the method on suspected sites of the obtained. Nevertheless we are encouraged by what period 400-900ad for which we have no archaeologi- we have called the 'Aston-Martin' method(!) and cal evidence. think that it could have wide application in finding Two such areas have so far been identified, a field the less obvious archaeological sites. called 'Sladwick' north of the village, and fields 209 M. A. Aston Conclusions and Future Work pile. Just when were particular settlements first built and what form were they in? The question marks In the remaining few years of the project field- show the degree of uncertainty in almost every case. work will continue in order to maximise the area Fig 12 shows in a much more straight-forward way covered and there will be further documentary and the current idea (August 1996) of how we think the topographical analysis of the village plan and the pre- parish developed from the (known) Iron Age sites to enclosure fields. We will have learned a great deal the Romano-British settlements located so far to the about how people used the landscape of the parish in situation in the post-Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods. the past and how the pattern of boundaries and prop- An attempt could also now be made to show the sites erties evolved. It is perhaps too early to be categori- in the earlier prehistoric periods. The development of cal about the evidence but it does look as if the vil- the village and its fields is shown in two stages, the lage was built up in some regulated fashion, probably earlier with small common fields and a lot of wood- from the tenth century, and that it replaced a scatter land and marsh and the later with full extent of com- not so much of farmsteads but of a few hamlets. So mon fields- the extent of woodland and marsh is not far it looks as if these have their origins in the late yet certain for the earlier periods. Roman period. We assume they operated some sort If the village and its common field system were of non-common field system, probably of infield- developed in or by the tenth century, as seems likely, outfield type, which may have been situated in the it is at least possible that this was the result of a de- remnants of the pre-existing pattern of prehistoric or liberate policy decision by Glastonbury Abbey which Romano-British fields. owned the estate, as part of the reestablishment of Two figures are shown here which attempt to regular monastic life in the old monastery. We might show the evolution of the settlement pattern and the expect Dunstan, the new abbot, to not only refound main landscape developments in the parish. Fig 11, the monastery but also look critically at the estates the less conventional version, tries to show the origin, which supported it, like Shapwick, to see if they development and present form of the settlements in should be altered to make them more efficient at sup- the parish- circles are farmsteads, thin hatched bands porting the monks. From such policy decisions made are hamlets and thick hatched bands are villages - such a long time ago did the appearance of much of white symbols are desertions. The information need- the familiar English scene develop. ed to compile this diagram is very difficult to corn- M. A. Aston University of Bristol 8-10 Berkeley Square, Clifton Bristol BSS 1HH England 210 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Neil Price The Gamla Uppsala Project: Rescue and Research in an Early Medieval Ritual Landscape Gamla (i.e. 'Old') Uppsala, located a few kilo- where the site is firmly linked to the Ynglinga metres north of the modem city of Uppsala in the dynasty ofkings. Named in numerous texts including province ofUppland, is well-known as one of Swe- Snorri Sturlusson's Heimskringla, the Ynglingatal den's most spectacular monuments from the early quoted therein, and Beowulf amongst others, the medieval period. The focus of the site as it appears Ynglingas are said to have ruled in eastern central today is a 760 m-long gravel ridge which supports a Sweden and eastern Norway during the later Iron cemetery of several hundred burial mounds dating Age, forging these areas into powerful petty king- from the 5th-1Oth centuries AD, at the eastern end of doms (cf. Norr in Duczko 1996). Several of the kings which are three huge barrows known as the Mounds are described as either dying or being buried at of the Kings. These burial mounds, up to 10 m high Uppsala, and the Kings' Mounds have been linked to and 75 m in diameter, were partly excavated in the a number of the dynasty's members including several last century and shown to be of Migration-period of those mentioned in Beowulf. The longhouses on date. Adjacent to the cemetery ridge and the Kings' the church terraces have been interpreted as remains Mounds is another large mound, its flat top perhaps of the royal halls, surrounded by the lodgings of the giving rise to the local tradition that it was the site of king's retainers. a royal Thing (assembly place); test excavations have Gamla Uppsala is perhaps best known as the tentatively suggested that the mound is also a burial alleged site of the famous pagan temple described by monument. the cleric Adam of Bremen, writing in the 1070s. North of the so-called Thing Mound is the medie- Purportedly quoting an eye-witness, he tells of a val church of Gamla Uppsala, once the seat of the great building girded with golden chains, its main archbishopric before its move to the site of the hall housing the images of the gods Odin, Thor and modem city ofUppsala. On artificial terraces built up Frey. Men and animals were sacrificed to the deities around and near the church, excavations have reveal- at great feasts, their bodies hung in a sacred grove (cf. ed a number of massive longhouses dating from the Alkarp 1993 and references therein for a recent Vendel and Viking periods. The possibility of a sim- discussion of the temple and its rites). It has been ilar structure under the church is likely and widely suggested that it is this building which once stood on accepted despite scant archaeological evidence, the the site later occupied by the medieval church. After stone foundations destroying most earlier deposits. years of conjectural reconstructions of what may Further excavations in the fields north of the church have been the most important Norse temple in Scan- terraces have revealed more Vendel-period build- dinavia, it has recently been suggested that we should ings, a road and massive boundary divisions spread instead think more of a 'temple-hall', perhaps dif- over a large area. The surrounding landscape is a fering little visually from the other longhouses veritable necropolis, with up to 3000 Iron Age graves around the royal terraces (cf. Nordahl 1996). suggested through a combination of archaeology and Combining all this data, much of it derived from reliable post-medieval maps to lie within a 2 km Uppsala University's research excavations (see papers radius of the Kings' Mounds. The same area is known in Duczko 1993 & 1996) and recent rescue work (e.g. through excavation to have been the site of settle- Karlenby 1994, Vinberg 1995, Roslund-Forenius 1996) ments spanning a similar date range. (The archaeo- a new picture has emerged of Gamla Uppsala over logy of the site is summarised in Lindqvist 1936, the last decade of scholarship on the site. We see a Damell 1990, Duczko 1993 & 1996, and Duczko et royal seat established in the Migration period and al. 1994.) expanding during the Vendel period, focusing on Uppsala is mentioned in several medieval sources massive kingly burials surrounded by a cemetery describing the earlier history of the pagan North, about which we as yet know very little. The site's 211 N. Price focus seems to have been a compact area of im- "is always mutating, being contested, and redefining pressive buildings raised on terraces above their itself as a result of changing relationships between surroundings and looking out over other structures, people and the way they see the world around them". roads and enclosures. In the Viking period there In a similar manner, Martin Carver has compared the seems to have been a shift in the monument's mean- signals encoded in the monuments to a form of ing or purpose, with an increased emphasis on ritual argument, in which different voices compete for a at the expense perhaps of Gamla Uppsala 's royal say in how a people should live and a society should connections (the king's interests may have shifted to function (e.g. Carver 1993 ). Adelso/Birka and later to Sigtuna). This is the period These approaches to landscape interpretation have of the temple and the aggressive paganism which so been most developed within Neolithic and Bronze dismayed the German clergy. The surrounding land- Age archaeology, amongst others by Richard Bradley scape seems to have been increasingly dominated by who has himself written on Gamla Uppsala (1993, cemeteries at this time. It is this ritual function of the 94-95). He has argued that the first major monuments site which was usurped by the Christian missionaries on the site that we know of- the Kings' Mounds- as the new religion became firmly established in may themselves have been constructed in imitation eastern Scandinavia during the early 12th century, or acknowledgement of an earlier tradition, such as when the temple was replaced by the seat of Swe- the massive Bronze Age barrows which dot the Upp- den's first archbishop. land countryside at sites such as Hagadalen. Bradley suggests that what were created as individual memor- ials to dead kings became instead a collective monu- Gamla Uppsala in its landscape ment during the Viking period; thus he emphasises that in Adam ofBremen's description the huge earth- We now know that Gamla Uppsala is one of a works are treated as a single phenomenon, providing number of similar sites throughout northern Europe a monumental setting for the religious festivities that -all centres of political and religious power during a take place at the temple. Through a sequence of suc- period of emerging kingdoms and a transition from cessive interpretation and re-interpretation the land- tribal - to state-based polities. Complexes of large scape has maintained a ritual meaning but been burial mounds, often with associated buildings of transformed from a place of individual commemor- various kinds, are a recurring feature of these monu- ation to a context for public assembly- the occasion ments. In addition to Gamla Uppsala itself, Sweden being perhaps the fusion of a unified pagan religion possesses another such site at Hogom in the northern with the growing power of the Uppsala kings. province of Medelpad. Similar patterns are seen at This ritual landscape at Gamla Uppsala, which the Danish sites ofLejre and Jelling, and in Norway has slowly been altered, adapted and re-created over at Borre, A valdsnes and Bertnem. All these localities millennia by the inhabitants of the area, is about to be are linked by a strong ritual cohesion, apparently changed again in perhaps the most dramatic manner serving as the seats of local dynasties who seem to in its history so far. A new rail development is to be have had a mutually supporting idea of the material constructed through the site, passing barely 200 m nature of the power they wished to create. In the from the mounds and consuming vast areas of the British Isles these sites are most closely paralleled at surrounding ground. Constituting both an unpreced- Sutton Hoo, but we may also consider the Scottish ented destruction of the archaeology and simultane- centres at Strathearn and Dumbarton, and Tara and ously an opportunity to examine the hinterland of Armagh in Ireland, amongst several others. Almost such a place in a way never previously possible, the identical "places of power" can be observed on main- East Coast Railway development is a major chal- land Europe too, especially among the Slav popul- lenge to Sweden's archaeologists. This paper- and ations in Poland and the Baltic littoral. the talk for which it is a pre-circulated template - This phenomenon has been intensively studied in presents a review of the ongoing rescue project set up recent years, and been the subject of many confer- in response to the proposed railway. ences and books. The general consensus has con- cerned the study of these monuments in the context of their landscapes, those "sites" which we often per- The East Coast Railway development at Gamla ceive individually instead forming a cohesive whole Uppsala and its archaeological impact representing the material expression of values held by the society in question. These values are naturally The development centres on a re-routing of the not static, and- in Tim Darvill 's words ( 1996)- what existing East Coast Railway which now runs north- may be called the "cognitive map" of the landscape ward from Uppsala city through Gamla Uppsala, 212 The Gamla Uppsala Project: Rescue and Research in an Early Medieval Ritual Landscape passing approximately 40 m east of the Thing Mound. aerial photos and other forms of non-destructive The track is being altered in conjunction with a wider reconnaissance undertaken in recent years.lt was clear programme of infrastructure development in central by the early 1990s that an archaeological response of Sweden and is related in particular to a complete some gravity would be required. rebuilding of the E4 motorway, the new route of which will pass approximately 2 km east of Gamla Uppsala. Archaeological work for the East Coast Railway From the city limits, the new railway is planned to 1990-95 run to the west of the existing track, through open fields. At the centre section of this new route, where The first stage of this response came in 1990 itself the railway passes closest to the main monuments, it when the regional unit of the Central Board for is proposed that the new line will be routed under- National Antiquities (Riksantikvarieiimbetet UV ground. The track will be carried through a 600 m Uppsala) carried out a preliminary desk-top assess- tunnel running beneath the modern village of Gamla ment of the route through Gamla Uppsala. Although Uppsala and emerging again into fields to the north. necessarily relatively superficial as the track specific- The tunnel will not be of bore construction, but will ations were then far from finalised, the report made be built of buried concrete sections, a technique plain the need for full archaeological investigations if necessitating a development corridor somewhat wider the railway was to proceed (Gothberg 1990). than the tunnel itself. From the tunnel mouth the line Little happened for the next three years until 1994, swings east to pass through a number of isolated when it seemed (mistakenly, as it later turned out) farmsteads and their surrounding land before cros- that the development was about to begin. At this time sing the Samnan river (a tributary of the larger Fyris a draft design for a research-driven rescue project at river) and then rejoining the existing East Coast Gamla Uppsala was published by the Institute of Railway. Much of the above-ground track will be Archaeology at Uppsala University together with the sunken into the landscape by means of substantial consultancy practice Arkeologikonsult AB, with a cuttings. contribution by Professor Martin Carver of York The total length of the new track sections is University (Duczko et al. 1994, Price 1994). The approximately 3 km, from the outskirts of the city to report was disseminated for comment and shortly just north of the Samnan. The width of the devel- afterwards the same organisations commissioned two opment corridor varies considerably, from a min- flights over the development area to make an aerial imum of 50 m to almost 200 m at its widest point photographic survey of the site. where the line includes areas for contractors' cabins, The research design had been prepared in the truck servicing and so on. Additional work is planned context of what the authors felt to be a widespread at points where the railway will cross existing roads indifference within the archaeological community and paths, resulting in several projections from the both to the importance of the monument and the main development corridor. Around 14 hectares of potentially drastic effects that the development currently undeveloped, open fields within a 1.5 km would have. Over the following eighteen months the radius of the Kings' Mounds and the church/terrace entire project was plagued by increasingly bitter con- complex will disappear within the railway corridor. troversy within Swedish archaeology on the one hand, A further 6 hectares ofland currently under roads, car and within the general social debate on the viability parks, playgrounds and other modern features will and/or desirability of costly infrastructure projects on also be included in the development (as discussed the other. Although centring principally on the polit- below, many of these modern features seal intact ical aspects of the railway itself- and in particular on archaeological deposits beneath them). the associated E4 motorway development - the As will be readily understood from the above administration of the archaeological response and the description, the archaeological impact of the rail selection of appropriate contractors for the task were extension is potentially massive. The human scale of also hotly contested subjects. A discussion of these the 14 ha of open fields can be better understood debates is inappropriate to the present paper, but their when one considers that this represents an area equi- occurrence played a significant part in shaping the valent to 20 football pitches. When the draft develop- current project. ment plans were first unveiled, it could be seen that Due perhaps to the increased urgency of the the existence of archaeological features was possible project following the development's shift to an active over this entire area. In some parts the presence of status in early 1996, this unfortunate situation seems sub-surface remains was either known through ear- to be for the most part resolved now, allowing archae- lier excavation work or suggested on the basis of ologists and other specialists from a wide range of 213 N. Price institutions to co-operate in the most effective fashion extensive archaeological deposits. The same team for the well-being of the monument. Beginning with were to continue working northwards along the devel- the results of an Environmental Impact Assessment opment corridor into an area of fields where prehist- carried out in separate sections by the different instit- oric building remains had been contacted in earlier utions early last year (cf. Price 1996 for the Univers- keyhole excavations, carried out for various purposes ity consortium's contribution), a major collaborative over the last decade or so (see below). The University project has now been established which will hope- team were allocated a larger area, approximately fully set the tone for all the future work on the site. 70% of the development corridor, which was expect- ed to produce more diffuse traces of settlement. This consisted of the entire corridor south of the present The project structure village, and also the area at the northern end of the development on both banks of the Samnan river. The new project is being run jointly by the Institute of Archaeology at Uppsala University and the Uppsala field unit of the Central Board for Objectives and methods National Antiquities. Overall responsibility for the project therefore rests with Professor Bo Gdislund Objectives for the University and Sverker Soderberg for the Central Board, with the University further providing For the purposes of the evaluations, part of the administrative and academic co-ordination in the form task of which would be to provide sufficient inform- of Dr. Kent Andersson and Docent Wladyslaw ation for the production of a full research design for Duczko respectively. The main project planning and the final excavations, our objectives were relatively fieldwork is undertaken by two separate units linked simple. The specific intention was to delimit the to the institutional partners: the author is director of remains contacted within the development corridor the University team while that of the Central Board and to obtain a preliminary overview of their char- is jointly directed by Johan Anund and Hans Goth- acter and dating. A deposit model should be produced berg. For the evaluations, the digging staff of the in combination with a qualitative assessment of the University team were sub-contracted from the Arkeo- strata, with an attempt made to predict areas of con- logikonsult consultancy. Like any such work in Swe- centrated archaeology. den, the entire project is answerable to the County However, in anticipation of the next phase of the Archaeologist (a local government officer based in project- the main excavations- a set of more general this instance at the county authority offices in Upp- principles and objectives should be borne in mind, sala) who is responsible for the higher administration especially in relation to the wider landscape perspec- of the region's archaeology. tive emphasised above. We should be mindful of Mar- As this is above all a rescue project, the above tin Carver's memorable words from the draft research structure must naturally link with the developers design of 1994, "all the landscape visible from the themselves, who under Swedish law are obliged to mounds must be regarded as precious" (in Duczko et fund all necessary archaeological work as determined al. 1994, 45). A clear focus must be placed on the by the County Archaeologist. For Gamla Uppsala the chronological and cognitive development of the Gamla Swedish state railways Banverket have afforded the Uppsala landscape, with a natural weight falling archaeologists every assistance over and above their upon the later Iron Age and the transformations of the legal obligations, and have been enthusiastic partners early Middle Ages. Equally interesting is the early in shaping a project commensurate to the monu- prehistory of the site: what was Gamla Uppsala be- ment's importance and the degree of impact that the fore the Kings' Mounds were built? How was the development will have on the archaeological remains. land used in the Roman Iron Age, and even in the For the purposes of the evaluation the devel- later Bronze Age when the Uppsala plain first drained? opment area has been divided into separate sections A particular feature must clearly be an assessment for the two units; a reallocation of areas will probably of the role played by Gamla Uppsala in the formation be made before the main excavations if the final of the Swedish state, in so far as these questions can phase of the project goes ahead. The Central Board be answered within the constraints of a development- team excavated in and around the buildings of the oriented project. It may prove to be possible to ex- modern village of Gamla Uppsala, at the heart of the pand the parameters of the project beyond the rail site where the development corridor passes closest to corridor, as in fact the developers have already the Kings' Mounds. Although small in area, this part suggested, for example through an associated train- of the site was judged to have the highest potential for ing and research excavation for university students. 214 The Gamla Uppsala Project: Rescue and Research in an Early Medieval Ritual Landscape All of this work should be published and dis- later location. All recording was computer-driven, seminated to the highest international standards, and with EDM total station theodolites and portable archived in such a fashion as to provide a lasting computers used for fieldwork, later transferred to in- intellectual resource not only for scholars but also for house CAD and GIS workstations. All reports will be the interested public. The final research design is as produced internally using DTP technology. yet in the future, when these and other questions will be taken up and debated in full. The 1996 evaluations: preliminary results Methods The evaluations were carried out in November 1996 at the onset of winter. Normally, little or no Early in the project planning we experienced a archaeological work is carried out in central Sweden small disappointment related to the use of non- so late in the year, due to the bad weather conditions destructive survey methods. Although recommended of snow, sub-zero temperatures, poor light and fog. to different degrees by both the University and the Although initially strongly resisted by both archae- Central Board in the research design, the use of geo- ological teams, it was soon clear that the schedule set physical and geo-chemical reconnaissance during the by the developers and upheld by the County Archae- evaluations was deemed by the office of the County ologist left no room for further delays. Accordingly Archaeologist to be unlikely to contribute any addit- the project had little choice but to proceed with the ional information. The project was therefore instruct- evaluations despite temperatures of up to ten degrees ed that the main focus of the evaluation strategy below freezing. In the event we believe that minimal should be placed on the excavation of test trenches. information was lost due to the weather (with the The use of field-walking was similarly rejected after exception of a small area in which the features were discussion, and in the event the only form of non- destroyed by frost action), but we certainly hope for destructive survey that could be viably included a warmer start to the final phase of excavations! within the project framework was the aerial photo- The following summary of the evaluation results graphic survey that had been completed in August is a strictly interim statement, and represents the 1994. The results of this survey could at least be used situation in early January 1997. At the time of writ- to assist in the location of test trenches in order to ing, none of the scientific analyses have been com- check the status of those features visible from the air. pleted and no radiocarbon dates have been received In the absence of such surveys, the field strategy from the laboratory. As discussed below, approx- consisted simply of excavating large numbers of imately one third of the test excavations are still to be short trenches approximately 2 m in width, arranged completed, and will be carried out during the spring. as appropriate in relation to the topography and the In the absence of publishable plans at this stage, it presence of known or contacted remains. Trenches will obviously be difficult for readers unfamiliar with were also sited in accordance with the recommen- the site to orientate themselves through the following dations of the academic advisor, Wladyslaw Duczko, notes, but the preliminary results printed here are tapping his extensive knowledge of the site and its primarily intended to serve as an interim reference environs. Trenches in the village area were more for specialists interested in the site. Full visual mater- constrained by the modem buildings, and their con- ials will be presented with the main lecture at the figurations were necessarily more esoteric than those conference. Information on the results of the test excavated in the open fields. A further aid to the test trenching carried out by the Central Board is pre- excavations was the use of CAD- and GIS-programs sented here by courtesy of Riksantikvarieambetet to overlay rectified versions of the earliest maps of UV-Uppsala. the area onto modem plots of the development The first kilometre of the development as it stret- corridor, enabling us to predict with great accuracy ches north from the limits of Uppsala city has been the locations of buildings and graves. During the found to be empty of archaeological remains, follow- course of final preparations for the main excavations, ing excavations by the University team. No monu- as many aerial photographs as the budget permits will ments were previously recorded from this area, which also be plotted in the same way. is known to have been open fields as far back as the A selection of features was fully excavated and late 16th century- the date of our first reliable records. recorded in order to gain a representative sample of There is no particular reason to suggest that any form dateable material, the remainder being drawn in plan of prehistoric settlement or non-agricultural activity and given a basic description before being carefully was ever located there, but the evaluations have in reburied under a plastic shield and marked for ease of any case confirmed that modem ploughing in the area 215 N. Price has penetrated so deeply (up to 0.5 m in some places) The burials had been badly damaged by plough- as to have effectively destroyed any archaeology that ing, and in addition to the intact graves found in the once existed there. test trenches we found traces of further stone-settings that had been almost totally destroyed. Although all the burials were found in locations which corres- A Migration-period cemetery? ponded to the pale circles seen from the air, con- firming that these represented graves, interestingly By contrast to the southern extremity of the devel- there were several such circles clearly visible on the opment corridor, archaeological remains were located ground which proved to have no stone-settings in most of the other areas investigated. Our caution to beneath. It is possible that there were originally other "expect the unexpected" at Gamla Uppsala proved graves at these locations, but that after ploughing sensible, as a wealth of previously unknown features only the faint difference in crop growth marked where and sites were discovered. The first of these were they once lay. A deposit model has been created for found by the University team under the direction of the plough-soil in the Lilla Gardet excavations, the author during test trenching at the southern edge showing clearly that the surviving graves lie in an ofLilla Gardet, the level clay plain which borders the area where -probably by chance - the plough has main cemetery ridge along its eastern side. No penetrated up to 0.2 m shallower than in the rest of archaeological investigations had ever been carried the field. The distribution of the stone settings found out here previously, but programmes of environmental in the evaluations respects the dimensions of this sampling combined with the evidence of early maps pocket of shallower ploughing so precisely that there have shown this area to have been quite marshy in the is no doubt that the cemetery must once have extend- early medieval period, its centre perhaps even occa- ed further than its present limits. How many graves sionally inundated. The plain is a dramatic landscape, have been destroyed by several centuries of cultiv- bounded as it is by the curve of the cemetery ridge to ation in the field is impossible to estimate, but judg- the west - Lilla Gardet dominates the eastward view ing from the faint indications visible in the aerial from the Kings' Mounds and the larger grave-field- photos it is possible that the cemetery was originally and we had hoped to find some evidence of human laid out along the eastern edge of Lilla Gardet for activity on the dryer ground at the plain's eastern limit. some considerable distance to the north. An area of On the aerial survey of 1994 it was noted that a almost 11,000 m 2 has been recommended for a full number of circular features about 1-2 m across were excavation to recover what remains of the cemetery. faintly visible in the crop in the south-eastern corner of the plain, diametrically "opposite" the Kings' Mounds and approximately 700 m away from them. A settlement by the Kings' Mounds Our hopes for new information on the archaeology of Lilla Gardet were realised with the discovery of a The most spectacular results from the evaluations cemetery at this part of the field. The burials con- were found by the team from the Central Board, sisted of circular stone-settings about 1.5 m in dia- working under the direction of Johan Anund in the meter, covering pits containing cremated bone and centre of the modern village. During the Middle Ages ash in pottery vessels. The ceramics could not be the village at Gamla Uppsala was one of the largest dated more precisely than to the Iron Age, and at time in the whole of Uppland province, and its location of writing we have not yet received the results of can be precisely plotted from maps of 1640 and 1710, accelerator datings on charcoal from the graves. made when the late Medieval farms were still stand- However, on the basis of their form and typology it ing (cf. Dahlback et al. 1984, Rahmqvist 1986). From is likely that the burials date from the Migration these earliest cartographic sources and documents period: if this estimate is correct, this will be one of such as tax records we know that more than 12 farm- the first monuments contemporary with the Kings' steads stood on the site in the early 17th century. Two Mounds to have been found at Gamla Uppsala. Only· of these farms were thought to lie directly in the path a small number of graves were contacted and excav- of the rail development, and it was speculated that ated in the evaluations, but to judge from at least one these late- and post-medieval buildings - together feature it is possible that the cemetery had its origins with more recent construction in the centre of a at an even earlier period: a sturdily stone-packed pit modern community- could have destroyed any pre- found in the centre of the surviving grave-field appears historic deposits in the area. In the event, while to be the foundation for a bautasten - a kind of minimal traces of the medieval buildings were found standing stone commonly erected as a memorial over in the form of layers of stone foundations, the few graves from the Roman Iron Age. trenches that were able to be excavated around the 216 The Gamla Uppsala Project: Rescue and Research in an Early Medieval Ritual Landscape lawns and yards of the modern buildings proved to be Although a final figure has not yet been drawn up packed with prehistoric features. owing to a delay in completing the evaluations in the The northern section of the modern village- 250 fields north of the village (see below), it is already m east of the Thing Mound - appears to have been apparent that at least 23,000 m 2 will probably be particularly densely settled, with postholes so tightly recommended for full excavation in the central area. distributed that only a few areas of clear ground This large site is known to support several phases of could be seen between them. For the most part these activity of a varied nature, including different forms postholes are cut directly into the natural sub-soil, but of structures and perhaps several graves, and further- pockets of occupation deposits survive up to 0.3 m more to preserve considerable areas of intact stratif- thick; more postholes have been found beneath these ied deposits. Given the likelihood of contacting fur- layers in the places where selective test pits were ther structures in the field area, it has been estimated excavated through them. A marked decrease in the that the final excavation area in this most important density of features further to the east may suggest a part of the site may be as large as 60,000 m2, in- boundary of some kind, perhaps connected to a known cluding the central area mentioned above. (These Viking-Age cemetery which begins here, or alternat- estimates include the eventual excavation of areas ively linked to fence-lines reconstructed around a which are currently inaccessible under roads, car Roman Iron Age longhouse found near this spot in parks etc.). As the remains excavated by the Central the late 1980s. All the new features are undated as Board extend to the southernmost limit of their area, yet, but ceramics of Viking-Age type, an early medie- adjoining the existing railway which the new track val bone pin and fragments of a medieval comb were will replace, the University has also recommended all found in the test trenches. that a number of trenches be opened up within a Slightly further away, approximately 250 m south- 6,000 m2 area at the northernmost limit of their sec- east of the Kings' Mounds, the trenching revealed tion. Although only a few postholes were found here large areas of surviving stratified occupation deposits during the evaluations on the opposite side of the up to 0.3 m thick. Almost the same density of post- railway to the Central Board trenches, it is clear that holes was found here too, together with the remains the settlement once extended at least this far. Even of stone-set graves. The chronological relationship of though ploughing has obviously removed most of the the burials and posthole buildings is unclear. The remains, the importance of the newly-discovered character of the central settlement seems to change settlement is held to justify a further intervention in about 100 m to the south of these remains (about 350 the fields. m south-east of the Kings' Mounds), with the post- hole structures giving way to a series of sunken- featured-buildings (Grubenhiiuser). Some postholes A settlement by the "King's ford" continue here, but unlike the other areas there are no hearths. As for the northern area, no definite relative At the third site to have been located in the chronology can yet be established for these features. evaluations, the University team under the author's Test excavations at the edge of modern features direction found indications of post-built structures by which cannot be removed until the main phase of the Samnan river at a point approximately 800 m work- such as the main road through Gamla Uppsala north-east of the royal terraces and the church. The village - indicate that these constructions seal buildings were found by a crossing place tradition- prehistoric remains beneath them, and have not ally known as the Kungsvad (King's Ford), marked destroyed them as first feared. on the earliest maps with a road leading from the The finds of settlement traces in the modern river to the church area (see Graslund 1993). A small village are not unexpected, but the sheer quantity of settlement nearby bears the name Kungsgarden building remains was rather overwhelming. There is (King's Farm), but this is thought to be a modem no doubt that just the test trenching alone has com- name coined in reference to the fact that the crown pletely changed our perspective on the whole monu- had once owned the land; the farm itself does not ment complex at Gamla Uppsala. The density of the appear on the 17th-century maps. remains clearly indicates that structures were re-built Scatters of postholes at this site, at which no many times on almost the same spot, suggesting archaeological remains have been found previously, some form of pressure to respect established bound- indicate clusters of buildings on a level plateau above aries. At this stage of the project we can only the slope down to the river bank and the ford. No speculate as to the importance of this in relation to dateable artefacts were found, but several charcoal the known presence of the royal estate at Gamla samples have been submitted for radiocarbon Uppsala, but it is tempting to make the obvious link. analysis; the results of the tests are expected towards 217 N. Price the end of January 1997. The site is one of several soon as the snow breaks in early spring 1997, and will river crossings along this stretch of the Samnan, but thus have been completed by the date of the Medieval the early link to the royal terrace area presents an Europe conference. intriguing possibility that the buildings found by the University represent some form of installation by a recognised royal travel route. Such a perception of The future of the project prescribed movement zones linked to status has interesting implications for the way in which the At present (January 1997) the timetable for the territory around Gamla Uppsala was imagined by its project's future is uncertain. As noted above, the inhabitants. planning of the railway is linked to the controversial The possibility that the remains formed part of a re-routing of the E4 motorway which will pass a few large settlement gains support from findings on the kilometres to the east ofGamla Uppsala, and the final opposite bank of the Samnan river. From a point go-ahead for this project has not yet been given. beginning a few metres outside the development There seems little doubt, however, that the develop- corridor - and thus uninvestigated for the project - ment will proceed as planned and archaeological pre- the aerial photographic survey of 1994 picked up parations are being made accordingly. The prelim- crop-marks which appear to show a large inhumation inary start-date for construction of the railway has cemetery stretching for approximately 150 m east- been set for 1999, before which the archaeological wards along the heights above the northern river- work will need to begin. At least two seasons of bank. Grave-fields of this apparent type are most excavation are envisaged, working in step with the generally found within the Roman Iron Age (the building contractors as successive areas of the site cemetery is unlikely to be an unregistered Christian become available after roads and other features are burial place, as no church is known from this spot), diverted. As it appears now, the main phase of the and it may be that the settlement by the ford is of Gamla Uppsala project is likely to involve one of the greater antiquity than the royal connections of the largest single~site rescue projects ever attempted in Migration period. Europe, and unprecedented at a monument of this An area of nearly 7,000 m2 has been recom- kind. mended for full excavation at the site of the Samnan We are intending to establish a series of work- settlement. shops in association with the project, presenting and debating the findings at archaeological institutions and universities throughout Sweden. At a wider level, Evaluations in Spring 1997 the present paper is one of a number of international presentations of the project at conferences and post- Due to a delay in arranging compulsory purchase graduate seminars. The public are already involved in compensation between the developers and one of the the Gamla Uppsala project through an exhibition on landowners, approximately one third of the develop- the evaluations at the provincial museum, and through ment corridor was inaccessible for evaluation work public lectures; the site receives regular coverage in in the winter of 1996. This incorporated a small sec- the media. For the main excavations we intend to tion of the University area and a large stretch within operate regular site tours and talks, with the possibil- the Central Board's area north of the village. Limited ity of one or more popular science programmes for rescue excavations have already been carried out in Swedish television. Plans are also being made for an this latter zone during the late 1980s and early 90s, in illustrated popular book on the site. At a future date, connection with cable-laying and the construction of we hope to arrange an international conference on a cycle track. On the basis of this earlier work we issues relating to the site and its socio-political con- know that this area contains substantial post-built text in the early medieval world. structures dating to the later Iron Age, and it seems It.is currently impossible to say how much work likely that the settlement in the central area of the will have been carried out in addition to that present- village extends several hundred metres north under ed above by the date of the conference, but the paper the modem fields. It is not impossible that these delivered at Medieval Europe will include illustrated features may in fact extend as far as the settlement summaries of the 1996 evaluations, the completion found by the University team next to the ford, thus work carried out in spring 1997, a full review of presenting a picture of a dense landscape of buildings progress up to October and more detailed inform- covering the Uppsala plain for up to a kilometre ation on the future of the project. around the royal terraces. The completion of the evaluation work in these areas is scheduled to start as 218 The Gamla Uppsala Project: Rescue and Research in an Early Medieval Ritual Landscape References GRASLUND B. 1993: Folkvandringstidens Uppsala, Uppland, 1993. ALKARP M. 1993: Adam av Bremen och Gamla G6THBERG H. 1990: Arkeologisk utredning: Uppsala, Dissertation in archaeology (CD- Uppland, Gamla Uppsala socken. Ostkustbanan Uppsats), Uppsala University. dell: Uppsala - Storvreta, Riksantikvarieambetet, BRADLEY R. 1993: Altering the earth: the origins of Uppsala. monuments in Britain and Continental Europe, KARLENBY L. 1994: Ett tviirsnitt genom Gamla Upp- Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh. sala socken, Riksantikvarieambetet, Uppsala. CARVER M.O.H. 1993: Arguments in stone: archae- LINDQVIST S. 1936: Uppsala hogar och Ottars ological research and the European town in the hogen, Kungliga Vitterhets Historie och Antikvi- first millenium, Oxbow, Oxford. tets Akademien, Stockholm. DAHLBACK G., FERM 0. & RAHMQVIST S. 1984: Det NORDAHL E. 1996: "templum quod Ubsola dicitur... " Medeltida Sverige 1:2. Tiundaland: Ulleraker, i arkeologisk belysning, Uppsala University Press, Vaksala, Uppsala stad, Riksantikvarieiimbetet, Uppsala. Stockholm. PRICE N.S. 1994: The Gamla Uppsala project pro- DAMELLD. (ed.) 1990: Gamla Uppsala:fornlamnin- posal: supplement 1, Arkeologikonsult AB, Upp- gar, utgriivningar, fynd, Uppsala University, lands Viisby. stencil. PRICE N.S. 1996: Gamla Uppsala Ostkustbanan- DARVILL T. 1996: Billown, Isle of Man, Current projektet: Miljokonsekvensbeskrivning, Arkeo1o- Archaeology 150, 232-23 7. gikonsult AB, Upplands Vasby. DUCZKO W. (ed.) 1993 & 1996: Arkeologi och RAHMQVIST S. 1986: Gamla Uppsa1a by- Upplands miljogeologi i Gamla Uppsala. Vols. 1 & 2, Upp- stOrsta. In: Fran 6stra Aros till Uppsala: Uppsala sala University Press, Uppsala. under tidig medeltid, Uppsala stads historia VII. DUCZKO W., ELGH S., GRASLUND B. & PRICE N.S. ROSLUND-FORENIUS Y. 1996: Arkeologiskforunder- 1994: Gamla Uppsala: ettforslag infor de arkeo- sokning, Gamla Uppsala, Gamla Uppsala socken, logiska undersokningarna pa Ostkustbanan och Uppland, Riksantikvarieambetet, Uppsala. intilliggande undersokningsomraden, Arkeologi- VINBERG A. 1995: Ett hus fran iildre jiirnalder i konsult AB, Upplands Vasby. Gamla Uppsala, Riksantikvarieambetet, Uppsala. Neil Price Institute of Archaeology University of Uppsala Sweden 219 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Sofia Andersson & Eva Svensson The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm Introduction to a medieval arena markets and fairs are documented, most of them however in sources from the 16th and 17th centuries. The Slaamle farmstead, central to this paper, is Among these places we find: Tingvalla (today the located in the county of Varmland, north of lake city of Karlstad), Knusesund (today called Saffle) Vanern in western Sweden. Today, the county of and Bro (today called Kristinehamn). Tingvalla is Varmland has about 300,000 inhabitants, with almost documented in written sources from the 13th century 140,000 of them in the Karlstad region (Karlstad is and it is said to be a central place and common the largest city in the area). Almost 80 % of the meeting place for trade in Varmland. county is forested and 8 % is arable. The forests are Archaeological investigations in the central parts consequently of the greatest importance for the of the city have not, however, revealed any agglom- industry and people in the region. eration or settlement dating from before the 17th Fairly little is known of medieval Varmland. century. Knusesund and Bro are not mentioned in Written sources are scarce and most of our know- medieval records, but during the 16th century they ledge is based on archaeological and historical studies are described as old market-places. Hence, there are that was carried out during the 1980s and early source critical problems concerning early history of 1990s. Older research focused on the construction these places. and history of churches. The county belonged to the That Varmland is a forested province is visible in medieval diocese of Skara, which also included the the range of goods that are mentioned in the early province ofVastergotland. Similarities between chur- period i.a. hides, timber and iron. The importance of ches can subsequently be traced in the two regions. the iron rose during the late medieval period. These But there are also a lot of differences, especially the products were also exchanged for corn, salt and fish. building material. In Varmland, it was more common to built the churches in wood. There where no mon- asteries in the county, but the monastic system had The arena of investigation: the Gunnarskog parish great interest in the area, especially the salmon fisheries. Vanern and the streams and rivers in the The Gunnarskog parish is characterised by the region were rich in salmon. This was exploited by the waterways running from north to south, with the crown and the monasteries from early times onwards. settlement located close to the water. Most of the Several of the farms located along the rivers were parish is covered with forest. The parish is mentioned subsequently owned by several Swedish monasteries for the first time in historical sources in 13 76 and was and convents. at that time an annex to the nearby Arvika parish Varmland also included a judicial district, with a (Ortnamnen i Varmlands lan 1942, 39). Next time the provincial law. The code oflaw does not exist today, parish is mentioned is in the land register of 1503 but we have indications that it resembled the law (Samuelsson & Kallstenius 1939). Our knowledge of which has been preserved for the province ofVaster- ancient monuments in Gunnarskog, as well as in the gotland. There are remains of three medieval fortif- rest ofVarmland and Sweden, is based on the survey ications in Varmland: Amneholm, Edsholm and Sax- of ancient monuments carried out by The Central holmen. The latter two have recently been the subject Board of National Antiquities. The first survey in of archaeological investigations during the 1990s. Gunnarskog parish was done in the 1960s. Eleven These strongholds have been erected for different ancient monuments were found at that time. The reasons, in different periods. There were no towns in second survey was done by the authors in 1989 and the northern part of the lake Vanern area. The first the number increased to 800. A majority of the town, Karlstad, was founded in 1564. Medieval remains are settlements such as crofts, but also 221 S. Andersson & E. Svensson has changed and a lot of new remains have been found. For the moment there is a project called 'Forest and History' funded by the local department of forestry working in the area. The aim of the project is to find all kinds of deserted remains in the forest area and to inform the forest industry and thus preventing a destruction of ancient monuments. This has resulted in an increased awareness of these remains in the local community and it proves the importance of information and contacts during fieldwork. Archaeo- logists in the field work as a link between archaeo- logy and the public. The Gunnarskog parish is considered as an area where permanent settlement started in the Middle Ages. This has been the traditional view in Swedish archaeology, that when there are no visible prehist- oric remains such as graves, the settlement in the area is considered to have been established during the Middle Ages (Hyenstrand 1994, 8-9). This view has been challenged by research in the last decade. In Gunnarskog there are a number of prehistoric remains i.a settlement from the Stone Age, pitfalls for elk and charcoal pits connected with bloomery furnace iron production. Our research which will be presented below shows that the notion of a large scale colon- isation during the medieval period in the central Swedish forested areas is too simplistic. In fact settlement can be traced back to prehistory. The excavations at Skramle A problem concerning studies of medieval rural settlement in Sweden is the difficulty of locating settlement sites. The large-scale strategy applied on a national level at the registration of archaeological Fig. 1. - Sweden with the location of Viirmland and the sites where farmsteads located on 17th century maps Gunnarskog parish. are believed to be situated on the same place as medieval settlements has not been successful when applied in regional and local conditions, i.e. con- industrial remains, such as mills and sawmills are fronted with reality. It has also been an apparent represented. A new category in the modern survey problem to locate medieval cultural layers and con- was the Stone Age settlements. This type of settle- structions during excavations of sites where medieval ments is found predominantly by the shores and was rural settlements were supposed to be located. A list not earlier known in the area. There was one system of archaeological operations on such sites carried out of pitfalls known after the first survey, a number during the years 1955-1992 shows that out of more increased to ten after the second survey. A number of than 400 sites touched by excavation only about half single pitfalls were also found, both for elks and gave indications of medieval activities. Also worth wolves. Dating of pitfalls for elks in Gunnarskog noting is that when medieval remains occurred they indicates that they were in use from at least 1400 B.C. were often fragmentary and difficult to date and up to modern times (Svensson 1995, 44). understand (Ersgard & Hallans 1996, 47-111). In short About 80 of the objects were protected by law. there is a general lack ofknowledge of how medieval Today there are a lot more. One cannot take the result rural remains are located and recognised in the land- of the survey and equate it with the total number of scape, and it is our opinion that such a knowledge has ancient remains in the parish. After 1989 the picture to be built up from a local and regional level and be 222 The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm Fig. 2. - The parish of Gunnarskog. QLAKE EBD ~EAD/VllA!X f"ENTKH:O N Tl£ t'fDfV AL RECORD 181 DESERTED FARMSTEAD/VllAGE; mN A!X 00 I'WE A!XS ~ AID. WITH PITFALLS SYSTEM [f PITFALLS G PREHSTORC GRAVE 'V OCC~t-K:E [f SLAGG ~ AID. WITH CHARCOAL PITS H (LOCAL> MARKET K REMAINS OF ROAD V STMONj STot-l, RESTt.G PLACE 0 SHflNJ F CATCfM:NT CDNSTROCTlON OOT PITFAW F3 STRAY Ftll OOT STot-l AGE! s SETTl.EJ'IfNT SITE (•ST!l£ AGE"l T SO.APSTot;E rJJARRY 10 integrated in landscape analyses. During the years of the peninsula of Skramle in 1990. Studies of old excavation at the deserted farmstead of Skramle we maps (17th-19th centuries) had added more probab- have encountered, and are still battling with the ility to the theories that, somewhere on the peninsula, problem of how to recognise and understand the there really had been a settlement, abandoned before remains. And we have had to learn the hard way that the oldest map (1641, LMV R3-97) came into nothing is what it appears to be at first sight. existence. But even if the maps showed that there The deserted settlement of Skramle was located in were was an area named Skramle that was in use but a somewhat irregular way. There was a tradition, not settled, the maps did not indicate where a former written down in the 18th century, of the medieval settlement could have been located. farmsteads Skramle and Amot that were abandoned As we had encountered a great interest for archae- due to the Black Death in the middle of the 14th cen- ology in the parish ofGunnarskog, we were accomp- tury and never resettled (Fernow 1977, 82). However anied by a group of local inhabitants on our return to the name ofSkramle was still used for a peninsula in Skramle in 1990. This was the beginning of a very the lake Gunnern and during the registration of fruitful co-operation that was later going to be 'instit- archaeological sites of the parish of Gunnarskog, utionalised' into an association by the name 'Project carried out in 1989 by the authors, efforts were made Skramle'. And with a great deal ofluck we found the to locate the settlement site. But as nobody knew site. We took up two small interventions at random, what to look for nothing was found. We returned to and in the second intervention we hit a hearth that 223 S. Andersson & E. Svensson I I I ancient fields that have not been dated, but appear to I I have been used also after the abandonment of the site I "• I I according to stratigraphy and finds. Probably at least --~·· :/~.~~MHFN some of the fields still in use did also belong to the medieval farmstead. I ....... - GUNNARSKOG~-~~~~.- The oldest house (H IX) from the 6th century A.D. appears to have been a kind of long-house (the size is not known as too small a part has been touched by excavation) with roof-supporting posts. As there is hardly any daub connected with this house the walls seem to have been of wood. A shallow hearth dug down in the ground in this house is among the 6vr;noren constructions that have been located. ·············-·· ... The other houses appear to have been wooden ··. constructions (most probably log-timbered). Most of Sk~b·l~............. , the houses (H II-VI and H XI) are placed on a light rudsudden '\ '• ······ ·············· southern slope with big stones and sometimes on o\hn.kat; terraces created to level out the slope. We do not know if there were several houses belonging to the 6th-century phase, but we know that for each of the two later phases there seem to be several houses with specialised functions. According to the general as- sumption, there was a change in settlement pattern around 1000 A.D., when the multifunctional long- houses were successively replaced by several smaller Fig. 3.- Historic Map Overlay, by Sofia Andersson, based houses with specialised functions. This change took on a map from 1709 (LMV R29-25:2). The original scale place over an extended period and was different in of the overlay 1:10 000, here diminished to 1:20 000. nature in different regions (Augustsson 1992, 64). Judging from the existence of hearths in four out of five houses belonging to the 13th-14th-centuries could be dated with 14C to the middle of the 15th phase (H XI is omitted in this discussion as the century A.D. The fact that this was a hundred years evidence is still too limited), it is probable that Skramle later than the Black Death did not bother us. Once we at that time was a farmstead with several different knew that we had located the site we also started to households. The presence of cooking vessels and see things that grew out of the ground and formed other items connected with daily domestic activities nice patterns of houses, ancient fields and other struc- indicates that all four houses were dwelling houses, tures. but we do not know whether they were contempor- The real excavations at Skramle started in 1992 ary. It is impossible to establish a relative chronology and were originally supposed to have been concluded of the houses based on stratigraphical sequences, but in 1996, but as the site has proved to be larger, more it is likely that at least the houses H VII and H X were complex and of a scientifically much larger value in existence at the same time as we have found than we had thought the project has been extended to remains of melted and slagged brass in house H VII 1998. As the project lacks sufficient financial support and a buckle made out of the same brass in house H each excavation season is very short- from a week/ X (Nystrom, communication). year to three weeks/year. The results are regularly The hearths in these four houses are of two kinds: reported in technical archives reports (Andersson & the hearths in houses H VI and H VIII consisted of Svensson, unpublished reports), but so far only the pits filled with fire-cracked stones and charcoal and results from the years 1990-1994 have been publish- in H VII and H X there were smoke-ovens with large ed (Anderson & Svensson 1995). bricks inside. So far eleven houses have been located and sub- The only house lacking a hearth (H V) is a large jected to excavations to various extents. These houses house that seems to be divided into three sections. can be grouped in three chronological phases; the 6th We have interpreted this house as a combined barn, century (H IX), the 13th-early 14th century (H V- store, stall, etc. If the 13th-14th-centuries phase was VIII, X and maybe also H XI) and the 15th century crowded with dwelling houses and equipped with (HI-IV) A.D. Around the houses there are remains of only a single outhouse, the situation was reversed in 224 The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm 0~ • Fig. 4.- Plan over the excavation-site of Skramle. the 15th-century phase. So far only the house HIll house HI, with a large hearth in a small house, prob- has been interpreted as a dwelling house (but it has ably was a cooking house and the small houses H II not been excavated to any larger extent), whereas and H IV most likely served as storehouses. During 225 S. Andersson & E. Svensson the excavations in 1993 we made an astonishing knives. But in 1996 a heraldic mount (not attributed discovery; one of the stones in the fundament to the to any family of nobility), a ring-brooch and an ornate large house- H V (M) belonging to the 13th-14th- buckle in brass were found in house H X. century phase- turned out to be a runestone with the older runic alphabet (juthark) dating from the 6th-8th centuries A.D. This was remarkable in two ways: Local and regional trade: contacts and influences first, only some twenty runestones with the older futhark are known in Sweden and, second, Skramle is There are few studies on handicraft, production situated in an area that should not, according to the and trade in the medieval countryside in Sweden. present research status, have been colonised until the Modem research, mainly within the field of history 12th century at the earliest (we had not yet located the and economic history, has concentrated on the 16th 6th-century house)! The interpretation of the runic century and the following era. Several researchers, inscription is still being debated and will therefore be influenced by Braudel and his concept of la tongue disregarded here. dun~e, argue that the economic conditions resemble For the moment 476 finds have been registered; the previous period i.e. the late medieval period 458 ofthem belong to the 13th-14th-century phase, 2 (Magnusson 1996, 35-61, 98-105). Some scholars to the 15th-century phase and 16 are more recent. The believe that research has underestimated the import- find material is dominated by simple objects of iron ance of the market economy in the medieval agrarian and stone, but there are also a few 'luxury' objects of context (Winberg 1985, 156-158). Others claim that bronze and brass such as a goblet, a buckle, a heraldic the so called natural economy, i.e. production intend- mount and a ring brooch. We have tried to sort the ed mainly for the household, was the basis for the objects into different groups related to different func- agrarian society (Osterberg 1977). Studies on handi- tions and activities. The different groups are: domestic craft in rural areas have been carried out in various utensils (D), building details (B), objects related to regions of Europe, for instance in Germany by Helga husbandry and other animals (HA), handicraft (H), Schultz and in England by Rodney Hilton (Gadd hunting and fishing (HF), agriculture (A), personal 1991, 53-56). A recent study on Swedish handicraft adornment (P) and others (0), comprising of pieces of in the countryside shows that the crafts are under- flints and quarts, fragments and unidentified objects. estimated in Swedish official records. These men- Group D includes vessels, strike-a-light flints and tioned only those craftsmen who paid tax as crafts- grindstones. It is worth noting that no pottery has men. During the Middle Ages, written law permitted been found at Skramle, and apart from pieces of a craftsmen with land or with a domicile to avoid the probable goblet made of bronze all vessels were relatively high taxes imposed on craftsmen by being made of soapstone. Building details are mostly nails, taxed under some other title, i.a. as a farmer (Gadd but also hooks, hinges, plates and locks. The most 1991, 201-21 0). This study indicates that there was a frequent item in the HA-group is the horseshoe nail, production of handicraft in the countryside that never but there are also some horseshoes, parts of snaffles can be seen in the written sources. With this inform- and buckles. Almost all objects in this group relate to ation, it is interesting to look into the archaeological horses and very few objects indicate the presence of material and see whether this picture can be verified other animals. A unexpectedly large group is the or not. The investigations at Skramle indicate that handicraft group. One reason for this is that whet- handicraft for sale could have been very common in stones have been included here, but also because the Swedish medieval countryside, at least in the there has been some handicraft production at the site. forested areas. As with rural studies as a whole, There are both tools and refuse connected with the however, the problem is that we lack similar archae- manufacturing of soapstone objects (probably mainly ological studies in Sweden that can complement the spindle whorls and vessels). Other important arte- picture. facts are spindle whorls, smoothing stones, scrapers, Artefacts linked to handicraft can be observed in awls and the above-mentioned melted and slagged the archaeological material at Skramle. There are brass. On the other hand,the HF- and A-groups are number of indications for 'over-production' of com- very small; there are hardly any objects that can be modities. These products do not belong in the agrar- connected to fishing, only a few arrows (mostly for ian sector, such as cereals and livestock. Instead we crossbows) and a small number of sickles. Ironically, find traces of an extensive soapstone production. basic subsistence is badly represented among the Products such as spindle whorls and vessels have artefacts. Until the excavation season of 1996, objects been made on the farm. Buildings, especially built for personal adornment were both very few and of a for production within various types handicraft, were very basic nature, such as simple iron buckles and probably used. The occurrence of soapstone artefacts 226 The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm in archaeological excavations is usually related to aimed at strengthening the ties between town and contacts with Norway, since quarries for soapstone countryside by making trade outside towns illegal. and production of soapstone items are well docu- Obviously, this law was hard to enforce by the central mented there. At Skramle we see that the use of government, as shown by the numerous exhortations soapstone quarries in the area probably was very and Royal Ordinances throughout the medieval period. important. The market for soapstone products was In King Magnus Eriksson's town-law from the late probably on a local scale. We can see that the mater- 13th century it is stated that trade shall be conducted ial standard on the farm was very high during the in the towns, both between townsmen and farmers period of soapstone production and during this period and not in the countryside or in other places (Holm- a lot of' outside' influences can be detected, partly in back & Wessen 1966, Kopmalabalken 23: 1). In a building techniques and partly in the finds material. province such as Varmland, without towns and with- At Skramle we relate the soapstone products to a out a strong control from the state, the farmers prob- local market, but there are other traces of more far- ably had a larger possibility to evade the legislation reaching contacts. We have some indications for the and getting their products to an appropriate market currying of hides. For instance, smoothing stones and and ensuring a high price. This relative wealth is scrapers have been found. Hides were a product that visible in the diversity of the artefacts and their ex- was interesting for a larger market, extending beyond clusive character during 13th and 14th centuries in the local one. Either traders came to the region or the Skramle. inhabitants of Skramle travelled themselves to a That some influences have reached Skramle can market-place to sell their products. We do not know be interpreted in the artefacts discovered in con- for what kind of markets Skramle was producing its nection with the investigations. But also the way the goods. The more important market-places, Tingvalla houses were constructed reveals external influences. (Karlstad) and Knusesund (Saffle), were the ones In two houses we have found a kind of' smoke-oven'. nearest and they were used for some purposes, but This type of oven seems to be common in an urban Gunnarskog parish is also located near the Nor- setting. Whether it is common in the countryside is wegian border and the foreign trade was probably open to discussion. The question is problematic very important at this time. Even if a Swedish town because of the lack of investigations. Studies on this or market place was the closest, the farmer could sell topic have been carried out by Richard Blanton for his products on the other side of the border. This is different communities. He could observe that houses particularly true in the case of a choice stands bet- in the countryside often have been strongly influence ween an inland town and a port. To the farmer the by urban houses, especially in remote areas with prices were more important than the distance (Linge farmers involved with long-distance trade (Blanton 1969, 30-43). The crown tried to stop this border- 1994). Is this the kind of influences we see in the trade during the late medieval period. Especially the 13th-14th-century houses in Skramle? Smoke-ovens trade in cattle was considered to be a threat to the are known in urban context both in Sweden and Swedish economy. Amongst other things, the king Norway at this time. One could argue that this iodic- 0 fls mllil HA rnH I;;;;;;J illlll HF I!! A rnmlp tiillill [Jo Fig. 5. - Relative import- ance of the different groups offinds; 13th-14th-century phase. 227 S. Andersson & E. Svensson ates a contact between an urban centre and the of the state, king and church and the growing influen- Skramle farmstead. The reservation is that we do not ces of European culture, the landed farmers had to know how common smoke-ovens were in the coun- chose sides. Some followed the king and could thus tryside and in this area at this time. become part of the nobility. Others conserved old Another contact we can notice in the Skramle practises and values and considered the status of material is the melted and slagged brass. The brass landed farmer and power within the local society to production commences on a large scale in Sweden be the most important. The latter strategy appears to during the 16th century. Smaller production units have been the most common one in the forest areas have been located in the medieval towns, for instance of central and northern Sweden (see Pettersson & in Lodose during the 14th century. It is not certain Svensson 1996). Maybe the heraldic mount and the that the brass items were manufactured at Skramle. other luxury items from the late 13th century found Maybe older brass objects have been melted down at Skramle can be regarded as reflecting a landed for casting new products. Thus, for instance, we have farmer's wish to compete with the young nobility. found a brooch made of brass which has possibly Equally of interest is the fact that during the critical been produced at Skramle. Some other objects that period of the late 13th century the farmers ofSkramle can be characterised as 'luxury' objects have prob- appear to have been cultivating the unusual and ably been bought on a market, since they are hardly extravagant crops of wheat and oats (Ranheden, un- of a local origin; these objects include a heraldic published report) in a time when barley is believed to mount made of silver and a ring brooch made of be the dominating crop in the region and wheat silver and bronze. The contacts and influences at almost non-existent (Osterberg 1977, 217 -219). Skramle are one of the most important parts of our Resource-utilisation has to be studied from sev- continued discussion in the project. We have shown eral points of views. Here the testimony from the that the preconception that a farm in a relatively surrounding landscape of the parish of Gunnarskog remote area had little contact with the outside com- (see Fig. 2) and from the farmstead of Skramle will munity can be questioned. The archaeological mater- be confronted. There are four major categories of ial is the only way to rectify this view and to find out outland use that are traceable in the landscape as sites what kind of economical situation and status a (outland use known to have been practised only in medieval farm located in a forest area really had, historical times are disregarded): pitfalls for elks, particularly when there are no written sources at all. bloomery furnace iron-production with charcoal pits, soapstone quarries and shielings. Judging from the spatial organisation of these sites only a shieling can Resource-utilisation and non-utilisation be connected with Skramle with some degree of possibility, all the other sites are located in areas Skramle is situated in an area with waste forest belonging to other farmsteads in historical times. But outlands, and the forest and over time its resources the rights to the outland was a complicated matter: have always been used in various ways. The possi- parts of the outland as well as single resources and bility to use the outland has played an important role constructions could be sold, donated, leased, etc. in making living in the parish of Gunnarskog pos- (Hvarfner 1960, 55-56, Backvall1920, 4-5). sible, but the use of outlands could also be the basis The organisation of the use of outland is another for the production of goods for sale at a market and factor that complicates the picture. The fact that some thus for the generation of wealth. It is important to of the systems of pitfalls stretch out between two point out that it was not the accumulation of wealth farmsteads indicates that there was some kind of eo- in itself that was interesting, but rather wealth as a ownership and co-operation between these farm- mean for social reproduction consistent with a steads. On the other hand it is striking that only one desired station. It was important to be a part of the farmstead is connected with iron-production and that society in general and its cultural values and practices several farmsteads appear not have participated in also when living off the agricultural areas (Martens outland use (if outland use is restricted to the four 1992, 5). What status did the farmers of Skramle known categories). In an as yet unpublished article wish to communicate? Probably the station of a well- one of the authors h:~s put forward a suggestion that situated farmer-landowner, i.e. the dominating group the farmers in Gunnarskog practised a kind of special- within the local society and an important economic isation in outland use and there was an exchange of and political group in Viking age and medieval goods on a local basis (Svensson, in print). This would Sweden. It is also from this group that part of the implicate that the local area was of great importance nobility emerged (in Sweden the estate of nobility (see above) and played an important role when form- was institutionalised in 1280). With the rising power ing subsistence bases and patterns for the individual 228 The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm farmsteads. Can such a theory be confirmed in the bows were used in the hunt of squirrels and other material from Skramle? small fur-bearing animals. From the existence of such The low number of artefacts connected with hunt- arrows and smoothing stones at Slaamle it seems ing and fishing at Skramle is striking. But even if the likely that hunting for fur was part of the activities at farmers of Skramle practised hunting and fishing it is Skramle, but it is difficult to judge its extension and not necessary that the objects related to this activities importance. should be found at the farm; fishing implements could Moving from hunting to iron-production and have been kept in buildings by the lake and hunting smithing, we can start by stating that 229 objects of equipment could also have been kept outside the iron have been found at Skramle. Most of the objects farmstead itself. On the other hand, the use of pitfalls appear to be of good quality and are well made. So far did not demand extensive hunting equipment. When neither bloomery furnaces for iron-production nor a not being able to rely on the archaeological evidenc~ forge for further processing of iron into objects have to illuminate the question of how important fish and been located at Skramle. Small amounts of slag (a wild game were to the daily diet at Slaamle, it would little bit more than 2 kilos), probably after smithing, be natural to turn to the osteological evidence. Un- have been found at Skramle. Pieces of slag are found fortunately the osteological material found at Slaamle over most of the excavation area, but the small is very sparse, only small fragments of burned bones 'concentrations' that are found are located near the seem to survive in the soil and most fragments are hearths of the dwelling houses. Maybe this is the impossible to identify. The animals identified are result of minor mending of iron objects at home. sheep/goat, pig and cattle (Sjogren, unpublished Indications for such a practise are given by a knife report). The evidence of the sparse osteological that, when conserved, showed clear signs of having material should thereby point in the direction of wild been the object of mending by an unskilled person game not being part of the diet. But it is important to (information from conservator Martin Andren, Kul- point out that it is possible that slaughtering and turen, Lund). The absence of iron production and the butchering could have taken place outside the farm in practise ofhome-mending indicates that iron objects connection with the hunt (a system often practised were bought and not made at Slaamle, maybe they today), and that meat from elks and other game could were bought from the local iron-producers in the have reached Slaamle as pure meat both if the game parish of Gunnarskog. was hunted by the farmer themselves and if it was A handicraft well visible at Slaamle is the manu- bought from others. facturing of soapstone objects. As has been stated Hunting was also practised for other reasons than above the production appears to have been directed direct subsistence, e.g. for furs. Furs appear as an towards a local market, as both the soapstone and the important economic resource in forest areas in Swe- craftsmanship are of relatively low quality and the den, especially northern Sweden, and were exported production seems to be directed towards a low num- to the European markets (Zachrisson 1996, 4). Cross- ber of different products. The low quality of the Out land Ill Non Outland Fig. 6. - Relative import- ance of objects related to outland production at Skramle (13th-14th-cen- twy phase) 229 S. Andersson & E. Svensson soapstone indicates that it was quarried in the vicin- times almost 0,5 m thick) and greasy, but the 15th- ity, and there are two soapstone quarries located in century ones are thin (hardly 0,1 m thick) and dry. the north and the south respectively of the parish of There are several possible explanations to this; may- Gunnarskog. An analysis of the origin of the soap- be there were fewer people living at Skramle during stone at Skramle has given evidence that the southern the 15th century (likely) or maybe this phase was a quarry was the one used most, but there are also lot shorter than the preceding phase (not likely); indications that a minor quantity of the soapstone maybe there even was a change in attitudes towards originates from the northern quarry (Nilsson 1995, rubbish etc. The explanation of fewer people during 30). Whether the farmers of Skramle possessed parts the 15th century is however not enough to explain the of these quarries or bought the soapstone is not known. thin cultural layers, as there were also more houses We will sum up these three categories of outland and larger areas in use during the 13th-14th-century use and their importance at Skramle first. Among the phase. There appears to be a change in attitude to- different groups of finds into which the finds material wards rubbish for during the 13th-14th centuries of Skramle has been sorted and which have been there are concentrations of refuse close by the houses presented above, there are no groups related to out- and these are lacking in the later period. Maybe there land use - apart from the small group of hunting and was a combination of a wish to alienate the refuse fishing. If we instead make a group of objects related from the vicinity of the living quarters and a need for to hunting, fur working and soapstone production, the manure for the fields that resulted in the thin 15th- relative importance of outland production among the century cultural layers. It is hard to use this tentative total finds material becomes more evident. discussion as a conclusive argument for the use of As the fourth category of outland use, the shiel- shielings in the 15th century, but it can be used as an ings are part of the agrarian economy and thus part of hypothesis for further investigations. the farmstead. In the county of Varmland shielings were used for grazing cattle during summertime, for We conclude this article by saying that it is im- hay making and sometimes also for agriculture (Eles portant to look upon a farmstead in a larger context 1975, 236-241). The relative importance ofthe shiel- than the settlement itself. Medieval farmers in Swe- ings depended on how well these needs could be den did not spend their entire life at home and they satisfied by the farmstead itself, and it is therefore not were part of different spheres of society. Here we surprising that most of the shielings are found in the have put the emphasis on the local and regional northern part of the parish of Gunnarskog where the arenas, which we believe to have been of great im- agricultural lands of the farmsteads were of a lesser portance to our farmers at Skramle, but there were quality. There was however a shieling situated relat- other arenas that are still left to study. ively close to Skramle, and as this was abandoned early it is impossible to attribute to a specific farm- stead. The other farmsteads in the vicinity of this References shieling however had their shielings in other loca- tions, so it is possible that this particular shieling ANDERSSON S. & SVENSSON E. 1990, 1992, 1993, belonged to Skramle. The use of shielings was not 1995: Rapporter over arkeologiska delundersok- without its problems as the long absence of the cattle ningar av odegarden Skramle, RAA_' 595, Gunnars- caused a lack of manure for the fields by the farm- kogs socken, Unpublished reports (VM Arkiv). stead. In northern Varmland, where shielings were ANDERSSON S. & SVENSSON E. 1995: Skramle. His- common, the farmers had elaborate systems and torien omen gard och en arkeologisk undersok- dedicated a lot of work to compensate for the lack of ning. Projekt Skramle 1990-94, Samha!lsveten- manure (Morner 1952, 70). As the products of a skap Arbetsrapport, Hogskolan i Karlstad, 10. shieling are the same as can be found at a farmstead, AUGUSTSSON J -E. 1992: Medeltida husbyggande i we have chosen to discuss the possible use of Sverige, Bebyggelsehistorisk tidskrift 23, Stock- shielings by the farmers of Skramle from the point of holm, 55-85. view of manuring. BLANTON R. E. 1994: Houses and Households. A comparative Study, New York. When presenting the finds material found at BACKVALL L. 1920: Bliistugnen vid Bliistkiirring- Skramle the total domination of finds belonging to biicken pa Sodra Braniis iigor i Dalby socken och the 13th-14th-century phase is apparent. The cultural dess iigare. layers from this period are also of a different char- ELES H. 1975: Satrar i V arm land, Sista !asset in: acter than the cultural layers from the 15th-century BERGENGREN G. (ed.), Studier tilliignade Albert phase. The earlier cultural layers are thick (some- Eskerod 9/5 1974, Stockholm, 231-252. 230 The local and regional arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm ERSGARD L. & HALLANS A-M. 1996: Medeltida MbRNER A. 1952: Kort oeconomisk beskrifning landsbygd. En arkeologisk utviirdering. Forsk- Ofwer Wermeland ahr 1762, in: Viirmland forr ningsoversikt, problemomraden, katalog, Riks- och nu, Karlstad, 7-146. antikvarieambetet Arkeologiska Undersokningar NILSSON S. 1995: Tiiljstensforemal pa Skramle. Skrifter 15, Stockholm. Hems!Ojdat eller kopt?, C-uppsats i arkeologi, FERNOW E. 1977: Beskrivning over Viirmland .. Ny Hogskolan i Karlstad. utgava med kommentar av Arvid Ernvik. (177 3- Ortnamnen i Viirmlands liin 6, Josse harad, Gunnars- 79), Karlstad. kog socken, 1942, 39-49. GADD C-J. 1991: Sjiilvhushall eller arbetsdelning? PETTERSSON S. & SVENSSON E. 1996: Jakten pa den Svenskt !ant- och stadshantverk ea 1400-1860, fdrsvunna "Svensson", META 1996:1, Lund, 31-43. Meddelanden fran Ekonomisk-Historiska institu- RANHEDEN H. 1995: Makrofossilanalys, Vr. Gun- tionen vid Goteborgs universitet 64, Goteborg. narskog RA;{ 595 "Skramle ",unpublished report, HVARFNER H. 1960: Fangst, in: HVARFNER H. & VM Arkiv. JANSSON S. (eds), Fran Norrlandsiilvar och SAMUELSSON S. & KALLSTENIUS G. 1939: En f}iillsjoar. Riksantikvarieiimbetets kulturhistoriska varmlandsk skattebok fran ar 1503, Nationen och undersokningar i samband med kraftverksbyggen hembygden If, 1939. och sjoregleringar, Stockholm, 51-64. SJOGREN J. 1995, Osteologisk analys, Vr. Gunnars- HOLMBACK A. & WESSEN E 1966: Magnus Erikssons kogs socken, RAA' 595, "Skramle ", unpublished stadslag. I nusvensk tolkning, Rattshistoriskt report, VM Arkiv. Bibliotek, sjunde bandet. Skrifter utgivna av insti- SVENSSON E. 1995: Jiirnframstiillning i norra Viirm- tutet fOr rattshistorisk forskning ser. 1, Lund. land, Samhallsvetenskap, Arbetsrapport 9 Hog- HYENSTRAND A. 1994: Landets bebyggelsehistoria, skolan i Karlstad. in: Kulturminnen och kulturmiljovard, Sveriges SVENSSON E. 1996: Handiga skogsbOnders produk- Nationalatlas (Selinge K.-G. red.), 8-9. tion och varuutbyte. Article under translation to LINGE L. 1969: Griinshandeln i svensk politik under English to be print in: Off the beaten track, Lund. iildre Vasatid, Lund. ZACHRISSON I. 1996: Pelsverk fra nord- hardvaluta LMV = National Land Survey of Sweden, Gavle i Europa, Spar - fortidsnytt fra midt-norge 21, (Statens Lantmateriverk, Gavle ). Trondheim, 1996. MAGNUSSON L. 1996: Sveriges ekonomiska historia, OSTERBERG E. 1977: Kolonisation och kriser. Fa1un. Bebyggelse, skattetryck, odling och agrarstruktur MARTENS I. 1992: Some aspects of marginal settle- i viistra Viirmland ea 1300-1600, Lund. ment in Norway during the Viking Age and the Middle Ages, in: MORRIS C.D. & RACKHAM D. J. Communication with Inger Nystrom, Vastsvenska (eds), Norse and later settlement and subsistence Konservatorsateljen, Goteborg. in the North Atlantic, Glasgow, 1-7. Sofia Andersson & Eva Svensson Department of Medieval Archaeology Archaeological Institute University of Lund Sweden 231 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Julian D. Richards Anglian and Viking Settlement in the Yorkshire Wolds Summary City of York, which lies some 12 miles (c. 20 km) from the western Wolds edge. The Anglian and Viking town of York is now well- The Wolds appear to have been extensively farm- known, but we know considerably less about rural ed from at least the middle Bronze Age. There are settlement in its hinterland. This paper describes the numerous round barrows but the most significant interim results of a landscape project which aims to feature is a series oflinear earth works that divide the characterise and map early medieval rural settle- landscape into territories and large enclosures. It was ment in the Yorkshire Wolds using information from in the late Iron Age, however, that the Wolds became aerial photography, geophysics, field-walking, metal fully settled. Mapping of crop marks from aerial detectors, and sample excavation, combined within a photographs reveals a landscape dissected by ancient GIS. The project has revealed a developing settle- trackways and partitioned by extensive field systems. ment hierarchy from the Middle Saxon period, and Many of these form so-called "ladder patterns" com- nucleation at new centres coincident with the Danish prising series of rectilinear fields or paddocks settlement of Northumbria. defined by ditches and often fronting onto a trackway, with occasional settlement enclosures. That this land- scape is pre-Roman is clearly demonstrated south of Introduction Wharram-le-Street, where the Roman road south of Malton cuts obliquely across the field systems and The Yorkshire Wolds are rolling chalk uplands in trackways. Where such ladder settlements have been Eastern Yorkshire. They are bounded to the north by excavated, as at Wharram Percy, a Late Iron Age date the Vale of Pickering; to the west by the Vale of has been confirmed, although they have generally York; and to the south-east by Holdemess. One arm been shown to continue in use into Romano-British extends directly south as far as the Humber Estuary times (Beresford & Hurst 1990, 87-92). The spacing which, from around the 7th century AD appears to of the settlements is generally every half mile (1 km), have formed the southern boundary of the early for example along the Thixendale valley, where there medieval Kingdom of Northumbria. To the north-east is a medieval village every 1 mile (1.6 km) and a the Wolds extend as far as the North Sea coast at Romano-British farm halfway between (Beresford & Flamborough Head. The underlying geology is chalk Hurst 1990, 92), The trackways look like cattle drove- and so there is little surface drainage, although there ways and the paddocks may have served as animal are a number of dry valleys whose origin is uncertain, enclosures although excavation of some of the but which are thought to date from an ancient glaci- medium-sized local villas and their associated corn- ation. There is one substantial watercourse, the drying ovens shows that cereal crops were also Gypsey Race, which rises not far from the medieval already important by the Roman period. settlement at Wharram Percy, and flows down the The immediate post-Roman settlement pattern of Great Wold Valley into the North Sea at the modem the Wolds is much less well understood. Ancient seaside town of Bridlington. Today the Wolds are pollen does not survive well on the chalk soils but lightly populated with settlement concentrated in dis- most environmental archaeologists assume that the persed farms and villages. The thin chalk soils are Wolds landscape remained largely cleared and that largely given over to arable farming although both there was no extensive reafforestation. Nevertheless, cows and sheep are also grazed on the grass uplands. there are no securely dated Early Anglo-Saxon settle- There are market towns at Malton and Driffield, ment sites from the Wolds (Watkins 1983). Early lying off the chalk to the north-west and south-east Anglo-Saxon cemeteries have been excavated on the respectively, but the nearest major urban centre is the western Wolds edge at Sancton (Myres & Southern 233 J.D. Richards Fig. 1.- Location of Crop-mark sites Cottam A & B. 0 ' Cottam B 0 o((!J 0 r1 ( 0 Cottam A <; ~ Cott•m DMV 1 o.-.-ac====~--~=====----- 1 km 1973; Timby 1993), and to the east at Sewerby (Hirst though post-built structures have been discovered at 1985), but only isolated burials are known from the Thwing where occupation debris, including sceattas Wolds tops. To the north the Anglo-Saxon cemetery and stycas, indicates activity from the 8th century and extensive settlement at West Heslerton (Powles- onwards (Manby forthcoming). Northumbrian stycas land 1986) lies just off the chalk, at the southern edge found within some of the buildings at West Heslerton of the Vale ofPickering. During what is known as the suggest that this site was also occupied in the 8th "Final Phase" of pagan burial, in the 7th and early 8th century. As witness to the 9th-century Danish settle- centuries, there was a trend to highly visible burials ment there are large numbers of Scandinavian type in the Wolds, often reusing prehistoric barrows, such place-names but until recently there was scant as at Garton and Uncleby (Mortimer 1905). Few archaeological evidence for Viking Age farmsteads Middle Saxon settlements have been excavated al- in the Wolds. York may have been a thriving and 234 Anglian and Viking Settlement in the Yorkshire W olds Fig. 2.- Cottam Site B: Metal detector finds. ARCIJNFO 7.0; J.D. Richards 1997; finds database: T. Austin, C. + Buckley & J Kenny. + + + + + + + ++ + + + + + + + 0 lOOm cosmopolitan trading centre from the early 8th Anglian and Anglo-Scandinavian artefacts by metal century onwards (Kemp 1995; Hall 1994), but its detector users. From 1987-89 some 200 man-hours of hinterland was virtually unknown. searching yielded over 60 pieces of 8th and 9th-cen- Archaeological investigation oftwo Wolds settle- tury date (Haldenby pers comm). The find spots have ments at Cottam and Wharram Percy, neither of which been systematically recorded, and the objects have would have been suspected to have had an early been published (Haldenby 1990, 1992, 1994). Sever- medieval origin, has now begun to indicate extensive al of the metal items are quite corroded, having suf- Wolds settlement in the Middle Saxon period, with fered from agricultural disturbance, whereas much nucleation and the development of new sites in the appears to have only been ploughed up in recent Viking Age. It is suggested that the majority of such years and is still in a good state of preservation. To settlements, however, continued as successful medie- date the published finds include some forty simple val and post-medieval villages and their origins there- pins, as well as disc-headed and racket-headed pins, fore lie buried under present-day churches and houses. a lead alloy brooch, over 30 ninth-century strap ends, a gilt mount, a fragment of rolled gold sheeting, over 20 ninth-century stycas, and numerous Roman coins. Cottam There is also evidence of domestic activity, including 8 lead spindlewhorls, and some 40 iron knife blades. The existence of an early medieval settlement The Anglo-Scandinavian finds include 2 Jellinge- near Burrow House Farm came to light as a result of style brooches and 2 so-called Norse bells. A chalk the discovery, over many years, of large numbers of weight with a possible ship graffiti has also been 235 J.D. Richards 0 E9 0 0 oo E9 oo @0 0 lJ OQI 0 @ 0 Fig. 3. - Cottam Site B: Datable metal objects. ARCIINFO 7.0; J.D. Richards 1997;finds database: T. Austin, C. Buckley & J. Kenny. recovered from the ploughsoil (Richards 1995). The sub-rectangular ditched enclosure, whilst there is a metal detectorists did not make any systematic at- second focus to the north which is less clearly associ- tempt to recover the non-metal artefacts, although ated with other features. Magnetometer survey, how- they acknowledge that substantial quantities of both ever, has revealed that there are further ditched en- pottery and bone were observable in the ploughsoil. closures in this area but in general their shallow depth These finds are largely coincident with a sub-rect- means that they have little effect on crop growth. angular crop-mark enclosure, henceforth described as If the position of datable metal objects is plotted Cottam B, which does not appear to be linked with an then it suggests that there is a difference in date associated field system. Instead, it appears to sit astride between the two clusters, with most late 8th-century a trackway which skirts the dry valley and then runs finds towards the south, and late 9th and 1Oth-century south-east to a crop-mark ladder pattern enclosure, finds in the northern .::luster (Fig. 3). Field walking known as Cottam A, and then further south to the has confirmed the picture derived from the distrib- earthworks of the deserted medieval village ofCottam ution of metal-detector finds (Didsbury 1990). This (Fig. 1). shows that there is a general background distribution If the distribution of the metal-detector finds at of Roman potsherds across the field, whereas Anglo- Cottam B is plotted there appear to be two foci (Fig. Saxon sherds are concentrated towards the east. The 2). The southern concentration coincides with the Torksey ware sherds, which are not current before the 236 Anglian and Viking Settlement in the Yorkshire W olds \ ,/ ... .J ...--.~ o Excavated finds 111 Exco.vated cu alloy finds 0 lOOm Fig. 4.- Cottam Site B: Metal detector and excavation finds. ARCIJNFO 7.0; J.D. Richards 1997;finds database: T Austin, C. Buckley & J. Kenny. tenth century, are particularly focused towards the stumbled into it whilst it lay open. By this stage, there- north-east, which is where the 1Oth-century metal fore, it is proposed that this area of the site had been finds were clustered. abandoned. The settlement had been relocated to the This localised shift has been further confirmed by north-east where a third trench dug in 1995 revealed a excavation (Fig. 4). In 1993 two trenches dug across farmstead of the Viking Age (Richards in prep). This the southern enclosure revealed post-hole buildings comprised a number of rectangular enclosures enclos- and settlement debris of the 8th and early 9th centur- ing post-hole buildings either side of a trackway which ies (Richards 1994). To the east of one of the build- would have been entered through a massive ditched ings was a circular pit, c.l.5 m in diameter, towards and banked gateway. Occupation appears to have been the middle of which was an adult female skull, relatively short-lived, perhaps spanning some 50 years radiocarb0n dated to 1295 ± 60 BP (with a calibrated or a single generation only, from the late 9th to early range of AD 664-775 at the 68% confidence limits). 1Oth centuries. It is proposed that at that point settle- The fill of the pit also contained a Wessex silver ment shifted again, probably to the site of the penny of Aethelberht, dated AD 858-62, an Anglo- deserted medieval villages at Cowlam or Cottam, al- Saxon dress tag and two decorated comb fragments. though this theory is as yet untested by excavation. The contents of the pit were sieved and yielded skel- In 1996 excavation of the crop-mark enclosure at etons of frogs and water voles which must have Cottam A revealed a more typical Romano-British 237 J.D. Richards farmstead. The Anglian and Anglo-Scandinavian arte- working, with both crucibles and clay moulds, facts recovered by metal detectorists in this area are including a mould fragment with interlace ornament interpreted as representing activity but not permanent dated on stylistic grounds to the late 8th or early 9th settlement. It appears that the prehistoric trackway centuries. The midden also included a fragment of a was still a landscape feature and would have been stone cross-head dated to the 8th century. Further used by Anglo-Saxon or Scandinavian settlers travel- Middle Saxon finds have been made in other parts of ling between their farms at Cottam B and any con- the Guardianship area, including a second 8th-cen- temporaneous settlement under the site of the Cottam tury cross fragment, a styca and a 9th-century strap- DMV. Such farmers may have driven their animals end from Site 12, on the plateau immediately above along this route and may have taken advantage of the the church, and a number of stycas and sceattas from opportunities provided for watering at the quarry the church excavation itself. holes which excavation has revealed were still open The most intensive Middle Saxon occupation, at Cottam A. however, was on the site of the later medieval South In summary, the three seasons of excavation at Manor house, where a Middle Saxon timber hall and Cottam have revealed a shifting and evolving early smithy have been excavated (Stamper & Croft 1997). medieval settlement pattern. It is difficult to escape The South Manor site plays a critical role in any the conclusion that the sub-rectangular enclosures at discussion of the nature of Middle Saxon occupation Cottam B represent Anglian and then Anglo-Scan- at Wharram Percy, and of its development into the dinavian farmsteads, whilst the more traditional post-Conquest village. Of all the Middle Saxon sites ladder-pattern farmstead at Cottam A is confirmed as it is the only one which was still occupied in the post- Late Iron Age and Romano-British. This work may Conquest period, and furthermore, as the site of one therefore allow a reassessment of the typology of of the two manor houses, it clearly had a special crop mark enclosures and a re-examination of the status in the later 11th and 12th centuries. If con- large number of undated enclosures known from the tinuity of occupation can be demonstrated then the Yorkshire Wolds (Fig. 5). It is anticipated that far South Manor provides valuable evidence for pre- more may turn out to be of early medieval rather than Conquest manorial origins comparable, for example, oflron Age or Romano-British date. to that recovered from Raunds (Northamptonshire), or Goltho (Lincolnshire). There is no firm evidence for major early Anglo- Wharram Percy Saxon activity in the South Manor area; most of the Anglo-Saxon pottery recovered from the South Manor The second site to be considered is better known site is probably 7th- or 8th-century. This is confirmed for the campaign of excavations aimed at under- by the radiocarbon dating where the four samples standing the desertion of the medieval village, pion- from features associated with the smithy all fall eered by Beresford and Hurst ( 1990). Excavations at within the calibrated date range of AD 600-1010 at Wharram Percy have revealed, however, that there the 68% confidence limits. A silver sceat of AD was also considerable Middle Saxon activity spread c. 700-710 is probably the earliest datable contempor- over much of the area of the later medieval village ary object, but two sword pommels and a 7th- or 8th- (Fig. 6). In 1975, a two-post sunken-featured build- century hilt guard are also probably contemporary ing was excavated at Site 39, on the northern fringes with the Middle Saxon settlement, and are particul- of the medieval village (Milne & Richards 1992). arly diagnostic of its high status. The finds from its fill included a Northumbrian sceat During the Middle Saxon period we also have of c.750, and a sherd ofTating-type ware, of the late evidence for the first post-Roman laying out of 8th or early 9th centuries. During 1980-84 two sunken- boundaries and enclosure of the landscape at Whar- featured buildings were identified cut into a Roman ram Percy. Two Middle Saxon boundaries were hollow-way in Site 60, immediately south of the recovered from the South Manor excavations; both North Manor. These were originally described as 6th were east-west ditches, the second apparently replac- century (Hurst 1984, 82), largely on the basis of a ing the first. The later ditch was contemporary with strike-a-light for which 6th-century parallels were the smithy; the earlier was sealed and cut by smithing quoted, but it has been suggested that they could also activity. It has been suggested that this redefinition of be later (Milne & Richards 1992, 93). In 1989-90 a the boundary 1 m to the north indicates that there was fourth sunken structure was found cut into a Romano- relatively little pressure on land at this stage and that British field boundary ditch in Sites 94 and 95 (Milne the Middle Saxon occupants of the South Manor site & Richards 1992, 13-25). The associated midden were thereby able to extend their holding (Stamper & deposit provided evidence for non-ferrous metal- Croft 1997). 238 Anglian and Viking Settlement in the Yorkshire Wolds lOOm Fig. 5. - Cottam Environs: Undated crop-markenclosures. Topography from Ordnance Survey 1:50,000 map. Crown copyright reserved. ARC!JNFO 7. 0; J.D. Richards 1997; digitised by H. Fen wick. The Middle Saxon soils are believed to have been end and belt slide decorated in the Borre interlace immediately sealed by "boney loams". This is thought style, current in Scandinavia in the 9th and 1Oth to have happened quickly because the final Middle centuries, one of which was recovered from the boney Saxon surfaces contained large sherds of pottery and loams. Caroline Richardson has noted that such belt complete bones, although the dating of the boney slides are rare finds from the British Isles and the loams is unclear. One possibility is that at least the presence of Scandinavian dress accessories at Whar- lower levels are Anglo-Scandinavian. Two radiocar- ram "could indicate the presence of a Viking man at bon dates for material interpreted as originating in Wharram Percy" (in Stamper & Croft 1997). If not the boney loams provide calibrated date ranges of imported from Scandinavia then these items must at AD 960-1030 and AD 880-1000, at the 68% con- least have originated from within the Scandinavian fidence level. community in Britain. There is good evidence for Anglo-Scandinavian It is thought that the first earth or turf built phase presence in the South Manor area, including schist of the main manorial boundary bank may have been and phyllite hones and a 9th- or 1Oth-century sword broadly contemporary, or slightly later than, the boney hilt guard, close in appearance to a smaller guard loams. It has also been suggested that the so-called from Coppergate. Most significantly, there is a strap lynchet bank which separates the medieval peasant 239 J.D. Richards tofts from their crofts is broadly contemporary with which supports both a 1Oth-century laying out of the the boundary bank. It is suggested that this may be village, and an Anglo-Scandinavian context for it. At Anglo-Scandinavian. Cottam the excavated Anglo-Scandinavian settle- Many of the surviving earthworks at Wharram ment was short-lived and it has been suggested that derive from the late medieval fragmentation of the it was re-established as the Cottam DMV. village caused by its gradual desertion and the oblit- The late 9th and 1Oth centuries was a time of eration of disused croft boundaries (Hurst 1984, 83 ). tenurial change, due to the Viking settlement. A It is clear, however, that the village originally con- number of former large, often ecclesiastical, estates sisted of a regular plan with two parallel rows of tofts were being fragmented and passing into private and crofts. It is also very likely that the whole system ownership (Richards 1991, 30-31 ). In Yorkshire the of thirty tofts was planned from the start, and not Anglo-Saxon Chronicle informs us that in 876 assarted gradually from surrounding waste. Each toft "Healfdene shared out the lands of the Northum- and croft was, with certain exceptions, laid out on a brians, and they [the Scandinavians] proceeded to module of 60 ft ( 18 m). This uniform layout suggests plough and to support themselves". The Yorkshire that the Danish Solskifte system (shown by docu- Wolds are one of the main areas where we believe ments to be in general use in the W olds area in that Scandinavian landlords took control of former medieval times) dates back to the laying out of the large estates. In the former east Riding of Yorkshire village and fields. 48% of place-names are Scandinavian influenced. There are three periods at which the planning of In the Wharram area there is an almost complete the Wharram area may have taken place: (1) at the replacement of English by Scandinavian place-names. time of initial settlement in the Middle Saxon period; This cannot denote completely new settlements fil- (2) following the period of Scandinavian invasion ling in gaps as we now know that most of the and settlement; or (3) in the late 11th or early 12th landscape was already extensively farmed, at least century following the disruption of the Harrying of from the Roman period. Existing settlements must the North (Hurst 1984, 85). The third possibility is therefore have been renamed after a redivision of the the most easily dismissed as it is thought unlikely that land by the new Scandinavian aristocracy. such major replanning could take place in the 11th or We have already noted that at Wharram Percy the 12th century, when many different landowners would Borre style belt slide and strap end from the South have been involved, without some documentary Manor site were probably manufactured in Scandin- evidence in surviving deeds or charters. The first avia and arrived in the Wolds with a Scandinavian possibility is difficult to disprove but there is no settler. To judge from the quality of the craftsman- archaeological evidence for it and it is also thought ship his status was relatively high. It may be of im- unlikely that the population of the Wolds would have portance that both these objects were found in a expanded to its greatest extent in the 8th century Middle Saxon enclosure which the presence of a (Hurst 1984, 86). From field walking in the Wharram timber hall and smithy suggests was already of high area it is also clear that the pattern of Middle Sax on status. Indeed this argues that whilst the Scandin- pottery finds supports the idea of scattered settlement avian takeover brought about the laying out and at this stage whilst Late Saxon pottery is only found nucleation of the village, the site which was to at the nucleated village sites (Hurst 1984, 82). In become the focus of the nucleated plan was already a 1984 John Hurst suggested that the most likely date focal point in the Middle Saxon period. Scandinavian at which Wharram Percy became a nucleated planned overlordship was based upon continuity of political village was during Scandinavian reorganisation in gravity. the 1Oth century (1984, 86). This likelihood is now New Viking landlords were also active in reiterated. assimilating Christianity and erecting private chapels in the lOth century (Richards 1991, 99-100). At Wharram Percy a small timber church was establish- Conclusion ed in the valley in the 1Oth century (Bell et al. 1987). Amongst the earliest burials in the church are the At both Cottam and Wharram Percy there is Anglo-Scandinavian style graves, marked by lime- evidence for the origins of early medieval settlement stone slabs with head- and foot-stones, of two adults in the late 7th or 8th century with subsequent re- and a child. These may therefore represent the first organisation in the 1Oth century, although we should Scandinavian lords of the Wharram manor. Radio- not seek a single pattern of settlement evolution as at carbon dates for the burials excavated within the each site development took a different course. At church now confirm that many were buried in the 9th Wharram there is a deal of circumstantial evidence or 1Oth centuries (Clark pers comm). 240 Anglian and Viking Settlement in the Yorkshire Wolds / /' 0 .-j .~·. \.~ -::-::'-- -- N I- ' ········ ' ,. ,. ·.: . f ......... ..·.···:.·:·:::::·:···.-.::: ··.:. ,., .· / ................... , I 'Cl •.. ~ ·:, '\ ' ,,,, \ ·. . I I \ \ \ I \ \ ' ' [QJ Excavated areas ' 0 8th· 9th c. coins 0 6th·6th c. structures m 8th c. pottery group w 8th/9th c. cross fragment [!] 8th/9th c. metal working .... Fig. 6.- Plan of Wharram Percy showing Anglo-Saxonfinds. (After C. Philo in Richards & Milne 1994, fig. 44). 241 J.D. Richards Finally, it should be noted that the early medieval HURST J.G. 1984: The Wharram Research Project: activity at Wharram Percy was only discovered be- Results to 1983, Medieval Archaeology 28,77-111. cause the village had ultimately been abandoned KEMP R. 1996: Anglian settlement at 46-54 Fisher- settlement and became the focus of a large campaign gate, The Archaeology of York 711, Council for to examine the desertion of the medieval settlement British Archaeology, York. which had unexpected results. Cottam was only dis- MANBY T. forthcoming: Thwing, Paddock Hill: A covered because of the chance association of Anglian Bronze Age and Anglo-Saxon site in East York- and Anglo-Scandinavian metal artefacts with crop- shire. mark enclosures. It is suggested that there may be MILNE G. & R!CHARDS J.D. 1992: Wharram: A Study many more early medieval settlement sites awaiting of Settlement on the Yorkshire Wolds, VII. Two discovery in the Yorkshire Wolds. Anglo-Saxon Buildings and Associated Finds, York University Archaeological Publications 9. MORTIMER J.R. 1905: Forty years' researches in References British and Saxon burial mounds of East York- shire, London. BELL R.D., BERESFORD M.W. et al. 1987: Wharram: MYRES J.N.L. & SOUTHERN W.H. 1973: The Anglo- A Study ofSettlement on the Yorkshire Wolds, Ill. Saxon Cremation Cemetery at Sancton, East Wharram Percy: The Church of St.Martin, Yorkshire, Hull Museum Publications 218, Hull. Society for Medieval Archaeology Monograph POWLESLAND D. 1986: Excavations at Heslerton, 11, London. North Yorkshire 1978-82, Archaeological Jour- BERESFORD M. & HURST J. 1990: Wharram Percy: nal143, 53-173. Deserted Medieval Village, London, B.T. Bats- RICHARDS J.D. 1991: Viking Age England, London, ford Ltd. I English Heritage. B.T. Batsford Ltd. I English Heritage. DIDSBURY P. 1990: Fieldwork in Cottam and Cowlam RICHARDS J.D. 1994: Cottam Evaluation, Yorkshire Parish, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal62, 63- Archaeological Journal66, 57-58. 67. RICHARDS J.D. 1995: An incised chalk weight from HALDENBY D. 1990: An Anglian site on the York- the Anglian Site at Cottam, Humberside, Medie- shire Wolds, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal val Archaeology 38, 167-169. 62, 51-63. RICHARDS J.D. in prep: Cottam: Anglian and Anglo- HALDENBY D. 1992: An Anglian site on the York- Scandinavian Settlement on the Yorkshire Wolds. shire Wolds, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal STAMPER P.A. & CROFT R.A. 1997: Wharram: A 64, 25-39. Study ofSettlement on the Yorkshire Wolds, VIII HALDENBY D. 1994: An Anglian site on the York- The South Manor Area Excavations, York Uni- shire Wolds- Part Ill, Yorkshire Archaeological versity Archaeological Publications 10. Journal66, TIMBY J. 1993: Sancton I Anglo-Saxon Cemetery: HALL R.A. 1994: Viking Age York, London, B.T. Excavations Carried Out Between 1976 and 1980, Batsford Ltd. I English Heritage. Archaeological Journal150, 243-365. HIRST S. 1985: An Anglo-Sa.x:on Inhumation Cemet- WATKINS J.R. 1983: The Archaeology of Anglian ery at Sewerby, East Yorkshire, York University East Yorkshire: a review of some published evid- Archaeological Publications 4. ence and proposals for future fieldwork, East Riding Archaeologist 7, 25-39. Dr. Julian D. Richards Department of Archaeology The University of York The King's Manor York YOI 2EP UK 242 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Kaname Maekawa A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cambridgeshire, England Summary castles were equipped with large baileys or house plots which helped to facilitate defence against In 1994 and 1995, our group conducted research on sudden attack. a medieval village in Cambridgeshire, England. Using various archaeological and geophysical tech- niques, I was able to come to a number of interesting Introduction conclusions about the relationship between the de- cline ofmedieval villages in the area and the creation What I would like to outline in this paper is the oflarger,fortified communities. Most significantly, I process of nucleation and urbanisation of a middle now believe that the inhabitants of numerous medie- ranking town from a medieval village. The discus- val villages eventually chose to or were forced to sion is centerd upon a specific example: the deserted migrate to larger towns which were situated in and medieval village at Swavesey in Cambridgeshire. around massively designed castles. Most of these There are essentially three reasons for the choice of survey area in 1994 Fig. 1. - The location of Swavesey and the distribution of medieval sites. 1 2 (After Ravensdale 1984) 243 Kaname Maekawa Fig. 2. - General view from the air (after Ravensdale study has been to shed light on it. Finally, the date of 1982). this site has been roughly established by the small trial excavation undertaken by Cambridge Archaeo- logical Unit in 1990. Historical background of Swavesey Swavesey parish forms part of the south-western hinterland of the fen basin, flanking the southern bank of the Ouse and stretching to the Roman Road running between Cambridge and Huntingdon (A14). It covers 1611 ha (3,982 acres). The southern part of the parish is upland, rising to 18m on the west next to the A14, the Roman Via Devana, falling gently to a small residual area of fen at the north and west, divided into Mow Fen and Mare Fen. Swavesey was flooded in 1874 and 1947. On the latter occasion, the floodwater appears to have reached the 5.4 m contour near the village. The high ground of the parish con- sists ofKimmeridge Clay (Chris 1992). In the early medieval periods, Swavesey was divided into three parts. At the north end is the church and the manor Swavesey, which was occupied from the iron age to house, in the central zone, the nucleus of the settle- the medieval period as the subject of our survey. ment and a castle, and at the southern end an exten- Firstly, through this example, we expect to be able to tion of the settlement and the deserted medieval vil- grasp better the history of developed medieval towns lage which posing interesting problems of the origin and settlements in the regional historical continuum. of the town (fig 1, 2). In this paper, I shall focus on Secondly, there is a high possibility of grasping the this point. relationship between large and middle-sized towns In the central zone, the dock and the market which on the one hand, and villages on the ether. This is still reflect a period of prosperity in medieval times have little understood and one of the achievements of this survived as a village square. However it is not clear p ~ \ ~ y ~ I r 'r " ; I I 1- "( I ~G 9 I G 6 I I G 3 f I ' I r t I I . ' I I I I I I Fig. 3. - The grid and rough plan 0 20 40 m Fig. 4. - Plot of Resistivity survey (after Maekawa K. et al. 1996). (after Maekawa K. et al. 1996). 244 A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cambridgeshire, England why the manor house was not in this central zone. 1: 1230 Swavesey acquired by Roger de la Zouch by Some say that the manor house was originally exchange; situated in the central zone island and was later 2: 1232 Roger granted fifteen oak trees for making moved to the northern island. According to the docu- lodgings at his manor of Swavesey; mentary evidence, Count Alan, Lord of Richmond, 3: 1244 Grant to Alan de la Zouch of market and fair held it in 1086. A market and fair at Swavesey was at Swavesey; granted to the then lord of the manor de alan la 4: 1261 Further grant, and enlarging the fair to eight zouche in 1244. This was enlarged to an eight day fair days at Michaelmas; in 1261. It was probably at this time that the town 5: 1267 Grant to Alan whose corn at Swavesey had defences and streets were laid out. Swavesey had a been burned by the King's enemies. port by about 1177, and the town was connected to the River Ouse by a navigation drain connected to the docks in the market place (Evans 1990). Our survey Topographical key elements (Fig.1) was made in the corner of the so-called castle close Black Horse Lane (fig 3). The site is situated on the The church and the manor west side of the central zone of Swavesey village. The church and the manor house are situated at the Along the west side, an earthwork of2m high with a north end of the village of Swavesey on a low gravel double moat of 8m wide survives in a well preserved 'island' separated from the medieval town of Swave- state. The north west corner of the earthwork is sey to the south by the Navigation Drain which form- higher than the rest, and is thought to represent the erly allowed boats to reach the village from the River motte on which a dongeon may have stood. The area Ouse. It is not known when there was first a church of the close probably therefore represents an inner at Swavesey, but a priory was established there be- bailey. To the north of it, the area of Topleys Close fore 1086. The nave is markedly broader at the tower by Amen Corner may well represent a second bailey, end than at the chancel arch, and this may reflect the since it also has a moat and an earthwork. At the lay-out of an earlier building. The nave of the earlier moment it is used as pasture for horses. Between these church was rebuilt around middle fifteenth century. two baileys, there is a road which changes direction at right angles. It was probably an important road in Dock and Town layout the medieval period, linking Swavesey and the Mr. John Shepperson has reconstructed and mapped adjacent village of Fen Drayton. A number of frag- the areas inundated in the great floods of the past ments in Farrer's Feudal Cambridgeshire indicate how hundred years in Swavesey. According to his recon- Swavesey developed during the thirteenth century: struction and aerial photographs, Church End emerges Fig. 5.- Plot ofMagnetometry sur- 0 20 40 m Fig. 6. - Plot of Susceptibility sur- vey (after Maekawa K. et al. 1996). vey (after Maekawa K. et al. !996). 245 Kaname Maekawa IUH ~ "'-.._ r------ r--...._ r----- r-- !'--- ...._ r-- ...__ r--~'------ r--, -....: ____ r---r-- ._.., ....... :::::: ·-H-- -- ;--. ...... ---- ..... 'I-- ,.... , ...._ t:r--r-- ~ • I 1 G 9 G 6 G 3 .,, I, ,. :.& .: l ,. l ·- \ , ' • I l.IM Fig. 7.- Plot of Ground Radar survey (1) (after Maekawa K. et al. 1996). !. Anomaly points; 2. the grid. as one island, and the central zone of the village (the putative medieval town and former Hale field) as another island. What he suggests is a dock area with I.IH four basins, including Swan Pond and Town Pond, and two others in between on the edge of church Green. The heart ofthe town is the market place, where the barges would have come tounloadto the .. ! navigation drain. Inside the town defences, the street layout seems to correspond approximately to a grid. OH The castle and Town defences The putative castle mound at Swavesey has probably been much reduced by gravel-robbing, and as it remains is comparable only to the smallest motte. The castle may have been the third in a chain including Burwell and Rampton in response to the anarchy of Stephen's reign, however,there is also a possibility Fig. 8.- Plot of Ground Radar survey (2) (after Maekawa that it was earlier, perhaps late 11th century in date. K. et al. 1996). 246 A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cambridgeshire, England Fig. 9. - Plan of Wharram Percy and a building recon- struction. I. general view; 2. reconstruction, after Be- resford M. & Hurst J. 1990). ·· .. N \ 0--' ·50 ---IOOmottes --·.""' ·- '! peasant tolls & crolls boundaries ol:- Mh manor house Ch church ·--- Pa parsonage F fishpond • • uncertain use 2 At the present, the town ditch and the earthworks on east side, they went up to the dock area and continued the west side of the settlement alone can be seen. to the fen. Concerning the western part, in 1984 and However, in the 13th century, it is likely that on the 1985, an excavation of the moats was carried on the 247 Kaname Maekawa Fig. 10. - Synthesis of various geographical methods and archaeo- Resistivity survey logical implication (after Maekawa K. et al. 1996). Suceptibility survey * Ground rader survey 60m + + (SS02) l -y -1 -1 -4 ~ Ditch 3 ( S D 0 I ' /-. '.,.•~ -.',-.·.-: -·.·_ . .~ ~ :}' •·.;::. :-.r-.... .,...:;;.,.:,: t- !,.f", / --1 ~:;{di ~ 40m / ,' '-I .,.., ;.:~~j.~;.. ,..t- ' 1- + House plot )' + / -.... llouse plot 3 +/: House plot 2 / ,.." Ditch 2 : D 0 2 ) i\j; ,._1- '* Road I (SSOl) + Manor House 60•n 0 south side at the end of the village, where flat bot- including the bank and ditch and the castle were tomed moats of 2m deep and 8m wide were discov- probably constructed in the last quarter of the thir- ered. Remains of 13th century were found inside the teenth century. earthworks. Until 15th century, the inside of the moat was regularly cleared (Haigh 1984). In addition, sur- Ryder 's farm face finds from this area have been analysed by Dr. The farmhouse is situated outside the town wall, Hall (Hall 1974). He concludes that they divid prin- however, it has the socalled 'long cat slide' roof cipally into two groups dating to the late iron age, and typical of an aisled hall, suggesting possible medie- the 11th or 12th (ie. the early medieval age). In addi- val origins. A small trial excavation by Cambridge- tion, there were some finds of 14th or 15th century shire Archaeology suggests that Rider's farm may date. Dr. Ravensdale implies that the defensive works date back to the 13th century (Bray 1993). 248 A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cambridgeshire, England o 100 '"""'=~=~=~ !!Mlh+"·c.;+ lOO ....)00 feet ' '' ' -- Fig. 11.- Plan of Rampton castle (after Taylor C. C. 1973). Geophysical survey in the deserted medieval vil- west of G4. In the case of susceptibility survey, an lage anomaly exists along each of the hollows and on the south side of the rectangular block. As for the ground Method (Fig. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8) radar survey, rectangular anomalies can be seen on We conducted a geophysical survey which included the top of each plot, as in G2, GS, and G8. In G3, G6, a resistivity survey, magnetometry survey, susceptib- and G9 which are thought to be the rear part of each ility survey and ground radar survey (Maekawa K. et plot, no anomaly can be seen, in addition, suggest al. 1996). We set up a grid of 9 squares, each 20 m that clear anomaly can be seen in the recently filled on a side, aligned with magnetic north. A pole in the ditch running from the middle of G7 to the south- south-west corner was established as the base point, west ofG4. and an x-axis to the east, and an y-axis to the north, with crossing points as shown. The grids and squares are numbered G 1, G2, G3 from the south-east corner Interpretation and then GS, G6 from G4 next to G 1 and then again G8, G9 from G7 next to G4. Overall the surveyed area Let us turn now to the problem of interpretation, measured 3600 square meters. Around the site, the taking all the currently available archaeological weather was dry and sunny for about one month up material into account. to including the survey period, therefore, the level of 1) As can be seen from the sketch plan and aerial water under the ground was comparatively low. photograph, the landscape of this site is quite similar to that at Wharram Percy in Yorkshire which is fam- Results ous as a deserted medieval village (Fig.9). At Whar- In the case of resistivity survey, taking account of the ram Percy, there was a Manor house at the north end local geography, in the center of the cut-edged rect- of the village, and a church and parsonage at the south angular plot and circle plot, apparently higher anom- end. Between them, the main street ran and either aly was apparent. In each of grid squares GS and G8, side has rectangular house plots divided by ditches or a clean edged rectangular anomaly measuring 10 me- earthworks. On the house plots, building remains ters wide and 16 meters long was found. In the case fringe the road, and the area at the rear ofthe plot was of magnetometry survey, a sparse anomaly appered given over to an agricultural use. The ultimate origin along the hollow which divides GS and G8, in the of this landscape may be sought in the Anglo-Saxon east corner of the rectangular block, and in the north period and this type in general was established in the 249 Kaname Maekawa ·· ..... . B IO~o _ _ _.;;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.o~oof"t c '>I'>.'. '_. • ' .. ·~. ' :,.._ _ _ _ __,.;;,s_o_ _ _ _ _..-,oo _,,.,, D + + I i Fig. 12. -Plan of Burwell castle (after RCHME 1972). middle of the 12th century. If we compare this case and 11.5 meters long in 05, and about 6 meters wide study with the results at D.M.V. site at Swavesey and and 10 meters long in 08. aerial photographs, an intriguing possibility emerges. 3) Thirdly, regarding the results of the magneto- At Swavesey, underneath the ground where a farm metry survey and susceptibility survey, the anom- house stands at the moment, it is possible a manor alies in the former case seem much higher in the site has hurried, although the site of a church and south of09, in the west of05, between 01 and 02, parsonage is not discernible at present. Moreover, a and inside the presumed buildings. The anomalies in road which is now not used runs from east to west the latter case seem higher in 02, 05, 08 and in the along the exist at 20 meter intervals. Towards the rear hollow between 02 and 05. We may surmise that of the plots, these features become less clear. there is burned soil with magnetic mineral or iron 2) Secondly let us consider the implications of the materials such as nails there. geographycal results.The resistivity survey leads us 4) Lastly, taking account of the archaeological evid- to suggest that in the center of house plots, higher ence of analogical examples in Britain, an attempt to rectangular anomalies can be seen, and along the hol- synthesise a reconstruction is offered in Fig. 10. Here lows resistivity becomes lower. In the case of the I have identified a hollow running north-south at the ground radar survey, anomalies partially arranged in west end of the site as Road 2. I interpret the rect- a line can be seen. Taking account of the buildings angular blocks as house plots. Outside of the pres- excavated at Wharram Percy, it seems that medieval umed manor house, I take the hollow referred to as farm houses did not always have foundation stones Ditch 1 to be a ditch which surrounded a possible on four sides, and there are examples which combine manor house. The hollows which divide presumed post holes and foundation stones. It seems reasonable House Plot 1 and 2, and 2 and 3 are referred as Ditch to suppose that the anomalies surveyed mainly by 2 and Ditch 3. I have termed the anomalies inside ground radar represent buildings with postholes and each of house plots 1, 2, 3 as Buildings 1, 2, 3. Because foundation stones, which measured about 13 meters there are very few features behind the House Plots 1, wide and 13 meters long in 02, about 5.5 meters wide 2, 3, we consider this was probably a cultivated area. 250 A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cam!Jridgeshire, England Conclusions- Other examples in Cambridgeshire the urbanization ofSwavesey in mid 13th century can be compared to the Incastellamento in southern part Burwell and Ramp ton (Fig. 11, 12) ofEurope which is, in general, considered not to have occurred in northern Europe including Britain (Wick- Burwell castle is firmly dated to the Anarchy of Step- ham C. 1981). hen's reign, and Rampton castle (Giant's Hill) ap- As mentioned above, field archaeology, geophys- pears similar in plan to Burwell, with its wide, recti- ical survey and documentary evidence combine to linear moat. Rampton castle (Giant's Hill) is situated suggest that the de la Zouch family redeveloped Swa- on the fen edge, and is believed to be the remains of vesey as a commercial centre, re-siting the houses an unfinished castle, dating from the mid-twelfth- around the dock area at least in the 1240s. At the century Civil War ofKing Stephen's reign, and con- same time, the medieval village which was probably nected to the rebellions of Geoffrey de Mandeville. established before the Norman conquest, was nucle- The castle has a rectangular mound with markedly ated into a new fortified town and eventually deserted curved south and east sides. It is surrounded by a completely. deep flat-bottomed moat or ditch up to two metres deep. On the north side, it has three house plots which Acknowledgements are surrounded by small earthworks. On the west side The results of geophysical s.urvey at Swavesey dis- of it, it has three bailies divided by two hallows. The cussed in this paper, were obtained by the joint middle one has a house plot. On the northwest side, efforts of those who participated in the Swavesey it has ridge and furrow. Burwell castle is situated on project. I am grateful to Professor Hideo Sakai, Pro- the fen edge as Rampton is. In its present form, it fessor Takao Uno (University of Toyama) and Dr. consists of a large rectangular moat, averaging 20 ft. Simon Kaner (University of Cambridge). I would wide at bottom and 9 ft. deep, isolating an area 200 particularly like to thank Dr. Antony Clark (Consult- ft. by 125 ft. On the north side, there are three house ancy in Archaeomagnetic prospecting, U.K.) for giv- plots outside the enclosure which are surrounded by ing us the results of susceptibility survey. The final hollows. It is known that in 1143 Stephen ordered the report of Swavesey Project is forthcoming and will building of a series of castles in this region to control be published by Oxbow books. Dr. Martin Morris the marauding Geofferey de Mandeville, and this is (University of Chiba) was kind enough to check my one of them. If Rampton and Burwell are from the English in this paper. I appreciate his kindness. same period, they might well be part of a system for commanding the ways that skirt the southern edge of References the fens. What is more important here is the fact that both of the two have deserted medieval house plot BERESFORD M. & HURST J. 1990: Wharram Percy forms around them as Swavesey does, and it is pos- Deserted Medieval Village, London. sible that this reflects nucleation initiated by a strong BRAY S. 1993: An Archaeological Investigation of a political power such as the King. 13th Century Farmhouse in Swavesey, Cam- bridgeshire Archaeology. EVANS C. 1990: Archaeological Investigations at Hypothesis Swavesey, Cambridgeshire, Cambridge Archaeo- logical Unit. Retuning to Swavesey again, it is evident that on HALL D. 1988: The late Saxon Countryside: Villages the western side, the settlement is characterised by and their Fields, in: D. HooKE (ed.), Anglo-Saxon broader baileys surrounded by earthworks and a moat, Settlements, London. on the eastern side, it consists of a town layout and HAIGH D. 1984: Excavation of the Town Ditch at docks. It might have been surrounded by moats for Swavesey 1984, Proceedings of the Cambridge defensive purposes, however, no visible remains of Antiquarian Society 73. such earthworks can be seen at the moment. The HODGES R. 1995: Early Medieval Archaeology, church and the manor house are isolated on the London. northern island. These facts may perhaps be in the MAEKAWA K., SAKAI H., UNO T. & KANER S. 1995: assumption as follows. When the village at Box worth Swavesey Geophysical Survey at Black Horse End was nucleated into Swavesey, there might have Lane. been a balance established between the old dock MAEKAWA K., SAKAI H., UNO T. & KANER S. town and baileys with the castle mounds, these being forthcoming: Swavesey, Oxbow Books. dominated from a distance by the church and the MAEKAWA K., SAKAI H., UNO T. & UEDA J. 1996: manor house as a political center. The nucleation and Geophysical Survey at Swavesey, England, News 251 Kaname Maekawa letter No. 17, Nara National Cultural Properties TA YLOR C.C. 1973: Cambridgeshire Earthwork Sur- Institute (Japanese). veys, Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian RA VENSDALE J.R. 1982: History on Your Doorstep, Society 54. London. University of London, Institute of Historical Re- RA VENSDALE J.R. 1984: Swavesey, Cambridgeshire: search 1989: The Victoria History of the County a fortified medieval planned markettown, Pro- of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely, Volume 9. ceedings oftheCambridgeAntiquarian Society 72. WICKHAM C. 1981: Early Medieval Italy, London. Royal Commission on Historical Monuments in Eng- WRATHMELL S. 1989: Domestic Settlement 2: Medie- land 1972: North-East Cambridgeshire. val Peasant Farmstead, York University Archae- SALZMAN I.F. (ed.) 1948: Ancient Earthworks, in: ology Publications 8. The Victoria History of the Counties of England. Kaname Maekawa Department of Archaeology Toyama University 3190 Gofuku Toyama City Toyama 930 Japan 252 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Udo Recker The Medieval Parish of Lohn Preliminary Report on a Research Project I Introduction Hausen manor has been rebuilt stone by stone in a suburb of Aachen. Since the early 1950s, the appearance of the land- Up till now no final evaluations have been made. scape in the western Rhineland between the cities of Only a number of preliminary reports have been pub- Aachen in the west, Cologne in the east and Mon- lished. The present report aims at providing an intro- chengladbach in the north has changed dramatically. duction to the research project and at presenting the Large scale open-cast mining activities have destroy- initial results. ed a cultural landscape ('Kulturlandschaft') that had developed over for several hundreds of years. In the course of the last 40 years many villages and their II The "Medieval Parish of Lohn" - Project boundaries have vanished and with them all material remams. The project is meant as a contribution to the archae- As early as 1953, Bader and Hermbrodt drew ology of rural settlements in the Middle Ages and attention to the danger linked with these procedures Early Modem Times. It was set up in the Department (Bader & Hermbrodt 1953). Nevertheless the local of Pre- and Early History of the University of Bonn archaeological authority concentrated its activities on in 1993. Since 1996, the research work is financed by exceptional excavations like those at Morken the 'Stiftung zur Forderung der Archaologie im (Bohner 1959; Hinz 1969) and the mottes and moated rheinischen Braunkohlenrevier' ('Foundation for the sites Husterknupp (Hermbrodt 1958) and Li.irken support of archaeology in the Rhenish open-cast min- (Piepers 1981 ). Schwellnus stated that without any ing area'). The 'Medieval Parish of Lohn'-Project doubt the results of these occasional interventions pursues several aims: on the one hand the archaeo- were important but that one should never forget that logical evaluation of all features and finds, on the in the meantime a dozen Rhenish villages and their other hand the reconstruction of the development of contents have been destroyed largely unnoticed and a small-scale landscape ('Kleinlandschaft') in the much less documented (Schwellnus 1987, 113). In western Rhine land in the High and Late Middle Ages the mid-1970s, the idea won recognition that only a as well as in Early Modem Times. Settlement struc- large-scale exploration enables us to gain an adequate tures should be analysed in their total cultural-histor- insight into high and late medieval rural settlement ical range without any ostensible limitation. structures. As a result the Rheinisches Amt for Boden- The oldest archaeological feature dates from the denkmalpflege (Rhenish Board for Archaeology) 9th century whereas the oldest finds go back to the started a research project in the parish of Lohn. Al- 10th/11th centuries. The end of the 18th century with though the realization of the original concept leave its world-shaking changes in the form of the French somewhat to be desired and the quality of the excav- Revolution was chosen as the recent chronological ations gives the impression of rescue archaeology, limit of the project. The attempt to reconstruct medie- the decision to try our hand at a project like this is to val and early modem settlement structures and the be welcomed. development of the cultural landscape (' Kulturland- The parish of Lohn was located east of Aachen schaft") in high and late medieval as well as early between Eschweiler and Ji.ilich. In medieval times it modem times requires an interdisciplinary approach. consisted of the six villages Erberich, Fronhoven, Interactions exist with subjects like historical geo- Hehlrath, Langendorf, Lohn and Pi.itzlohn as well as graphy, history, art history, sociology and cultural , of a manor called Hausen. With the exception of anthropology. Whenever possible scientific analyses Hehlrath and one street of Fronhoven all these vil- are used to back up the results. lages were demolished between 1973 and 1985. The 253 U. Recker Archaeological aspects of the project source: 'Aldinhoven' (Aldenhoven), 'Ascwilre' (Esch- weiler), 'Lon' (Lohn) and 'Inden'. His successor in So far, a total of 13 large-scale excavations and 7 office, Heinrich von Mi.illenarck, committed the fees rescue excavations or observations have been carried to the convent of the Cathedral at Cologne. Since out. The largest group of archaeological finds consist 1280, the parish has been under the wings of the sov- of medieval and early modern pottery. Hence the ereigns of Ji.ilich-Cleve-Berg. evaluation of excavations was started with two pot- Several archives keep a multitude of written sour- tery complexes from Lohn (Recker 1995) and Pi.itz- ces concerning the parish. Among them are parish lohn (Holtken 1995). A total of about 10,000 sherds registers, lists of peasants who cultivated land in and some complete vessels were analysed. Each frag- Lohn and in the other villages of the parish, details on ment was examined according to a catalogue of 21 the location and the dimensions of plots, information distinctive features. This way, 35 pottery ware types concerning the types of grain or field crops grown, could be distinguished. Distinctions between the wares descriptions of the feudal duties, accounts, court were made with regard to material and manufact- records and so forth. uring technique, optical characteristics and optical Amongst other things, these sources will enable criteria. No use was made of chemical and physical us to calculate the yields for selected years. Should analyses. In addition, the shape of the vessels/frag- the occasion arise, we will be able to reconstruct the ments and - if present - the decoration were anal- correlations between the types of grain or field crops ysed. The results obtained were complemented with that were grown and the nutritional condition of the those obtained through the study of a third complex rural population. of about 7,000 sherds and a few vessels from Li.irken, A category of sources of special interest are old a moated site located close to the western border of maps of the parish and the surrounding area. The old- the parish. In doing so, a pottery spectrum of a period est remaining map in which Lohn is plotted dates ranging from the 1Oth/11th to the 18th/19th centuries from the year 1610. It shows the Duchies of Jtilich, was covered. All ceramic remains from excavations Cl eve and Berg. The map was printed by Hessel Ger- within the parish will be classified according to this ritz in Amsterdam and was originally part of the chronological framework. In a second step, all archae- Blaeu Atlas. Similarly dated is a map printed by Claes ological features are evaluated. By this means settle- Jansz Visscher. It has the same object and content as ment structures should be reported/investigated per the first one and was also printed in Amsterdam. Sev- excavation in order to reconstruct the settlement eral other maps of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries structure of each village and of the whole parish. are preserved. A French map drawn up in 1807 is of special importance. In 1801, the French Ministry of Finance decided to revise the law of taxation and Scientific aspects of the project gave the order to prepare a land register. In a first step 1,800 villages in France - including the western Supplementary to the conventional analyses of Rhine land- were selected to be surveyed. From 1803 pottery, the determination of provenance is backed onwards, all villages were surveyed. The French land up by NAA (neutron activation analysis). At all ex- register had not been entirely completed when the cavation sites, wood was so badly preserved that it is western Rhineland became part of Prussia in 1815. impossible to get any dates by tree-ring dating. If Hence it was continued by the Prussians from 1819 possible, samples are analysed by radiocarbon dat- on. The map ofLohn was drawn to a scale of 1:5,000 ing. Bones will be subjected to an anthropological or and is the first exact plan of the village and its fields. osteological analysis. This may allow us to answer Combined with the written sources, it will allow us to questions concerning human eating habits, nutri- reconstruct the landed property of at least the 18th tional conditions and diseases as well as those related century. Whether it will be possible to go back into to the kinds of domestic animals kept. the 17th century or even further back is doubtful. Nevertheless an approximate distribution of the fields and the peasants related to them can be reconstructed Historical geographical and historical aspects of the by means of the field-names. project Langerwehe, one of the major production centres of medieval and early modern pottery in Europe, is On April 25th, 1226 the archbishop of Cologne, located only five kilometres southwest of Lohn. Be- Engelbert I von Berg, invested one of his vassals, the cause of this the parish has been a part of the local nobleman Gerhard von Randerath, with land in the market for Langerwehe products. In this connection, Ruhr district. Four farmsteads are mentioned in this it appears to be interesting to study in which quan- 254 The Medieval Parish of Lohn. Preliminary Report on a Research Project tities pottery from other production centres occur in the parish. In the 16th and 17th centuries Lohn had its own court of lay assessors. The preserved court records afford an insight into everyday wranglings and rows. The court was appealed to in order to settle a sale of land, to call in hereditary tenancies, to regulate claims to inheritances and so forth. On the other side, the records shed light on the relationship between vassal or free peasant and the authorities respectively the feudal lord. The first mention ofLohn as an independent rect- ory can be found in the so-called 'liber valoris' of the early 14th century. Since the same century Lohn and the surrounding villages formed a parish. The eccles- iastical history of Lohn can be duplicated by papal Fig. 1. -Detail of sheets 77 (Aldenhoven) and 78 (Jiilich) documents of the 14th and early 15th centuries as of "Kartenaufnahme der Rheinlande 1:2 5000 durch well as by the registers of the archbishops of Cologne Tranchot und v. Milffling "from 1805. (Knipping 1909; Janssen 1973 and 1977). Ill Archaeological evidence was not changed for about 200 years; and finally 6. a new church of 1902/03 which was demolished in The heart of the parish has always been the village 1973. In the following the phases 1-5 are described; of Lohn. This situation and the range of questions phase 6 is of no interest for the project. under consideration are good reasons to focus the fol- lowing interpretations on this village. Phase 1 The centre of the settlement was formed by the Beneath the nave of the modem church (phase 6), a parish church and a small market place from which wooden structure or rather eight postholes were un- the four main streets lead off. In addition, to these covered. The excavator identified the structure as the places another two spots within the village were of first phase of the church (Dohm-Ihmig 1978, 542). exceptional importance for the archaeological invest- According to her interpretation, we have to think of a igations. At the northern periphery of the village lay church in form of a small hall with a rectangular choir. a plot of land that was called 'Alte Burg' ('old cas- The hall was preserved to a length of about 7 m not tle') or 'Brubbeleburg'. In the middle of the parcel, a including the choir. Because of the fact that the west- hillock was located. This feature makes the field- em edge of the structure was disturbed, this does not name even more interesting. The oldest building of tally with the original maximum length. Provided the village was situated to the east of the market that the postholes have equal distances of nearly 2 m place. In 1678, the village was destroyed by a fire and the hall should have been at least 8 m long. It was according to oral history only three farmsteads were about 6.5 m wide. To the east, a choir of2 m in length not burned down. It is said that the 'Hof Kaldenbach' and 3 m in width was attached. On top of undisturbed (Kaldenbach farm) was one of these farmsteads. soil, a composition floor (Estrich) could be observed; it has been linked up with the wooden structure by Dohm-Ihmig (Dohm-Ihmig 1978, 544). The filling The parish church of Saint Silvester of the postholes contained a number of sherds ofred- painted pottery of the Pingsdorf-type and hard-fired The excavations inside and outside the church have grey wares. not yet led to a final and complete study. Never- Inside and outside the church, several graves were theless, it is possible to present a general review of excavated. At least ten of them relate to the wooden the development of the church. The development can structure of phase 1. They are located east of the rect- be subdivided into six phases: 1. a wooden structure angular choir and all of them have a W-E-orientation. of the 9th century; 2. a stone structure of the lOth cen- From a stratigraphical point of view, they are of the tury; 3. a church and steeple of the 12th century; 4. an same age or somewhat younger than the wooden enlarged structure of the 15th century which was de- church. In the north-eastern corner of the choir, a stroyed in 1678; 5. a new construction of 1696 which posthole has been disturbed by the eastern part of a 255 U. Recker Fig. 2. - Phase 1 of the parish ·- ·-'" .,/ 10m church (based on Dohm-Ihmig . -\, + 1978, fig. 5) . >~- -~- '-. i -· -·· i iI 11 Ii N 0 5m II I '""'""' grave, which means that the grave comes from out- circular apse was attached to the church. At the same side the building. This grave and another nine burials time or somewhat later, a larger hall was erected west are overlapped by younger walls which belong to the of the entrance to the church. In the choir and apse as church of phase 2. Anthropological examinations are well as in the large hall, the same kind of rubble was hampered by the bad preservation of the skeletons. observed. This seems to indicate that both parts of the There are several indications that the wooden building were erected at the same time. structure was destroyed by fire. Two samples of char- coal that had been taken out of the postholes could be Phase 3 dated to the years 760 AD± 50 years and 850 AD± Further alterations can be demonstrated by archaeo- 50 years. According to this, the wooden structure was logical and historical evidence. In the 12th century, built in the first half of the 9th century. It can still not the western close of the hall and the choir with the be said at which time it burned down. Whether we apse were removed. The latter were replaced by a follow the interpretation ofDohm-Ihmig or not, there larger choir with a semicircular ending; in the west a is one question that cannot be clarified. The first steeple was erected. The foundations of the new choir stone structure of the church (phase 2) dates from the were based in part on the foundations of phase 2 1Oth century. If we consider the durability of a which must have led to static problems in the fol- wooden structure founded on postholes, the supposed lowing years. Because of this, two buttresses and six end of the wooden structure does not coincide with pillars were attached to the eastern end of the hall and the beginning of the stone structure. the choir. It is impossible to ascertain the exact point in time when these measures were taken. The mason- Phase 2 ry was not interlocked with that of the hall. In gen- As mentioned before, the second phase of the church eral, the pillars were built in same way as the but- dates from the 1Oth century. In the first instance, a tresses but their basal surface was only half the size small hall of 3.3 m in length and 5 m in width was and their foundations were not as deep as those of the erected. In a joint of two walls, a fragment of a globu- buttresses. The same kind of stones and mortar were lar pot ('Kugeltopf) was found. A rectangular choir, used. 0.9 m long and 3.5 m wide, was attached to the hall. The dimension of the steeple base was c. 8 by 8 m. The preserved foundations are based on several lay- The quadratic structure was not attached to the west- ers of sand and gravel and were built with quarry- em edges of the longitudinal walls of the hall. Quite stones, Roman tiles, limestone and sandy mortar. The to the contrary, its eastern foundation lay 0.8 m west lower parts of the walls contained a number of pieces of the foundation of the western front of the hall. The of charcoal. soil between both foundations was undisturbed. In At an undetermined point in time, this structure order to close the gap between the two buildings, the was rebuilt. Instead of the rectangular choir, a semi- longitudinal walls of the hall had been lengthened in 256 The Medieval Parish of Lohn. Preliminary Report on a Research Project Fig. 3. - Phase 5 of the parish church (taken from Dohrn-Ihmig 1978,fig. 3). a westerly direction. We owe a description of the was not erected before 1696, but as early as July 1679, steeple (Franck-Oberaspach & Renard 1902, 185) to one of three new church-bells was cast. Its inscription the fact that it was not destroyed by the great fire in reads: 'S. Silvester I am called, 1678, October 4th, 1678. The Romanesque spire had three floors. While burned by fire, 1679, July 20th, totally indefatigable Dohrn-Ihmig (1978, 552) describes the building founded by Johannes Bourlet'. During the excava- materials as quarrystones, Franck-Oberaspach and tions in 1983, a large round pit was uncovered in Renard (Franck-Oberaspach & Renard 1902, 185) which one of the three new bells had been cast. The speak of tuff. One could enter the church through a pit was located close to the steeple of the 12th century portal at the southern end of the steeple. On the first and attracted attention due to the very heavily burnt and second floor there were at least two windows soil surrounding it. The infilling of the pit contained with a round arch at each side. The portal and the a large number of burnt earth lumps as well. windows were designed in Romanesque style. The roof had the shape of a frustum and was slated. Over Phase 5 the next centuries, the church and steeple were not This brick-structure was erected in 1696 and referred changed or if something was changed it did not leave to the ground plan of the burned-down church (phase any trace in the archaeological record. 4). It consisted of a nave and a northern aisle with a steeple in the west. The windows of the nave and the Phase 4 aisle had a pointed arch, beyond that they were austere. In the 15th century, the northern longitudinal wall of The choir of the nave was semi-circular, that of the the hall was removed and an aisle was added to the aisle was three-sided. East of the semi-circular choir, nave. Instead of the wall, three pillars were erected. a polygonal vestry was located. A rectangular porch At the eastern end of the church, a polygonal vestry was added to the western front of the aisle. The over- was built. Moreover, the outside wall of the Roman- alllength of the building was 20 m and it had a width esque choir was surrounded by a brick retaining wall. of 12.5 m. The ground plan of this church remained TI1e ground plan of this church was not changed over largely unchanged until its demolition in 1902. the next centuries. In 1678, French soldiers under the command of the Duke of Luxembourg invaded the Duchy of The 'Alte Burg' ('old castle') or 'Brubbeleburg' Jiilich-Cleve-Berg and burned down the village. Most parts ofLohn, including the church, were destroyed. As mentioned earlier, the 'Alte Burg' or 'Brubbe- Only the steeple withstood the fire. A new church leburg' was located on the outskirts of the village. 257 U. Recker The plot of land with the corresponding field-name harder (Mohs 5). A fourth group of greyish, hard-fired lay about 400 m north-north-east of the market place (Mobs 5) earthenwares can be compared with pottery and west of the radial road leading to Erberich. The ofPaffrath-type or Elmpt-type. This pottery is wheel- plot- which was eventually used as a pasture- was thrown but possesses elements of both wares. Some excavated in 1983 (von Brandt 1985; Recker 1995). sherds have been fired so hard that on technical Amongst the hillocks, parts of a filled-in moat grounds one could identify them as proto-stonewares. could be made out. It was observed to a linear extent The fabric is light grey and the shape corresponds of about 100 m. Although topographical and aerial with Pingsdorf-type vessels. It is assumed that this maps of the area show a second moat south-west of pottery is also of local origin. The range of different the first one, it could not be located during the excav- kinds of vessels illustrates that mainly cooking uten- ations. In total, an area of 8,300 m2 was examined. sils occur. The so-called 'Tiillenkannen' (spouted Even today the term 'castle' is still used gener- pitchers) of the 12th century constitute an exception ically for a variety of different objects. As early as in to the rule. the 1960s, Sieper made a proposal for a three-part definition (Sieper 1962). According to this suggestion Phases 213 we have to differentiate between a fortified farmstead Within these two periods several temporal gradations ('fester Hof), a fortified manor ('festes Haus') and a are possible. The final partition is still to be worked castle ('Burg'). Although this distinction presents out. many, it can still be accepted as a basis. If we follow A group of older features within these two phases Sieper's definition the 'Alte Burg' ('old castle') has is represented by two west-east oriented rows of to be identified as a 'fortified farmstead'. Except for Grubenhauser. They disturbed the moats of the first the moat-system no other elements of defence could phase. Each of the Grubenhauser contained a large be observed. amount of pottery mainly of the 12th/13th-14th/15th According to the features and the pottery spec- centuries. Most of the ceramic remains are yellow or trum, we have to distinguish four settlement phases. greyish earthen wares, proto-stonewares or stonewares. We can think of the first and fourth phases as being It is possible that the Grubenhauser were linked with well-established, but the second and third phases and a fireplace or oven close by, but there is no indication their full particulars are still in question. as to what they were used for. The yellow earthenwares are represented by Phase I Pingsdorf-type vessels, but it can be considered that The first settlement phase can be dated to a period none of these were produced in Pingsdorf or in the ranging from the 1Oth/11th to the 12th century. In this Vorgebirge. Just like in the case of phase 1, some early stage the hillock of natural origin was fortified sherds could be assigned to production sites in Lan- with an outer moat. A section of about 150 m of this gerwehe-Jtingersdorf. This determination of proven- moat could be uncovered. The preserved section runs ance is based on the characteristics of the temper from north to south and the section drawings show a used. A second group of Pingsdorf-type sherds was two-phased filling. In a first phase, the moat had a produced in South-Limburg (NL) or East-Belgium. pointed form, whereas in the second phase it was Both wares are baked very soft (Mohs 2-3). Among somewhat rounded. Because of the fact that the moat the finds are another two groups of hard-fired Pings- was not connected with a brook, it was only occas- dorf-type pottery (Mohs 5-6). The third ware is com- ionally filled with water. East of this moat, three seg- parable to pottery produced in the western Rhine land, ments of a second inner moat could be located. This South-Limburg or East-Belgium whereas the fourth one was much smaller and was poorly preserved. ware has parallels among the pottery produced in the Only a small number of pottery sherds could be Vorgebirge. The greyish earthenwares found in the found in the infilling of the moats. Most of them be- Grubenhauser can be subdivided into four groups. long to the Pingsdorf-type wares. Because of the fab- The first ware is represented by hand-made, hard- ric, it can be considered certain that none of them fired (Mohs 3-4) pottery ofPaffrath-type. The pottery were produced in the Vorgebirge west ofBonn. Part- of the second and third wares is wheel-thrown and icularly because of the temper in some sherds, they hard-fired (Mohs 5).1t is comparable to Paffrath-type could be assigned to production sites in Langerwehe- and Elmpt-type pottery. A number of sherds has been Ji.ingersdorf. Others may have been produced in fired so hard that they could be classified as very South-Limburg (NL) or in East-Belgium. Both wares hard-fired earthenwares as well as proto-stonewares. have been fired quite softly (Mohs 2-3), which makes The fourth ware can be identified as Elmpt-type pot- it possible to distinguish them from a third group of tery. The proto-stonewares and stonewares have Pingsdorf-type pottery that has been fired much mainly been manufactured in the Langerwehe- or 258 The Medieval Parish of Lohn. Preliminary Report on a Research Project Cologne-Frechen-area. A small number of sherds can infilling, the cellar can be dated into the 16th/17th be identified as Siegburg stoneware. Difficult to clas- centuries. East of the cellar, a paved track was uncov- sify in every respect are the orange-coloured lead- ered. This was accompanied by two low walls. glazed earthenwares. With the rise of hard-fired earth- Typical of this settlement period is the occurrence enwares and near-stonewares in the 13th century, of Langerwehe stoneware. More than 35 % of the only a slight change in vessel shapes can be observed. pottery coming from the 'Alte Burg excavation was New shapes include tumblers and cans. classified as stoneware of the Langerwehe-type. A group of younger features is scattered over the According to the shapes, mainly drinking-vessels and whole excavation site. These can be dated to the large storage-vessels were found. Furthermore, there 15th-16th centuries. The pottery spectrum is domin- are stoneware products coming from Raeren, Frechen ated by different kinds of stoneware. Possible pro- and the Westerwald. In addition lead-glazed earthen- duction sites are Langerwehe, Raeren, Cologne or ware plates and dishes were found in large quantities. Frechen and Siegburg. Moreover there is a multitude Polychrome decorated earthenware has been pro- oflead-glazed earthenwares. As mentioned before, the duced in the Netherlands, the Weser-Werra-area and orange-coloured lead-glazed earthenwares are very the Lower Rhineland since the 16th century. In all difficult to classify. Green-coloured flat plates and probability, we have to take a local production into dishes are typical products of the late 16th century. consideration as well, but most of the polychrome The fragments found in Lohn are probably from decorated pottery found in Lohn comes from the Frechen. The small number of earthenware cooking Lower Rhineland. Parts of the table-service are green- utensils can be interpreted as an indication of the use coloured and were manufactured in Frechen in the of metal pots and pans. 16th/17th centuries. In contrast to phases 2/3, the or- ange-coloured lead-glazed earthenware can be dated Phase 4 in the 17th/18th centuries. Early yellowish-green-col- This settlement phase can be dated to a period rang- oured earthenware was produced in the 18th century. ing from the 15th/16th to the 17th/18th centuries. In Up to now, it is impossible to define an exact chro- this period, a new rectangular moat was dug. Com- nological frame for the brown-coloured lead-glazed pared to the moat of the first settlement phase, its pottery, which was found only in small numbers. position was shifted to the west. Except for a small strip of its eastern section, the moat has been excav- ated completely. In the east, it was disturbed by the The 'Hof Kaldenbach' (Kaldenbach farm) western ditch of the modem radial route. The flat- bottomed moat was 8 to 16 m wide and had a maxi- This farmstead is said to be one of the oldest mal depth of 2.8 m. The area it enclosed measured buildings of the village. The earliest record of the 78 by 94 m. The questions of where and how an en- 'Hof Kaldenbach' (Kaldenbach farm) dates back to trance to the interior zone was made possible could the 15th century. In 1407, Gerhard von de m Berg was not be answered through archaeological means. The invested with the farmstead. According to Binding contour lines urge us to think of a causeway. In this who investigated the historical building in the 1950s case, two areas are suitable for such an entrance: parts of it had been constructed before the great fire one in the middle of the western section of the moat, of 1678. He distinguished three phases. The kitchen, a second in its south-eastern corner. South of the the laundry and two chambers on the first floor could rectangular moat, sections of a second moat of the be dated to the end of the 16th century. The cellar had same period were found. This second moat was dis- a barrel vault and was constructed in the first half of turbed by a modem farmhouse built in the first dec- the 17th century. The living-room and a bedroom ades of the 20th century and could not be excavated upstairs were of the same date. In the 18th century, completely. the parlour, a storage room and some bedrooms were As mentioned before the' Alte Burg' ('old castle') erected. The remaining parts of the farmstead dated must have been a fortified farmstead. Only a few de- from the 19th and 20th centuries. In 1982, the build- tails concerning the moated area can be described. ings were investigated and surveyed. Afterwards the The features are restricted to the southern half of the farmstead was demolished. excavation site. A rectangular cellar in the south- The archaeological excavation started in the winter western quadrant was built with brick stones and had of the same year. There was no evidence of an older a basal surface of3.5 by 9 m. Most of the brick stones structure beneath the building of the 16th century. In were removed after the cellar was left open. Three the rear part of the plot, several pits, postholes and brick rows and the landing of an outer staircase were other features indicated that it had been in use at least found in situ. According to the pottery found in the since late medieval times. A trapezoidal cellar, 2.5-4 259 U. Recker by 9 m in size, contained a lot of hard coal, charcoal sels have been analysed. The great number of pot- and fragments of brick stones. No parts of masonry tery wares does not seem to coincide with the mul- were found. A second cellar was uncovered beneath tiplicity of the pottery. Lohn as well as the entire a modern farm building. It was largely preserved and parish is dominated by ceramic products from Lan- of rectangular shape. It had a floor space of 2.2 x 3.1 gerwehe. About 60 % of all pottery was manufac- m. The walls were up to 2.1 m high and had been tured in Langerwehe. Some of the production cen- built with hewn stones, which were laid down very tres in South Limburg (NL) and East-Belgium are accurately along the inner sides of the walls. A floor- also represented with large quantities of objects. covering could not be observed. The access to the Only a small amount of the pottery comes from cellar was possible only from the outside. A small Siegburg or from production sites in the Vorge- entry (0.35 m wide, 0.8 m high) with a threshold was birge, in Westerwald or in South-Hesse. Only an located at the northwestern side of the cellar, but no extremely small number of pottery is of very high remains of an outer staircase were found. According quality. Most of it consists of ordinary table-wares. to the features, there had originally never been a A high percentage of the pottery is of poorer qual- structure on top of the cellar. ity. Especially in the material from the 'Alte Burg' The fillings of both cellars contained only small ('old castle') one can find a lot of evidence that pot- amounts of pottery, most of it coming from Langer- tery vessels of second-rate quality had been sold. wehe. Among the finds was a fragment of a Roman- We can infer from these facts aspects of the finan- esque baptismal font, which may have been part of cial circumstances and the social status of the occu- the interior decoration of the parish church (phase 3). pants of the 'Alte Burg'. It will be part of the prob- It is uncertain what it was used for in a cellar at the lem to find out to what extent this statement can be back of a farmstead. generalised for the entire village or even for the Of importance are the relics of a drainage-system whole parish. that drained off the rainwater as well as the waste The demolition of the parish church in 1973 was water to a pond east of the farmstead. The drainage- the first visible sign of the eventual destruction of the system and the pond were part of a late medieval and village. Twelve years, later the parish and the medie- early modern sewerage. Within the village, water- val structure of the landscape were wiped out. The pipes made of stoneware were used, whereas at the 'Medieval Parish of Lohn' -Project was planned to periphery open ditches were dug. The pond was built emphasise the importance of the archaeology of rural at the lowest point of the surrounding area and col- settlements in the Middle Ages and Early Modern lected all the water from Lohn and Pi.itzlohn. Times. The pottery spectrum confirms a settlement in late medieval and early modem times. According to the ceramic material a first phase can be dated to the Acknowledgements 15th/16th centuries. It is followed by a second phase The author is indebted to A. Brown, M.A., for read- which corresponds to the oldest phase determined by ing the manuscript proof. Binding. Selected Bibliography IV Summary ASTON M. 1985: Interpreting the Landscape. Land- The parish of Lohn looks back on a thousand scape Archaeology and Local History, London. years ofhistory. The beginnings ofLohn date back to BADER W. & HERRNBRODT A. 1953: Das Rheinische the 9th and 1Oth centuries. The wooden structure be- Braunkohlengebiet. Eine Landschaft in Not, neath the parish church and the 'Alte Burg' ('old cas- Denkschrift des Rheinischen Vereins fi.ir Denk- tle') have been the initial cells. The excavations car- malpflege und Heimatschutz, Neuss. ried out in the parish in the 1970s and 1980s enable BAUER I., ENDRES W., KERKHOFF-HADER B., KOCH us to get a large scale impression of rural structures R. & STEPHAN H.-G. 1993: Leitfaden zur Kera- in high and late medieval times as well as in early mikbeschreibung (Mittelalter - Neuzeit). Termi- modern times. Together with the preserved written nologie - Typologie - Technologie, mit einem sources, they allow us to have an inside look into the Beitrag von I. Endres-Mayser, Kataloge der Prii- ordinary life of the medieval villagers. historischen Staatssammlung Mi.inchen, edit. by The chronological framework is based on the H. Dannheimer, Beiheft 2, 2nd. edit., Kallmi.inz. classification of the ceramic remains. So far, more BERESFORD M. & HURST J. 1990: Wharram Percy. than 20,000 sherds and a number of complete ves- Derserted Medieval Village, London. 260 The Medieval Parish ofLohn. Preliminary Report on a Research Project K. BbHNER K. 1959: Das Grab eines frilnkischen gen des Institus ftlr mittelalterliche Realienkunde Herren aus Morken im Rhein/and, Ko1n/Graz. Osterreichs 6 = Osterreichische Akademie der VON BRANDT D. 1985a: Archii.ologische Untersu- Wissenschaften, Phil.-Hist. Klasse, Sitzungsbe- chungen in Lohn, Stadt Eschweiler, Kr. Aachen. richte, 433. Bd., Wien. In: Ausgrabungen im Rhein/and '83/84, Bonn, JANSSEN W. (ed.) 1973: Die Regesten der Erz- 205-211. bischOfe van Koln im Mitte!a!ter. Fiinfter Band VON BRANDT D. 1985b: Ausgrabungen und Funde 1332-1349 (Walram von Jiilich), Bonn. 1983. Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Eschweiler, Kr. JANSSEN W. (ed.) 1977: Die Regesten der Erz- Aachen (11., 12.), Banner Jahrbiicher 185,497-499. bischOfe van Koln im Mittelalter. Sechster Band VON BRANDT D. & GOEBELS J. 1984: Ausgrabungen 1349-1362 (Wilhelm van Gennep), Bonn. und Funde 1982. Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Esch- JANSSEN et al. 1979: Burgen aus Holz und Stein. weiler, Kr. Aachen (1., 2.), Banner Jahrb. 184, Burgenkundliches Kolloquium in Base! 1977, mit 1984, 637-638. Beitrii.gen von W. JANSSEN, W. MEYER, 0. 0LSEN, VON BRANDT D. & HERMANNS J. 1984: Ortskem- J. RENAUD, H. SCHNEIDER & K.W. STRUVE, untersuchungen in Pi.itzlohn, Stadt Eschweiler, Schweizer Beitrii.ge zur Kulturgeschichte und Kr. Aachen. In: Ausgrabungen im Rhein/and '81/ Archii.ologie des Mittelalters 5, Olten/Freiburg i.Br. 82, Bonn, 208-210. KNIPPING 1909: Die Regesten der ErzbischOfe van VON BRANDT D. & SCHMIDT F. 1985: Ausgrabungen Koln im Mittelalter. Drifter Band 1205-1304. und Fun de 1983. Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Esch- Erste Hiilfte 1205-1261, edit. by R. Knipping, weiler, Kr. Aachen (5.-10.), Banner Jahrbiicher Bonn. 185,497. KUNOW J., GIESLER J., GECHTER M., GAITZSCH W., D. VONBRANDTD., SCHMIDTF. &KEHRENG. 1985: FOLLMANN-SCHULZ A.B. & VON BRANDT D. Ausgrabungen und Funde 1983. Mittelalter und 1986: Vorschlilge zur systematischen Beschrei- Neuzeit. Eschweiler, Kr. Aachen (4.), Banner bung von Keramik, Kunst und Altertum am Rhein Jahrbiicher 185, 496. = Fi.ihrer RLMB 124, Bonn. DOHRN-IHMIG M. 1978: Ausgrabungen in der Pfarr- MOMMSEN H., KREUSER A., WEBER J. & BOSCH H. kirche St. Silvester in Lohn, Kreis Aachen, Ban- 1987: Neutron activation analysis of ceramics in ner Jahrbiicher 178, 539-568. the X-ray energy region. In: Nucl. Instr. Meth. in W. ERDMANN W., KOHN H.J., LODTKE H., RING E. Phys. Res. A257, 451-461. & WESSEL W. 1984: Rahmenterminologie zur MOMMSEN H., KREUSER A. & WEBER J. 1988: A mittelalterlichen Keramik in Norddeutschland, method for grouping pottery by chemical com- Arch. Korrbl. 14,417-436. position, Archaeometry 30, 451-461. FRANCK-0BERASPACH K. & RENARD E. 1902: Die MOMMSEN H., BEIER Th., HEIMERMANN D. & HEfN Kunstdenkmiller des Kreises Jiilich, Die Kunst- A. 1993: Charakterisierung der hochmittelalterli- denkmii.ler der Rheinprovinz (Edit. by P. Clemen), chen Keramik aus Langerwehe-Ji.ingersdorf durch Achter Band I, Di.isseldorf. Neutronenaktivierungsanalyse, Nearchos 1, 93-98. HERRNBRODT A. 1958: Der Husterknupp. Eine PERLMAN I. & ASARO F. 1969: Pottery analysis by niederrheinische Burganlage des friihen Mittel- neutron activation, Archaeometry 11, 21-52. alters, mit Beitrii.gen von A. ZIPPELIUS, W. HERRE PFOTENHAUER A. 1992: Dorfbegrii.bnis. Von Hii.usern & G. SIEWING, Beihefte der Bonner Jahrb. Bd. 6, und Menschen aufKohle, Monumente, Magazinfiir Koln/Graz. Denkmalpjlege in Deutschland 2, Heft 7/8, 34-38. HINTON D.A. 1990: Archaeology, Economy and So- PIEPERS W. 1981: Ausgrabungen an der A/ten Burg ciety. England from the fifth to the fifteenth cen- Liirken, mit Beitrii.gen von S. CORSTEN, H. HAM- tury, London. PERL, L. JONAS, F. KRETSCHMER, G. MULLER, H. HINZ H. 1969: Die Ausgrabungen auf dem Kirchberg REICHSTEIN & Th. SCHREIBER, Rheinische Aus- in Morken, Kreis Bergheim (Erft), Rhein. Ausgr. grabungen 21, Bonn. 7, Di.isseldorf. RECKER U. 1995: Die mittelalterliche undfriihneu- H6L TKEN Th. 1995: Die archilologische Dorfunter- zeitliche Keramik der Ausgrabung .. Alte Burg" in suchung Piitzlohn (WW2), Kreis Aachen, unpubl. Lohn, Stadt Eschweiler, Kreis Aachen (WW5), Magisterarbeit, Bonn. unpubl. Magisterarbeit, Bonn. Institut ftir mittelalterliche Realienkunde 1984: Die SCHWELLNUS W. 1977: Ausgrabungen auf dem Ritter- Erforschung van Alltag und Sachkultur des gut Hausen bei Lohn, Stadt Eschweiler, Kreis Mittelalters. Methode - Ziel - Verwirklichung. Aachen. In: Das Rheinische Landesmuseum Internationa!es Round-Table-Gesprilch, Krems Bonn, Sonderheft Januar 1977. Rheinische Aus- a.d. Donau, 20. September 1982, VerOffentlichun- grabungen '76, Bonn, 161-163. 261 U. Recker SCHWELLNUS W. 1980: Hochmittelalterliche Sied- SAUERLAND H.V. 1913: Urkunden und Regesten zur lungsreste am Ortsrand von Fronhoven, Tagebau Geschichte der Rheinlande aus dem Vatikani- Zukunft-West. In: Das Rheinische Landesmu- schen Archiv. Siebenter (Schluss-)Band 1400- seum Bonn, Sonderheft. Rheinische Ausgrabun- 1415, Bonn. gen '79, Bonn, 306-307. SIEPER W. 1962: Die Burg und ihre Bedeutung im SCHWELLNUS W. 1987: Archaologische Untersuchun- Rahmen des mittel- und nachmittelalterlichen gen in Dorfem des Rheinischen Braunkohlen- Befestigungswesen. In: Burgen und Schlosser 3, reviers. In: Dorfer und Stadte. Ausgr. im Rhein- Heft 2, 37-54. land '85186, Bonn, 113-124. STEINBRING B. 1996: Die Kleinfunde von der Haupt- SAUERLAND H. V. 1902: Urkunden und Regesten zur burg der Matte Alte Burg in Liirken, Stadt Esch- Geschichte der Rheinlande aus dem Vatikani- weiler, Kreis Aachen, unpubl. Magisterarbeit, schen Archiv. Erster Band 1294-1326, Bonn. Bonn. SAUERLAND H. V. 1912: Urkunden und Regesten zur Geschichte der Rheinlande aus dem Vatikani- schen Archiv. Sechster Band 1378-1399, Bonn. Udo Recker, M.A. Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-UniversiUit Institut fiir Vor- und Friihgeschichte Regina-Pacis-Weg 7 D- 53113 Bonn Deutschland 262 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Bruggc 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Birgitta Berglund Changes in the Power Structure around A.D. 1100 on the Northern Norwegian Coast. The importance of waterways and of the organisation of trade in building and in maintaining power 1 Introduction 2 Rural centres in North-Western Norway Along the coast in Helgeland in northern Norway Along the northern Norwegian coast and along the I have identified several rural centres from Early Arctic Circle, in the province of Helgeland, I have Medieval times (Berglund 1995). They were politic- identified five centres from the Viking Age the roots ally independent chiefdoms before they became part of which go back to the Early Medieval period. The of the Norwegian kingdom in AD 1000-1200. Then two largest centres were politically, ideologically and the king and the church built up new centres of their economically independent areas comparable to small own. Some of the old centres disappeared totally, kingdoms. Here I want to stress Tj0tta which is one while others were soon used by the state to manage of these two most important centres. power in this province. Tj0tta is situated at the mouth of a big fjord thus In the province ofTnmdelag, south ofHelgeland, forming an important cross-road with the old mari- the king and church evidently used the old centres for time highway along the coast ('Norway' literally their own purposes. There the continuity in power is means 'the way north'). The fjord provides easy com- much stronger than in Helgeland. In the present paper, munication with the nomadic hunting people of the I want to show how the waterways and the organ- mountain areas to the east. Outside Tj0tta lies a big isation of the trade influenced the different directions archipelago. The old maritime/sea-highway runs along in managing power in the two neighbouring prov- the coast. This situation gives Tj0tta a strong position inces. The result was, however, the same: the areas in the exchange of goods, trade, piracy and the col- were incorporated in the Norwegian kingdom. In a lection of taxes. broader perspective, these northern areas became part According to what Snorre Sturlason writes in the of the normal form of European societies at that time. old Icelandic Sagas, the Viking chiefHarek came from The two provinces are known from the Icelandic Tj0tta. Snorre tells us that in A.D. 1030 Harek Sagas. Helgeland in particular is also known for its mobilized a whole army for the big battle ofStiklestad large estates during the period A.D. 1700-1900. Both in Tmndelag, 400 kilometres south of Tj0tta. From provinces are rich in medieval monuments, but archae- that time onwards, the northern Norwegian coast was ological research on the centres and their environment more closely tied to the kingdom ofNorway. The year mostly concentrated on Helgeland. In the medieval 1030 has a strongly symbolic meaning in Norway town ofTrondheim (celebrating its 1000th annivers- because, according to the Sagas, the Christian king ary this year, 1997) in the province ofTnmdelag, big Olav Haraldson was killed in the battle of Stiklestad by excavations are however carried out. The Icelandic another one of the chiefs who was fighting for the Sagas tell us much about the chiefs from Helgeland independence of the northern areas ofNorway. After- and Tmndelag as well as about the competition wards the king was canonised as Saint Olav. King between the chiefs themselves and between the chiefs Olav was buried in Trondheim, about 90 kilometres and the Norwegian kings. Other written sources from south of Stiklestad. From that time onwards, the town abo\}t 1430 onwards tell us a lot about the admini- became a destination for many pilgrims in northern stration and land ownership in the area, not in the Europe. The battle of Stiklestad was then regarded as least about the holdings of the archbishops. The the victory of Christianity in Norway. archbishop had his court in Trondheim ('Nidaros' in I have studied what the formation of the Norweg- papal language). ian state meant for the old centres in the north of Norway, especially in Helgeland. The king needed an apparatus to develop and maintain his power in the north. I have found that the king, and with him the 263 B. Berglund church, did not build up their new centres in the same islands surround Tj0tta. On most of them people had areas as those where the old centres were situated. settled with their domesticated animals. On these The resistance in the old centres was too strong. In islands there are large areas of grass, which grows contrast to the old ones, the new centres were special- quickly in this humid and relatively warm climate. ised. The king had the real power and therefore he Seaweed and fish remains were also used as fodder could have separate centres for administrative, religi- for the livestock. The sea of course provided fish, but ous and military functions. also large sea-animals such as seals and whales. The TjeJtta lost its function as a politically independent area has many kinds of sea birds which provided eggs, centre when the area became a part of the Norwegian meat and down. kingdom and later (after 1450) of the kingdom of The archipelago also has plenty of good landing- Denmark-Norway. But it survived as the centre of a places. This is very important, both for the use of the big estate. Soon the king started to use the local land- resources from the sea and for trade and communica- owner for his own purposes. Tj0tta became part of the tion, and not in the least for the control of it. biggest estate in Norway, owned by the ruler of the So the natural environment around Tj0tta is al- country under the Danish/Norwegian king, who reig- most perfect for building up and maintaining power. ned from Copenhagen. Around A.D. 1350, the ruler The traces of this early medieval activity are still of the country gave the estate to the archbishop as a clearly visible mainly as impressive grave-mounds. token of gratitude for the help the latter had given They demonstrated the power ofTj0tta to the people him in connection with his pilgrimage to Rome, passing by boat and to the people living in the archip- prompted by the Black Death. elago outside Tj0tta. Both the size and the form of the In The Land-register of Archbishop Aslak Bolt graves were illustrations of power. In one corner of from about 1432, Tj0tta is the farm with the highest one of the large cemeteries, several boat-shaped graves income derived from land fees. Areas on the coast form a fleet. Tj0tta wanted to demonstrate its ability and in the fjords were attached to Tj0tta, according to to operate an entire fleet. the land-register. In Early Medieval times and in the Viking Age, In later land-registers, we find that important the houses of the most important site on Tj0tta were islands with seal-grounds had also become attached arranged around an open area like a court-yard. Sev- to Tj0tta. For most of the period form A.D. 1500 to eral excavations have been performed on the site 1900, Tj0tta was the biggest estate in northern Nor- (Berglund 1995). This arrangement of the houses must way, with many dependent farms from which it gained have been planned and ready at the time when the its income. first house was built. The houses are large ones with Today, Tj0tta is the biggest farm in northern Nor- thick walls of turf. At one of the two entrances the way. It is owned by the Norwegian state and used for houses almost look like a wall. This entrance is mark- experimental farming. The traditional specialisation in ed by a standing stone. At the other entrance, the site this area includes the cultivation of grassland and is shut offby means of a wall of turf. The place must sheep-breeding. Recently, experiments with the cult- have looked like a small castle, hidden between the ivation of salmon have been started. (Today this region hills standing on each side of the site. From these is one of the main production areas for salmon in hills, early detection of arriving ships- whether carry- Europe.) ing enemies or expensive cargo - was possible. The The roots of the large Tj0tta estate from the last trade in hunting products from the far North had to century go back to Early Medieval times. I shall have pass close by as did the trade with hunting products a closer look at the role of the waterways, harbours from the mountains to the East. There is no reason to and trade in the management of power in and over doubt the ability of Tj0tta to take advantage of this Tj0tta through the centuries. position. According to the Icelandic Sagas, the chief at Tj0tta often collected taxes from the Saami people. Due to the fact that the sea-level was higher when 3 Waterways, harbours and trade - Conditions the court-yard site was built, it was possible to have for the power of Tjotta harbours in two directions, one facing the outer archipelago anj the sea-lane to the West and one fac- Tj0tta and the archipelago around it has been a ing the fjords to the East. The most important reasons landscape of power for at least fifteen hundred years. why the site was established exactly at this place Tj0tta is the dominant island with extensive areas of were certainly the harbours and the possibility to look arable land. Cultivation is marginal due to the short out over the sea from the hills. summer season. Tj0tta has a good, self-draining sandy In an archipelago like this, it was important to soil, which is well-suited for cultivation. Hundreds of have large ships and good harbours. No remains of 264 Changes in the Power Structure around A.D. 1100 on the Northern Norwegian Coast 0 0 0 0 a . JAMTLAND N r 0 50 100km Fig. 1- The provinces, centres and other places in the provinces ofHelgeland and Tmndelag in Norway mentioned in the paper. 265 B. Berglund D (§ TJl?JTT~Furm-m~und Gravefie!d s l t l :""" vs e \? Gruvefield Standing 6 " stones N 0 100 I 200 300 m Fig. 2- The island ojTjf!tta with some of the most important ancient monuments. ships have so far been found in this area but a few was probably made because as a result of the land harbours are known. Other imposing ancient monu- rising, the distance to the harbours became too great. ments preserved on the island ofTj0tta are the court- While the court-yard site was hidden between the hills, yard site, cemeteries with standing stones, the farm- the new place was located fairly high up and its loc- mound (' terp ') with the stone church and two large ation was imposing, with the flat cultivated landscape boathouses. A few years ago, during diving opera- in front of it and the mountains behind. From here it tions, we found another harbour with a jetty protrud- was easy to control traffic, both by boat and over land. ing into the sea. This harbour faces the sea-lane and When people from the outer islands came to Tj0tta the archipelago west ofTj0tta. People who were sail- with the products they paid to the landowner for the ing along this sea-lane must have seen it. A group of permission to live on the islands, they could land in the cooking pits are probably connected with the harbour. harbour on the western side. This was the shortest They are dated to the Viking period. In addition to the possible distance by boat. After landing they had to pits, the harbour consists of the jetty, two landing- walk about 1.3 kilometres to the farm. That walk must places and steep cliffs. It would have been possible to have seemed long, leading through the flat landscape land here at high tide. before the farmhouses of the landowners were reach- Around A.D. 1000 the centre was moved from the ed. These houses were located on a higher and more court-yard site to the place where the farm is still imposing level. The new site also had a harbour facing located today. Here there is a big farm-mound site with the fjords and the eastern mountain-areas. thick cultural layers. I have excavated parts of the During the 18th and 19th centuries, the Tj 0tta mound (Berglund 1995). The move to the new place estate derives most of its income from farms in large 266 Changes in the Power Structure around A.D. 1100 on the Northern Norwegian Coast Fig. 3 - The court-yard site at Tjetta with at least 12 visible house-grounds and 17 cooking pits. areas of northern Norway. Many of these farms were One of the reasons why a farm like Tj0tta could situated close to Tj0tta. It was typical for the northern dominate the surrounding sites was the fact that it Norwegian estates to have farms both in the outer was easily accessed by boat. It was very difficult to archipelago and in the fjords. In this way they were hide in the surroundings or escape from the woodless economically independent, because they had all the archipelago when a threatening boat from Tj0tta ap- goods and food they needed. From the fjords they got peared. Of course Tj0tta had a variety of positive and products such as wood, soapstone, tar and furs, and negative sanctions to use, but here I stress the import- from the archipelago came maritime products such as ance of the waterways, harbours and trade. fish, sealskin, food, seal-oil for lamps, and eggs and down from seabirds. Both the archaeological and the written sources make it clear that the estate had 4 Changes in the power structure around AD 1100 implemented this organisation this long before these recent centuries and probably already in Early Medie- I have found that in Helgeland the king and the val times or at least in the Viking Age. Church did not use the old centres of power to estab- On the islands around Tj0tta, I have identified lish their own power. Instead they introduced their several farm-mounds and carried out archaeological own centres. These centres were established on minor excavations in a number of them. These mounds cover farms with low income and without big grave- smaller areas than the site of the big centre ofTj0tta. mounds and other symbols of power from Early The archaeological material is quite different and of Medieval times. a much poorer character than that from the sites on As an example of the new centres in Helgeland, I Tj0tta. In the small settlements, there were for exam- want to stress the parsonage Alstahaug with its ple hardly any iron objects, no imported material medieval stone church. Here the great baroque poet such as medieval ceramics, and only few examples of ofNorway, Petter Dass, was priest around A.D. 1700. handicraft. And the food came from the areas near the He died 290 years ago, in 1707. Alstahaug was a very dwelling-place. In contrast, the Tj0tta site yielded rich, if not the richest priesthood in northern Norway. much iron, imported ceramics and other material, In Alstahaug the soil hides thick cultural layers and I including products from different handicraft and food have excavated there during several seasons, the last coming from a larger area. The imported material one in 1992. from Tj0tta shows that it was this centre which The excavations revealed that much activity took organised the trade. place here from the 12th century onwards when the 267 B. Berglund church was built. It is interesting to note that we could in Tmndelag to demonstrate loyalty to the central not find any traces of human activity before that time. power because the king and the earl often had their So the parsonage and the church were established at residence there. According to the old Icelandic Sagas, the same time in an area without any previous settle- resistance was as strong in Tmndelag as in Helge- ment. My opinion is that with his church organisation land. However, the centres of power in the North had the king established this place as an ideological more to loose by becoming part of the Norwegian centre to break down the old Viking centres in the kingdom. As independent chiefdoms, they could area. I think this had to be done because the resistance manage independent politics and trade with the against the king was so strong. Before I explain this northern hunting products. As a part of the Nor- opposition, I will, however, first take a look at Tmn- wegian kingdom they had much to surrender to the delag, the province south of Helgeland. central power without getting much in return. In Tmndelag, the large fjord, 'Trondheimsjjorden ', The foundation of Trondheim can be seen as an bordered with arable land, is quite different from the opportunity for the old centres to get an effective landscape of Helgeland. Here we find the most distribution of the iron produced in Tmndelag and in important rural centres in the Early Medieval times Jiimtland, the province east ofTmndelag in present- far from the outer coast, but still within the fjord day Sweden. For Jiimtland too, the 'Trondlzeims- areas. There are also concentrations of rich finds jjorden' has the nearest ice-free harbour. A trade- from the Viking Age at the mouth of 'Trondheims- route over the mountains was already established jjorden' (Sognnes 1988). here before A.D. 400 (Slomann 1950). A distinct and marked change in the power- The bloomery iron-making was going on far from structure in Tmndelag around A.D. 1000 is that a the sea-lanes and the trade-route there (Magnusson town, known today as Trondheim, was established at 1986; Stenvik 1991 ). I think that the old centres con- the mouth of the river 'Nidelva' in the centre of the trolling the bloomery iron-making welcomed a cen- fjord area. Trondheim celebrates its first millennium tral apparatus for the distribution of the iron. Ships this year, in 1997. The town was founded on a site with iron and other products such as grain and wood which was not known as a centre in earlier times. from the inland areas ofTmndelag had to pass through However, it is located near the farm Lade, known the mouth of the dangerous 'Trondheimsjjorden' to from the Icelandic Sagas as the residence of the earls come out to reach the main sea-lanes. There, the ship of Lade in the Viking Age. At that time, these earls could easily be attacked. With the protection from the controlled the trade in northern hunting products king, such a trade must have become safer. The big according to the Sagas. Nothing in the archaeological medieval harbour of king 0ystein, 'kong 0ysteins material from these centres contradicts the idea that havn ', testifies to the fact that the mouth of 'Trond- the centres in Helgeland could organise their own heimsjjorden' was an important strategic place trade. This is also supported by other stories in the (Jasinski 1995). Sagas. Historians and archaeologists (among the most Many of the old centres in Tmndelag certainly recent Christophersen 1994) have discussed whether must have been happy with the establishment of cen- the town was established by the rulers ofLade or as a tral power and in this they felt quite differently from competitive centre to Lade. I have just started small the old centres in Helgeland. There the king was a excavations at Lade and hope that they will contrib- competitor for the northern hunting products rather ute to clarify the role of that farm. I think archaeo- than a protector of trade and transport as he was in logical excavations at Lade are important in finding Tmndelag. out whether the Sagas tell the truth. In Tnmdelag, the old centres certainly continued as centres even when the area became part of the 5 Conclusion Norwegian kingdom. The king and his church ob- viously used the old centres for their own purposes. The extreme Atlantic coastal landscape around There are several settlements with remains of strong Tjotta encouraged the development of a centre of symbols of power both before and after the creation power there in Early Medieval times. The easy com- of the Norwegian kingdom. In Helgeland, there was munications by boat helped the centre to control both a marked break in the symbols of power at that time. the people and other resources. The centre placed There the king and the Church let other centres, people in the surrounding areas to harvest the rich different from the old ones, develop in order to resources. The position at the cross-roads between exercise the power on their behalf. the sea-lanes and the mouth of a major fjord was very Why this great difference between Tmndelag and important for the development of the centre. The fjord Helgeland? Perhaps it was easier for the old centres it made possible to communicate with and control the 268 Changes in the Power Structure around A.D. 1100 on the Northern Norwegian Coast /- !Northern \ " ( areas l \ J -r "-._ / I -l Vl <( I :L :L <( I :L <( w lz Vl LL 0 Vl I- W ~ 0 0 g: :I: Vl LL IRON, GRAIN SOAPSTONE DOWN, EGGS IRON, GRAIN -l) c;i L~I L Z ~ w3 .ZI ~ (/') ~-1 g ~I Vl ~ w ~I ~~ w :;ex ~I ffi3 • LL ~I ~~ (/') Ow £1 t;;;c ~.1. ~ ~ ,.Y- 3 <! 1/Southern\ " \ areas ) \. I .......... Fig. 4 - Outline of local and long-distance exchange and trade organised by the centre of Tjetta. 269 B. Berglund resources of the nomadic hunting people living in the fjord area in Tmndelag, the situation was different. mountains. The position along the coast also made Here the chiefs had the advantage of the protection of possible control over sea-trade. In the inland area, a king when travelling with an expensive cargo on the such a concentration of power was impossible. dangerous 'Trondheimsjjorden'. In the inner fjord area By A.D. 1000, Tj0tta had become established to in Tmndelag, the king was a co-operator when it came the point that the ruler Harek - according to the to resources and their transport. Icelandic Sagas - played a substantial role in the conflict between the king and the aristocracy over the northern resource-areas. References To maintain this power, the centre used different positive and negative sanctions. Organisation of trade BERGLUND B. 1995: Tjotta-riket- En arkeologisk could be used as a positive sanction. Threatening with undersokelse av maktforhold og sentrumsdannel- weapons was a negative sanction. Imposing monu- ser pa Helgelandskysten fra Kr.f tit 1700 e.Kr., ments, such as large graves (including grave-mounds, Dr. philos avhandling, Fakultet for arkeologi og cairns and standing stones), specially shaped dwelling- kulturhistorie/ A VH, Universitetet i Trondheim. places, the imposing location of the dwelling-places CHRISTOPHERSEN A. 1994: Kaupangen ved Nidelva, and large harbours were used to keep the people Riksantikvarens Skrifter 7, Trondheim. subservient to the ruler of the centre. The image of JASINSKI M. 1995: Kong @ysteins havn pa Agdenes. power was strengthened by the visibility of these Forskningsstatus og reviderte problemstillinger, monuments to the many people passing Tj0tta. Viking, Oslo. Later the king and his church organisation built up MAGNUSSON G. 1986: Lagteknisk jarnhantering i new centres in competition with the old ones, because Jiimtlands !an, Jiirnkontorets Bergshistoriska the resistance against the Norwegian kingdom was so Skriftserie 22, Stockholm. strong. In that manner, a centre such as Alstahaug SLOMANN W. 1950: lvfedelpad og Jiimtland i eldre was established. In Tmndelag, a town was establish- jernalder, Univ. i Bergen. arbok 1948, Hist.- ed around A.D. 1000. Just like the new centres in antikv. rekke 2. Helgeland, the town was established at a site which SOGNNES K. 1988: Sentrumsdannelser i Trondelag. did not belong to an early medieval centre . En kvantitativ analyse av gravmaterialet fra In Helgeland, the old centres along the coast yngre jernalder, Fortiden i Trondheim bygrunn, strongly resisted the Norwegian kingdom since they Folkebibliotekstomten. Meddelelser 12. Trond- did not need the king's protection. Their position heim. close to the sea-lanes and the trade there made it pos- STENVIK L. F. 1991: Iron production and economic sible for the chiefs to be independent of a king's Booms during 2000 years, in: A. ESPELUND (ed.), protection. The old Helgeland chiefs saw the king as Bloomery ironmaking during 2000 years, Vol. I, a competitor for the resources ofthe area. In the inner Trondheim. Dr. Birgitta Berglund Norvegian University of Science and Technology Museum of Natural History and Archaeology Institute of Archaeology Erling Skakkes gt. 4 7b 7004 Trondheim Norway 270 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Julio A. Perez Celada Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso medio del rio Carrion en la edad media El rio Carrion constituye la principal corriente de como chopos, sauces y frutales y, en fin, ingenios agua de la actual provincia de Palencia - perte- molineros 2• El terreno sobre el que estas realidades se neciente a la Comunidad Autonoma espaiiola de asentaran sera elllamado "de Vega", configurado por Castilla y Leon -, a la que recorre pnicticamente en arenas y materiales aluviales arrastrados por el rio y su totalidad de Norte a Sur. Situado en la vertiente adecuado, por ende, para su explotacion agricola. septentrional de la Cuenca del Duero e integrado en En estos terminos, conviene aclarar que nuestro el sistema hidrognifico de este rio, el Carrion vierte estudio se limita a las vegas de Saldaiia y Carrion, sus aguas en el rio Pisuerga, tras nacer en la Cor- situadas en ese "curso medio" del rio a] que se refiere dillera Cantabrica, atravesar Ios paramos de raiia su titulo, quedando excluido, por su contextura histo- palentinos - formados por derrubios de aquella - y rica diferenciada, el tramo bajo del mismo, en el que acceder despues, en su sector oriental, al ambito de se asienta la ciudad de Palencia - capital de la las campiiias- ambitos arcillosos miocenicos conse- provincia -, a muy pocos kilometros de su afluencia cuencia de la erosion fluvial de Ios paramos cabireos a! Pisuerga. Por lo demas, e insistiendo en lo dicho meridionales -que configuran la denominada tradi- mas arriba sobre la indole de las riberas del rio, cionalmente Tierra de Campos 1• Sin entrar en la podremos constatar como el aprovechamiento hidrau- consideracion de las virtualidades economicas de la lico se realiza de manera casi exclusiva en la vega Tierra de Campos, que hicieron de ella el principal accidental, a excepcion de Ios tramos correspon- "granero" cerealistico de la Cuenca del Duero, quere- dientes a Nogal de las Huertas y Poblacion de Soto y, mos remitimos a Ios caracteres que informan el valle mas al Sur, a Cestillos y Villanueva del Rio. del rio Carrion y a !as actividades productivas que se Por lo que se refiere alas determinaciones clima- desarrollaron en el mismo a lo largo de la Edad ticas que han operado historicamente sobre el ambito Media y han perdurado en buena medida hasta nues- geografico en que se enmarca el objeto de este tros dias. estudio, debe seiialarse que, ademas de !as impli- Cabe, en primer lugar referirse a la circunstancia caciones de su continentalidad - frecuentes heladas de que el Carrion, como el Cea y el Pisuerga, ha exca- desde octubre-noviembre hasta abril-mayo, veranos vado una cuenca planiforme que entraiia la peculia- calurosos - sobre el logro de Ios cultivos a que nos ridad de presentar una ribera oriental elevada sobre el acabamos de referir, el regimen de lluvias se carac- curso del rio mientras que la accidental se caracteriza teriza - a causa, en buena medida, del "efecto por su planitud, lo que, unido al desnivel que salva pantalla" ejercido por la Cordillera Cantabrica- por desde su nacimiento, constituira el fundamento mate- su escasez, lo que da lugar a un caracteristico paisaje rial del temprano e intensivo aprovechamiento eco- arido. Las pocas precipitaciones tienen lugar espe- nomico de sus recursos hidniulicos mediante la cialmente durante la primavera y el otoiio, presen- derivacion del mismo de cauces de agua artificiales. tando una acusada irregularidad y produciendose con Asi, desde que la documentacion medieval comience relativa frecuencia de forma torrencial. Estas circun- a hacerse explicita hallaremos multitud de noticias stancias nos ponen ante la realidad cotidiana que relativas a explotaciones horticolas, herrenes, planta- hubieron de afrontar los colectivos humanos que ciones de lino, arboles propios de terrenos hUmedos poblaron las vegas de Saldaiia y Carrion; una realidad Sobre las caracteristicas hist6ricas y geognificas de este espacio son de obligada consulta Ios trabajos de VACA LORENZO A., La estructura socioecon6mica de la Tierra de Campos a mediados del siglo XIV, Pub/icaciones de la !nslilucion Te//o Tellez de Meneses 39, 1977, 229-398, y 42, 1979, 203-387, y: La Tierra de Campos y sus bases ecol6gicas en el siglo XIV, Studia Historica. Historia Medieval X, 1992,149-185. 271 J.A. Perez Celada consistente en intensos estiajes y ocasionales inun- La problematica historica del uso del aqua daciones que, como veremos con mas detenimiento, llevaron a aquellos a extremar el control sobre Ios En una sociedad como la feudal, en la que se cursos artificiales de agua y a sufrir frecuentes en- encuadran Ios elementos humanos que ocupan !as frentamientos en su seno relacionados con el aprove- vegas objeto de nuestra consideracion, la disponibi- chamiento de un bien tan escaso. En efecto, y prin- lidad del agua del rio, de Ios terrenos que la misma cipalmente cuando llegaba el verano, cualquier presa riega y de Ios ingenios molineros que mueve, se halla o boquera construida recientemente en el rio Carrion sometida a determinaciones que se manifiestan en la o en cualquiera de Ios canales de el derivados, capacidad diferenciada de !as distintas clases sociales mermaba el caudal que Ios beneficiaries tradicionales para poseer en propiedad y/o usufructuar dichos del agua recibian segun un riguroso reparto de por- medios de produccion. Sin animo de abordar la ciones aplicado a! sistema de irrigacion de !as riberas problematica del feudalismo iberico - porque ello desde su inicio en el termino de Poza de la Vega hasta trasciende ahora nuestras pretensiones - estimamos su conclusion en el de Villoldo 3 • imprescindible, en todo caso, referimos someramente Antes de pasar a otras consideraciones conviene a esta cuestion en relacion con el tema que tratamos. sefialar que el nombre de Carrion aplicado a! rio En primer lugar, cabe preguntarse sobre la instan- proviene del de la villa homonima - hoy Carrion de cia que tiene la capacidad de decision sobre la atri- Ios Condes -, circunstancia que se explica porque en bucion de aprovechamiento de Ios recursos hidrauli- esta, que primero se llamo Santa Maria, existia un cos. Si se parte de la consideracion del agua como pequefio camino o carria que permitia salvar el "res communis", como "bien comunal" 5, habra que escarpe existente en la orilla oriental del rio y cru- convenir, en principio, que son Ios organismos con- zarlo4. Cuando Ios condes saldafieses decidan trasla- cejiles- y, en ultima instancia, Ios reyes- quienes se dar la capital de la circunscripcion que gobieman a hallan facultados para regular, en tanto que represen- Santa Maria a fines del siglo X y, media centuria tantes de Ios distintos nucleos de poblacion, el uso del despues, se construya, por voluntad de uno de Ios agua. Pero para fijar esta cuestion en Ios terminos ultimos representantes del linaje condal, un puente adecuados conviene remontarse a! proceso de "repo- sobre el rio en dicho punto, quedara consolidado el blacion" de este territorio. Tras la desarticulacion caracter de etapa significada de la villa en el Camino politica y demografica del mismo causada por la de Santiago, a! que se sumara, en razon de la impor- invasion musulmana, desde el siglo IX, y procedente tancia de Ios recursos agricolas en general de la zona de la comarca montafiesa de La Liebana y su entorno, en que se asienta, el de principal nucleo de poblacion descendera de modo continuado una corriente de del ambito delimitado por Ios rios Cea y Pisuerga repobladores a traves, especialmente, de Ios pasos de durante la Edad Media. Por otra parte, el estableci- Cervera de Pisuerga y de Ios situado a! Este de Ios miento a partir de 1076 de monjes cluniacenses en el mismos que se iran instalando en la zona bajo el monasterio de San Zoilo, situado, con el rio de por regimen de "presuras" de tierra individualizadas 0 medio, frente a la villa de Carrion, convertira a esta colectivas, dirigidas o no por nobles o monarcas. en un centro de irradiacion ideologico-religiosa. El Paralelamente, a lo largo del valle del Carrion- como "riuulo maiore" de que hablan !as fuentes del siglo en otros ambitos de la vertiente septentrional de la XI se ira identificando paulatinamente con el nombre Cuenca - se configura una sucesion de comissa o de la villa situada a orillas de su curso central. demarcaciones militares articuladas por fortalezas A titulo de ejemplo, citaremos un testimonio documental CARROBLES P., Las vegas de Saldafia y Carrion, antecedentes significativo en la zona: el rey Alfonso VII reintegra en 1127 el historicos de sus regad[os, PITTM 36, 1972, 193). Por lo que se monasterio de Nogal de !as Huertas a la jurisdiccion del de refiere a las avenidas del rio, ya en 1349 se hallan atestiguadas Sahagun y lo hace, entre otras cosas, "cum tern's et uineis, pratis, inundaciones en el monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion, situado pascuis, paludibus, are is, montibus, fontibus, molendinis, sesi- en la rib era derecha del rio: "...jluvius intra/ sepia prioratus, nisi cis molendinorum, aquis aquarum, cum aqueductibus earum, . remedium apponatur, ecclesia et claustrum minantur ruinam" arboribus fructuosis et infructuosis ... " (FEIU'lANDEZ FLOREZ (ROBERT U., Etat des monasteres espagnols de l'Ordre de Cluny J.A., Colecci6n diplomatica del monasterio de Sahagzin, IV aux XIIIe.-XVe. s1ecles, d'apres les actes des Chapitres Gene- (1!/0-1199), Lean, 1991,docno 1230). raux, Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia XX, 1892, 398. 3 4 DIEZ ASENSIO J., Substrato prerromano en la toponimia En 1719 las Ordenanzas relativas a! regimen de explotacion del agua en la Ribera de San Zoles, que se basan en costumbres palentina: Calahorra, Carrion, Saldafia, Tamara, Aetas del !I existentes cuando menos 500 afios antes, sefialan que "suele Congreso de Historia de Palencia I. I, Prehistoria, Arqueologia acaecer Ios mas de Ios aiios traer poca agua el rio de esta villa e Historia Antigua, Palencia, 1990, 738; GONZALEZ J., Cuestio- yen razon de e//o haber algunas diferencias en la lama del agua nes de repoblacion en tierras palentinas, en: Palencia en la de el para dicha ribera de San Zoles y la de Nogal" (LALANDA Historia, Palencia, 1982, 56. 272 Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso media del rio Carrion en la edad media Villosilla o Poza de la Vega o Csna/ o Rio Nuevo (s.XVI) • Canal de la Parionda Pago del Nido del Cuervo Villaturd~e Villanueva de loa Nabos Villotilla \ • Villamez 0 Ctwal del Monasterio de San Zoilo Canal da lztln o Abanzilas 8 Carri6n da Ios Condes ........ .... .... • Cestillos ...... ........ Cane/ de Cest.i/Jos .... "' .. 0 Torre de Ios Molinos El ....~~ .... Ob,~, ....~l' .... ...... ....'{~go 'P t2 •• 11 Reconstrucci6n hypotetica del sistema principal de canales en la Edad Media. 273 J.A. Perez Celada que servinin para proteger Ios asentamientos huma- grupos aldeanos o desde instancias ajenas a !os mis- nos. Desde principios del siglo X cuando menos, un mos, la pequefia propiedad campesina 7 • Conocemos comes - o conde -, teorico delegado del monarca algunos casos, correspondientes a Ios siglos XI, XII astur-leones, gobernani estos distritos. Pese a la con- y XIII, que ilustran el movimiento en lo que se refiere dicion de removible del cargo por el rey que tiene el al objeto de este articulo. En 1057 Ios campesinos de titular del condado, un linaje, el de Ios Banu-Gomez varias villas o aldeas situadas a algunos Km al SSE o "descendientes de Gomez", que no por casualidad de Carrion poseian un amplio conjunto de tierras de coincide con la familia mejor dotada patrimonial- regadio y tres grupos de molinos a lo largo de un mente en la zona, monopolizani la dignidad condal canal - "rego ", "cornago"- que eran obra de sus hasta el siglo XII. La escasa capacidad de la Corona antepasados; el canal constituia una derivacion del para hacer efectivo su dominio sobre el conjunto del "riuulo maiore ", y las tierras y este mismo se nos reino dotani a los condes Banu-Gomez de una gran presentan con toda probabilidad como resultado de capacidad de intervencion sobre el espacio de su presuras,· el aprovechamiento del agua, por su parte, demarcacion, que abarcani !os distritos de Saldafia, constituia el ejercicio de un derecho derivado de su Entrepefias y Carrion. La importante ocupacion de caracter de bien comunal. Pues bien, en el afio men- tierras por campesinos ha dado lugar a comunidades cionado mas arriba, el conde G6mez Diaz - uno de aldeanas que tienen un gran protagonismo en la Ios ultimos Banu-Gomez- se hani con la totalidad del puesta en explotacion de Ios recursos. De este modo, complejo mediante una operacion masiva de compra estos colectivos - pero tambien los situados bajo la de tierras y "raciones" o partes de Ios molinos que ferula de Ios poderosos - comienzan a aprovechar privara a este amplio grupo de villanos de su con- con regularidad las virtualidades productivas que las dici6n de propietario del mismo. En 1194, el monas- vegas de Saldafia y Carrion brindan, labrando cana- terio de Santa Maria de Benevivere realiza una les, construyendo molinos o plantando huertos, y ello compra, de analogo corte a! de la anterior, mediante bajo la atenta mirada- si no de la induccion- de los la cual incorpora a su patrimonio una importante condes, de sus delegados o de Ios componentes de numero de participaciones- "raciones" y "partes"- una incipiente clase nobiliaria. Las obras de apertura pertenecientes a Ios campesinos de Poblacion de de acequias y de construccion de molinos, asi como Yuso - Poblaci6n de Soto - en sus molinos de esta su mantenimiento, habnin de implicar severas disci- villa, llamados Redondillo, Hostio, Gordo y Afiar. En plinas colectivas que las comunidades campesinas se fin, en 1221 el monasterio burgales de Las Huelgas impondran a si mismas o sufrinin como compulsion compra !as veces o participaciones de los propieta- externa, y supondnin con frecuencia la coordinacion rios del molino de Sopena, asimismo en Poblaci6n de de los habitantes de diferentes nucleos de poblacion6 . Soto 8 . Por lo demas, ya desde los inicios de este proceso Se ha incidido hasta hace no mucho tiempo en el estaba teniendo lugar otro que se orientaba hacia la caracter de monopolio sefiorial de !os molinos, que captacion de presuras territoriales de los campesinos habrian constituido uno de los fundamentos de la y el control de !as infraestructuras construidas por dominacion feudal 9 . En nuestro ambito de estudio estos para su explotacion. Nos referimos al proceso cabe decir que tal cosa no es cierta. Existe hoy, en de configuracion de las grandes propiedades feudales efecto, la coincidencia generalizada en que la docu- que ira menoscabando, desde el mismo seno de los mentaci6n revela que con frecuencia fueron !as Vease a este respeeto GARCIA DE CORTAZAR J.A., El equi- 428. Sobre Ios derechos de uso del agua fundados en las pre- pamiento molinar en la Rioja Alta en Ios siglos X al XII, en: suras de la Repoblaci6n, GL!CK T.F., Islamic and Christian Spain Homenaje a Fray Justo Perez de Urbel, t. I, Studia Silensia, in the Early Middle Ages, Princeton, New Jersey, 1979, 96 y 97. Abadia de Silos, 1976, 387-405; GAUTIER DALCHE J., Moulin a 7 El proeeso, por lo que respecta a una zona no lejana de la eau, seigneurie, eommunaute rurale clans le nord de I' Espagne que trata este estudio, ha sido magistralmente analizado por (!Xe-XI!e sieeles), en: Etudes de Civilisation medilfvale (IXe- MARTINEZ SOPENA P., La Tierra de Campos accidental. Pobla- X!Je siecles). Melanges offerts a Edmond-Rene Labande, Poi- miento, poder y comunidad del siglo X al XJJJ, Valladolid, 1985, tiers, 1974, 337-349. 207-321. PEREZ CELADA J A., El monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion. PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion del monasterio de Formacion, estructura y decurso historico de tm seiiorio cas- San Zoilo de Carrion (/047-1300), Burgos, 1986, doe. 3; FER- tellano-leontis (siglos XI-XVI), Tesis de Doetorado, Universidad NANDEZ L., Coleccion diplomcitica de la abadia de Santa Maria de Valladolid, 1994, en prensa, Capitulos !I y Ill, y, del mismo: de Benevivere (Palencia) 1020-/561, Madrid, 1967, doe. 31, y Notas sobre la ampliaei6n del patrimonio eondal en el siglo XI: LIZOArN GARRIDO J.M., Documentacion del monasterio de Las una operaei6n multiple de eompraventa y permuta protagoni- Hue/gas de Burgos (1!16-1230), Burgos, 1985, doe. 158. 9 BLOCH M., La historia rural francesa: caracteres ori- zada por don G6mez Diaz y doiia Teres a en I 057, en: Aetas del JJ Congreso de Historia de Palencia, t. I!, Palencia, 1990, 415- ginates, Barcelona, 1978, 229. 274 Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso media del rio Carrion en la edad media comunidades campesinas- e incluso Ios particulares en manos de campesinos que estan perdiendo su - quienes edificaron Ios molinos y conservaron su propiedad en beneficia de Ios senores. Por lo demas, propiedad- dividida en participaciones, veces o vices vemos como Ios institutos religiosos adquieren, con -durante largo tiempo en ocasiones 10 • El hecho de frecuencia por donacion, molinos hasta el momento que la clase senorial se presente cada vez mas como en manos de senores laicos sobre todo durante Ios la mayor propietaria de molinos- a! igual que sucede siglos XII y XIII. Por lo que respecta a Ios huertos y con Ios demas medios de produccion - es una cir- plantaciones de regadio en general, senin tambien Ios cunstancia imputable a! proceso de configuracion de senores quienes se presenten en la documentacion la gran propiedad feudal, verdadero pilar de la socie- como Ios mayores propietarios, aunque podremos dad medieval, pero ello no puede considerarse un contemplar la persistencia de pequenas propiedades monopolio formal sobre Ios ingenios molineros 11 • A horticolas a lo largo de todo el periodo considerado 15 • traves de mecanismos como la compra, la profilia- El caracter comunal de !as aguas, y su conse- cion, la maneria, la recepcion de donaciones o, en fin, cuente administracion coordinada por Ios respectivos de otros, coercitivos ono, Ios senores se iran haciendo concejos - y no entraremos aqui en el proceso dife- con las partes o vices que Ios campesinos poseen en rencial de oligarquizacion de Ios mismos -, consti- Ios ingenios construidos por sus antepasados o por tuira una realidad a lo largo de todo el medievo, ellos mismos y, en muchas ocasiones, a adquirirlos aunque sea necesario referirse a Ios importantes con- en su totalidad 12 • Por lo de m as, cuando Ios senores dicionamientos a que esta sometida tal capacidad. reciban atribuciones jurisdiccionales sobre la totali- Por una parte, son Ios monarcas quienes tienen la dad de Ios terminos de las villas de la zona, disfru- ultima palabra, por la via de la emision de privilegios taran de una excelente plataforma suplementaria para o el dictado de 6rdenes, en el reparto de !as aguas. Por convertirse en propietarios de Ios molinos como otra, el mencionado incremento de la propiedad feu- parece que sucedi6 en la villa de Lobera, donde Ios dal a costa de la campesina convertira con frecuencia monjes de San Zoilo de Carrion, que recibieron la a Ios agricultores en usufructuarios de propiedades jurisdicci6n singular sobre la misma en 1129, sin que senoriales, por lo que Ios concejos son sustituidos en conste que por ello accedieran a la propiedad de Ios ocasiones por Ios senores o por Ios concesionarios de molinos, se presentan en 1213 como duenos de Ios molinos o huertos a titulo particular en la regulacion mismos, que explota ahora el concejo mediante de Ios derechos de uso del agua 16 • arrendamiento 13 • Sin embargo, vemos que, en el caso El derecho individualizado de aprovechamiento de Poblacion de Soto, situada bajo la jurisdiccion de del agua, en todo caso, se deriva de la condici6n de Ios monasterios de Sahagun y Nogal de !as Huertas "heredado" en un lugar, esto es, de propietario o usu- desde algun momento del siglo XI, existian herederos fructuario de tierras. Esta circunstancia generani soli- que poseian participaciones en molinos hasta que se daridades, normalmente expresadas a traves de Ios desprendieron de las mismas mediante dos ventas, ya concejos, que agrupan a veces a personas fisicas o glosadas mas arriba, que tuvieron lugar en 1194 y juridicas con intereses objetivamente diferenciados. 1221 y pusieron !as mismas en manos, respectiva- Por otra parte, son Ios monarcas quienes, en la prac- mente, de Ios monasterios de Santa Maria de Bene- tica, determinan la resolucion de !as diferencias vivere y Las Huelgas de Burgos 14 • En fin, las men- importantes relativas al uso del agua 17 • Siesta habia ciones de molinos se presentan ya desde el siglo XI experimentado una explotacion que se basaba en 10 PASTOR R., Resistencias y luchas campesinas en /a epoca fol. 148 V0 • del crecimiento y consolidacion de laformacionfeudal. Castilla 16 Asf, por ejemplo, el monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion y Lean, siglos X-XII!, Madrid, 1980, 56-60. siempre actuo directamente en lo relativo a la defensa de sus 11 MARTINEZ SOPENA P., op. cit., 316 y 317. privilegios relativos al agua, quedando e1 concejo que existfa en 12 PASTOR R., ibidem. su barrio de San Zoles sistematicamente en la so m bra a este res- 13 PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion ... , does. 27 y 80. pecto. Hay ocasiones en que un concejo se inhibe por no consi- 14 Vease supra, nota 8. derarse concernido por un problema: el concejo de Poblacion de 15 La enumeracion de ejemplos resultaria farragosa. Baste Soto, en efecto, se desintereso de un enfrentamiento entre el citar el registro documental del monasterio de San Zoilo de monasterio de San Zoilo y Ios arrendatarios de Ios molinos de Carrion- lndice de San Zoilo- depositado en el Archivo Histo- Las Huelgas en dicho lugar surgido en 1398 (PEREZ CELADA rico Provincial de Palencia, que principalmente a partir de su fol. J.A., Documentacion del monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion 144 ofrece casos, correspondientes principalmente al siglo XV, (1301-1400), Burgos, 1987, doe. 335). 17 de pequefios propietarios que donan, compran o venden tierras No obstante, Ios senores, en virtud de sus capacidades en el entomo de Carrion; incluso disponemos del dato de un propietarias y/o jurisdiccionales pod fan deterrninar Ios derechos "moro"- un mudejar-, de nombre Hamete, vecino del barrio de de uso del agua (GAUTIER DALCHE J., art. cit., 348), aunque en Ios monjes, que vende a estos dos pedazos de tierra de vega - el ambito que tratamos no hemos verificado tal circunstancia. 275 J.A. Perez Celada sucesivos pactos explicitos o tacitos entre Ios usua- artificial, seguramente el de Izan o Abanziles, en el rios que se iban agregando a lo largo del proceso de que en calidad de propietarios tenian intereses terri- compactacion demografica de la zona, lo cierto es toriales Ios monasterios de Sahagun y Nogal, que que a partir de fines del siglo XII comienzan a mani- aprovechaban dos boqueras del curso alto del mismo festarse tensiones por causa de la construccion de en el siglo XVII, una circunstancia que se puede nuevas presas para captar agua del rio. Asi, en un remontar en principio a este momento 20 . Lo cierto es 11 momento no determinado de fines del siglo XII, una que Ios "homines de Nogal, aparte de haber cegado tal Maria Boiso, posiblemente una importante la toma de agua de este canal, habian construido a! hacendada territorial en este espacio, ordeno abrir un otro lado del Carrion, a la altura de la villa, una presa 11 "cornagus o canal entre San Martin del Obispo y que menoscababa el derecho de San Zoilo de Carrion Los Barrios, en la vega saldafiesa. El rey Alfonso a recibir su cupo de agua algunos Km mas abajo, VIII, requerido por algunos concejos, ordeno efec- pasada Poblacion de Soto y en la ribera derecha del tuar una pesquisa a! respecto al abad de Benevivere y rio. Tras la pesquisa, efectuada significativamente por a dos caballeros de la zona y, tras ello, a traves de su el abad de Sahagun- otro de Ios damnificados por la merino en Saldafia, clausuro dicho curso de agua. La actuacion de sus dependientes -, el rey prohibira que razon que dio lugar a tal determinacion fue que la se hagan en adelante presas nuevas entre Nido del mencionada sefiora habia abierto el canal "non de· Cuervo y la villa de Carrion, con lo que Ios derechos fuero neque de consuetudine, et nunquam ibi fuit de Ios usuarios situados bajo dicho pago quedaban apertus es decir, transgrediendo un uso consoli- 1118 , por el momento salvaguardados 21 • dado - principalmente por parte de Ios vecinos de Conviene recalcar esta nueva actuacion regia, que Gafiinas y Lobera - que la Corona se encargaria de se concretara en la confirmacion del reparto ante- restaurar. Muy poco tiempo despues, en 1203, vere- dicho y que sera reiteradamente aducida por Ios mos al abad de Sahagun ejecutando una pesquisa interesados y confirmada a lo largo de toda la Edad tambien a instancias de Alfonso VIII algunos Km rio Media y de la propia Edad Modema por Ios sucesivos abajo, concretamente en el entomo de La Sema, en monarcas. Nos hallamos, pues, ante la evidencia de relacion con una disputa entre el monasterio de San que, si no era posible un acuerdo directo entre !as 11 Zoilo de Carrion y Ios "homines de No gal de Las instituciones y/o concejos, la monarquia tiene la Huertas por causa de la apertura de una presa que capacidad ultima de decision 22 • Una vez que el rey estos habian realizado a la altura de dicho nucleo, lo adjudica un cupo en el uso de agua, su beneficiario se que privaba al monasterio de sus derechos - que se convierte de facto en propietario del mismo, aunque remontaban cuando menos a tiempos de Alfonso VII ello, como veremos, no evite en absoluto transgre- - a la tercera parte del agua del rio que pasara allado siones de tal concesion en el contexto de escasez de de Nogal - las otras dos debian ir hacia la villa de agua que, segun indicabamos, caracteriza a este Carrion - y que captaban mediante una presa colo- ambito. cada unos tres Km rio abajo de Noga! 19 • En realidad, estos "homines" parecian haber actuado por propia iniciativa, al margen de sus senores, Ios monasterios Los canicteres de la red hidraulica y el regimen de benedictinos de Sahagun y San Salvador de Nogal, explotaci6n de Ios recursos que lo eran desde 1131, asi como propietarios del pago de Nido del Cuervo y de terrenos en La Sema, Las primeras menciones de estas infraestructuras unos tres Km a! norte de Nogal. En Nido del Cuervo hidraulicas tienen un caracter relativamente tem- - situado en la orilla derecha del rio- nacia un cauce prano y nos presentan por lo demas a !as mismas y a 18 22 PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion ... (/047-1300), doe. 68. Sobre esta euesti6n en el entomo de Burgos, ver CASADO 19 Ibidem, doe. 72. ALONSO H., Senores, mercaderes y campesinos. La comarca de 20 AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328. Relacion de Ios fundamentos Burgos a fines de la Edad Media, Valladolid, 1987, 183-186. 23 que liene este monasterio de San Zoil de Carrion para gozar la PEREZ CELADA J.A., Notas sabre la ampliaci6n ... 24 BERNARD A. & BRUEL A., Recueil des chartes de l'abbaye tercera parte de todo el agua que viniese por el Rio Mayor desde la presa del Nido del Cuervo ... (siglo XVII). (V er croquis del re- de Cluny, t. IV, Paris, 1900, doe. 3507, donde se mencionan, parto del agua desde la toma de Iz:in). Pero ya en 1395, en efecto, entre otros bienes, "or/os, piscarias, molendinos, aquas,fontes, la situaci6n era identiea, eomo lo demuestra el concierto entre el rivulos cum suis reductilibus, aquis aquarumque introitus et Coneejo de Carrion y el monasterio de Benevivere (LALANDA exitus". Sob re la donaeion a Sahagun del monasterio de No gal: CARROBLES P., art. cit., 196 y 197: articulo 226 de Ias Orde- HERRERO DE LA FUENTE M., Coleccion diplomatica del nanzas de la Ribera de Torre y Calzada -Izan). monasterio de Sahagun (I 07 3-11 09), Lean, 1988, doe. 912. 21 Vernota19. 276 Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso medio del rio Carrion en la edad media los huertos y molinos en una situacion consolidada. vega saldafiesa, donde la inclinacion continuada del En efecto, al testimonio citado mas arriba corres- terreno resulta idonea a tal efecto 26 , corresponden a! pondiente al afio l 057, en el que observamos la afio 1285, cuando dofia Berenguela, abadesa de Las presencia de molinos y canales al sur de Carrion en Huelgas, hace valer ante el monarca Sancho IV una pleno funcionamiento y en dependencia de un curso pesquisa realizada tiempo antes por orden de Alfonso artificial de agua y que deja claro que dicho fun- X 27 • En ella se consignan !as presas para tomar agua cionamiento se estaba produciendo al menos desde existentes desde Poza de la Vega- "la presa de Sob re los alrededores del afio 1000 23 , cabe afiadir la men- Por;uela "- hasta la de La Serna, es decir, las corres- cion de molinos, canales y huertos que hace la carta pondientes a la vega de Saldafia y a los inicios de la de donacion del monasterio de San Zoilo a Cluny de Carrion. Las tomas de agua relacionadas en la realizada por Teresa Diaz, viuda del conde Banu- pesquisa son !as siguientes en orden descendente: de G6mez Gomez Diaz, correspondiente al afio 1076- "Sabre Por;uela ", de "Domingo Abbat ", de "!os 1077, en la que se pone de manifiesto que los monjes Sauariegos ", de "Sarannan ", de Lobera y Gafiinas, disponian ya de un complejo de irrigacion y molien- de Moslares, de Renedo, de Nido del Cuervo y de La da. Por lo demas, ya en 1093 el monasterio de San Serna. Esta enumeracion de obras hidraulicas creemos Salvador de Nogal recibe, entre otras cosas, cuatro que ofrece una informacion fundamental respecto a molinos a orillas del rio Carrion en ubicaciones no la estructura del sistema de cauces de agua, que no precisadas 24 . En estos terminos, y sobre todo por lo experimentara, si exceptuamos la apertura del Rio que se refiere al primero de Ios testimonios citados, Nuevo o de Los Molledos a la altura de Villosilla a estamos en condiciones de suponer con fundamento principios del siglo XVI, modificaciones sustanciales que, como enunciabamos mas arriba, el aprovecha- con posterioridad 28 . En efecto, podemos hacer coin- miento del agua en Ios terminos referidos se venia cidir la primera presa - "Sabre Por;uela " - con la produciendo seguramente ya en el siglo X y que los saca de agua del canal o "Puerto" de Matazorita men- sucesivos aportes demograficos a la zona no habrian cionado en las Ordenanzas relativas al agua de esta hecho sino colaborar en la ampliacion de la "red" acequia del afio 1630 y que se situa en Poza de la hidraulica que habria comenzado a configurarse Vega, desaguando con posterioridad el caudal que durante esta centuria, si no en la anterior. En fin, las toma en el Rio Nuevo 29 . La presa de "Domingo colecciones documentales monasticas de la zona Ab bat" pudiera ser la que, sin ten er unas Ordenanzas recogen durante Ios siglos XII y XIII bastantes testi- especificas en la Edad Moderna, se ha conocido monios de donaciones de molinos sefioriales y de sus tradicionalmente como Rozas Viejas y que nace tam- derechos anejos sobre el agua 25 . bien en las cercanias de Poza 30 . La de "Sarannan" Conviene ahora que presentemos a! lector una creemos que puede identificarse con la de Saldafia y imagen mas perfilada del sistema de canales sobre la constituir el canal con mayor desarrollo espacial en la base de los datos concretos que nos ha brindado la vega de Carrion: la Perihonda, que, naciendo en el encuesta documental que hemos realizado. Y, para pago que sus Ordenanzas de l5671laman El Sedenal, ello, efectuaremos un recorrido en sentido norte-sur, se situaria en la ribera opuesta a la de la villa de es decir, comenzando por las primeras tomas de agua Saldafia31 . Las de Lobera y Gafiinas, Moslares, Renedo en la vega saldafiesa, situadas en las proximidades de y Lerones serian tomas de caracter menor destinadas Poza de la Vega, y concluyendo en el ultimo desagi.ie a la irrigacion y molienda de trarnos de ribera restrin- de los canales, a la altura de Villoldo. gidos32, y la de Nido del Cuervo, situada en termino Las primeras noticias explicitas de que dispone- de La Serna33 , es la que iniciaba el canal conocido mos sobre las presas mas septentrionales, las de la como de Izan o Abanziles 34 . 25 Ver, por ejemplo, PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion ... tar que en el documento de 1285 citado supra se consignan ocho ( 1047-1300), does. 15, 27, 52 y 76; FERNANDEZ L., op. cit., doe. molinos escalonados entre Saldaiia- donde hay un molino del 16, y FERNANDEZ FLOREZ J.A., op. cit., does. 1204, 1248, 1365 rey- y Lerones- que alberga dos-, concluyendo la enumeraci6n y 1438. con una menci6n a Ios molinos de Torre, ya en el cuemago de Izan. 26 Asi consideran las Ordenanzas de la acequia de Matazorita 29 Ibidem, 175. en 1630 a Poza y su entomo - "donde el rio se inclina y pone 30 Ibidem, 143. mejor disposicion" (LALANDA CARROBLES P., art. cit., 175) -, 31 Ibidem, 165-168. y asi puede verificarse sabre el terreno o mediante la contem- 32 CASTRO GARRJDO A. & LIZOAIN GARRIDO J.M., op. cif., placi6n de un mapa topografico. doc.39. 27 33 CASTRO GARRIDO A. & LIZOAIN GARRJDO J.M., Documen- Sobre el pago de Nido del Cuervo, vid. FERNANDEZ FLO- tacion del monasterio de Las Hue/gas de Burgos (1284-1306), REZ J.A., op. cif., doe. 1389, y AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328. Rela- Burgos, 1987, doe. 39. cion de Ios fundamentos. 28 LALANDA CARROBLES P., art. cit., 149 y ss. Conviene seiia- 34 AHN. Clero. Ibidem. 277 J.A. Perez Celada Fuera de la enumeracion que hemos comentado se obligara a menoscabar la de doiia Sancha- como con encuentra la toma o boquera que riega la ribera de Ios de !as poblaciones de !as riberas del norte, en lo Nogal y Poblacion de Soto y que se encuentra a la que parece que se trataba de un afio particularmente altura del primer lugar citado. En tomo a ella tuvieron seco. Por lo que respecta a la presa de dofia Sancha lugar Ios enfrentamientos mas intensos y constantes que menciona el documento citado, hay que seiialar por el uso del agua entre algunas de !as instancias que debio de ser esta abadesa de Las Huelgas (1205- sefioriales con mas peso en la zona y con un interes 1230) quien la mando construir, una actuacion que mas acusado en el uso masivo del agua: el monasterio transgredia a todas luces el ordenamiento del agua de San Salvador de Nogal, a! que ya nos hemos realizado por Alfonso VIII en 1203. Ahora bien, este referido, y, sobre todo, el de Las Huelgas de Burgos, hecho se explica si tomamos en consideracion que con intereses ambos en la misma ribera, y el de San Alfonso VIII fue un significado protector del monas- Zoilo de Carrion. En efecto, ya en 1203 nos hallamos terio burgales, donde en union con su esposa se halla 11 ante el contencioso suscitado entre Ios "homines de enterrado, y que no hubo de resultar dificil a !as Nogal y el monasterio de San Zoilo, que, sin embar- monjes arrancarle a! monarca una autorizacion para go, no se reavivani hasta el siglo XVII 35 . No asi abrir su propia boquera, precisamente mas abajo de sucedera con Poblacion de Soto. En dicho lugar Nido del Cuervo, a la altura de Nogal - "sabre! de poseian !as monjas de Las Huelgas de Burgos una Nogar ~~, como afirma el documento citado 37 . 11 "domus o explotacion agraria destinada a! apro- En 1398 sera el monasterio de San Zoilo el que vechamiento del terrazgo en regimen de gestion reivindique sus derechos contra Ios de Poblacion de directa, pero tambien a la recaudacion de rentas de !as Soto. En efecto, parece que un clerigo y otras per- explotaciones campesinas, y a! aprovechamiento de sonas, arrendatarios del complejo productivo de !as 11 un conjunto de molinos. La "domus de Poblacion monjas en Poblacion- circunstancia que indica que formaba parte de un conjunto de explotaciones de la Ios "freyres" a! servicio de !as mismas habian aban- 11 misma indole dispersas por Ios amplios dominios de donado ya la "domus habian realizado una toma -, la institucion burgalesa. Aunque la primera mencion de agua a la altura de Poblacion- es decir, otra mas en la documentacion corresponde a! afio 1263, cabe abajo de la de doiia Sancha en Nogal- para alimentar suponer que la integracion en el dominio se produjo el molino de Las Casillas, lo cual menoscababa el 11 con anterioridad. Regida por "freyres cistercienses tercio de agua que le correspondia a San Zoilo. Ante 11 a !as ordenes de !as monjas de Burgos, la "domus o la inhibicion del concejo de Poblacion, que no se 11 "palacio de Poblacion parece que orientaba sus sentia afectado por la actuacion de dos particulares, excedentes a! mercado de Carrion, pues sabemos, por estos llegaron a! acuerdo con Ios monjes de que no se un documento de 1336, que a Ios vasallos dellugar se tocara la presa que habian hecho y que se rebajara, en les obligaba a transportar !as rentas del mismo hasta cambio, la de dofia Sancha, situada rio arriba, una dicha villa 36 . Pues bien, la institucion burgalesa man- solucion que ha de responder a la ausencia de cual- tuvo un autentico "tira y af!oja" en lo relativo a! uso quier gestor del monasterio en Poblacion y a! desin- del agua con el monasterio de San Zoilo a lo largo de teres que dicha institucion mostraba a estas alturas mucho tiempo. Ya en 1285 pidieron !as monjas que por sus propiedades en ellugar38 . se ratificara su derecho a disponer de su boquera, con En cualquier caso, en 1412 el monasterio de San el caudal de agua correspondiente, en la ribera iz- Zoilo lograra que la presa del molino de Soto, que el quierda del rio. Pero muy pronto, en 1305, la abadesa nuevo arrendatario del complejo molinero de !as mon- se quejara a! rey Femando IV de que "Ios monjes de jas, precisamente el merino de Poblacion, Juan Garcia, Sanct Zoyl de Carrion e otros ommes que les embar- utilizaba a la altura de dicho lugar para alimentar el gan el agua a monte la presa de donna Sancha, mencionado ingenio, fuera rebajada porque contrave- sabre! de Nogar, e en otros logares (...), en manera nia su derecho a un tercio del agua obtenido en 1203 39 . que sus molinos non muelen nin se aprovechan del En 1416 Ios monjes carrioneses volveran a efectuar 11 agua segund deuen una queja que cabe relacionar ; requerimientos, esta vez a Ios alcaldes de Carrion, tanto con el interes del monasterio de San Zoilo por porque rio abajo de Nogal se han erigido presas con que su porcion de un tercio del agua reconocida en ramas y cespedes que impiden que el agua llegue a su 1203 llegara integra a su presa - lo que quiza les boquera y funcionen adecuadamente sus molinos 40 . 35 AHPP. In dice de San Zoilo, fol I 0 I. 37 CASTRO GARRIDO A. & LIZOAIN GARRIDO J.M., op. cit., 6 J.M. & GARCIA GONZALEZ J.J., El monasterio de j LIZOAIN does. 39 y 181. 38 PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion ... (1301-1400), doe. 335. Las Hue/gas. Historia de un seiiorio cisterciense burgales (siglos Xff y X[[[), Burgos, 1988, 222-225. 39 AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328, 31-VII-1412. 40 AHN. C1ero. Legajo 5328, VIII/IX-1416. 278 Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso media del rio Carrion en la edad media Conviene ahora referirse a! canal de bin o Aban- Duefia y discurria hacia el sur regando en primer ziles. Este curso, situado en la margen derecha del rio termino !as huertas de la abadia de Benevfvere, que Carrion, se presenta como el principal de la vega de le daba su nombre - acequia Canoniga o de Bene- Carrion en la Edad Media. En un orden de sucesion vivere -; la ubicacion de esta toma de agua se hallaba de canales considerado desde el oeste, aparece en allado mismo del Camino de Santiago, lindando con tercer lugar, tras el Rio Nuevo- que, como ya diji- tierras del Hospital de San Torcuato, un priorato mos, se abrio a principios del siglo XVI - y la dependiente de la abadia mencionada que se hallaba Perihonda. El Iz:in nace en termino de La Serna, en a un centenar de metros de la misma 43 . El segundo la orilla derecha del rio y fue concebido con el doble ojo se encontraba cerea del anterior y tambien fin de aplicarlo primordialmente a! riego en su tramo discurria hacia el Sur, avenando el pago de Hingidro alto y a la alimentacion de ingenios molineros en el y otras tierras cercanas propiedad de habitantes de la bajo, concretamente en !os terminos de Torre de !os villa de Carrion44 • El tercer ojo estaba entre el molino Molinos y Calzada de Ios Molinos. En 1285, la con- de Abanziles- que daba al canal principal uno de sus firmacion de la pesquisa regia solicitada por !as mon- nombres- y el de Casasola, y se situaba en el actual jas de Las Huelgas nos presenta a! Izan en estos ter- pago de Ojo Muela, allado del camino que llevaba de minos: 'et la presa del Nido del Cuervo faganla !os Benevivere a Villanueva de Ios Nabos. La cuarta de Poblap'on e de Nogar e !os de Poblar,:ion de Suso, toma estaba entre Ios molinos de Casasola y el de e !os de La Serna den la terr,:era parte del agua que Vado- perteneciente este ultimo al Hospital de la vaya por Castelanos ea Torre ea !os molinos del rey', Herrada, que dependia del obispado palentino y se lo que parece indicar que !os monjes de Nogal y dedicaba a la atencion de los peregrinos que iban a Sahagun estaban en condiciones de exigir a sus Compostela - 45 ; como este curso secundario regaba dependientes en !os lugares mencionados prestacio- principalmente tierras de dicho hospital, ha conser- nes personales aplicadas a la construccion y el man- vado hasta nuestros dias el nombre de Arroyo de La tenimiento de la presa que se ubicaba en su pago de Herrada. El quinto ojo salia a la altura de Villanueva Nido del Cuervo 41 • de los Nabos. El sexto, en fin, lo hacia a la altura de Un compromiso establecido en 1395 entre el Nogal de las Huertas - situada al otro !ado del rio monasterio de Santa Maria de Benevivere, ocupado Carrion- y se aplicaba fundamentalmente al riego de por canonigos regu1ares que seguian la Regia de San los terminos de Villanueva de los Nabos y Villamez, Agustfn y dependiente, en lo que se refiere al apro- en Ios que los monjes de Nogal tenian una importante vechamiento del agua, del caudal que proporcionaba dotacion territorial. Aguas abajo, y sin excluir en esta acequia de Izan, y el concejo de la villa de absoluto el riego de huertos, linares y frutales, el agua Carrion en relacion con los derechos de ambas insti- servia para mover el mayor conjunto de molinos de tuciones sobre el mismo, nos informa de los cursos este espacio en un terreno idoneo para dicha apli- secundarios que se derivaban del canal por su ribera cacion: el de Ios terminos de Torre y Calzada46 . Por izquierda; una informacion que, por lo demas, es ple- lo que se refiere a! final de estos cauces principales, namente aplicable mas de tres siglos despues, cuando sefialaremos que elllamado Rio Nuevo desembocara se aprueban, fundandose en la misma, las ordenan- en la Perihonda, entre Villaturde y Villotilla; esta zas42. Asi, del Izan se derivanin una serie de canales confluira unos Km mas abajo, recien pasada Calzada o regatos secundarios que son, enumerados de Sur a de los Molinos, con el Izan, y, finalmente, este curso Norte, los siguientes: el primer ojo se situaba comun desembocani en Villoldo, cerrando el ciclo inmediatamente el norte del molino llamado de La hidrologico de !as vegas de Saldafia y Carrion47 . 41 CASTRO GARRJDO A. & LIZOAIN GARRIDO J.M., op. cit., monasterio de Benevfvere reeibe en donaei6n una parte en el doe. 39. molino de Sotillo en dieho lugar (FERNANDEZ L., op. cit., doe. 42 LALANDA CARROBLES P., art. cit., 196 y 197. 127). En Torre de Ios molinos hay meneiones a diehos ingenios 43 FERNANDEZ L., op. cit., 3; VAZQUEZ DE PARGA L., LACARRA -en plural y sei\alando su propiedad regia- en 1285 (LIZOAIN J.M. & URJA RIU J., Las peregrinaciones a Santiago de Cam- GARRIDO J.M. & CASTRO GARRIDO A., op. cit., doe. 39). poste/a, t. !!, Madrid, 1948, 213-218. 47 Pueden servir de adeeuada orientaei6n a este respeeto las 44 LALANDA CARROBLES P., ibidem. hojas no 164, 197 y 235 del Mapa Topograflco Nacional de 45 Ibidem. Espatia- eseala I :50.000- y el Mapa Provincial de Palencia- 46 Ibidem, y AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328, Relacion de losfimda- eseala l :200.000- elaborados por el Instituto Geogratieo Naeio- mentos... En Calzada se doeumentan en el siglo XV Ios grupos nal, asf eomo el Diccionario geograflco, estadistico e historico molineros de Palaeio y de la Sema, perteneeientes al monasterio de £spatia y sus provincias de ultramar, de MADOZ P., Madrid, de San Zoilo, y el de la Duei\a (AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeos del 1850, en el eual habn1n de busearse Ios top6nimos que apareeen monasterio de San Zoilo, fols. 4! -5 [, e Indice de San Zoilo, fol en el Mapa que nosotros adjuntamos a este trabajo. 132, respeetivamente). Asimismo, sabemos que en 1414 el 279 J.A. Perez Celada Para concluir con la descripcion del sistema de muelas a traves de un engranaje. La modestia del canales de estas vegas, conviene que nos refiramos a volumen hidrico del Carrion y, por ende, la de Ios Ios dos restantes cursos artificiales del sistema. Uno canales derivados del mismo, nos situa ante la prac- de ellos, el canal de Cestillos, se sirua, como el de tica inevitabilidad de recurrir de modo sistematico al Nogal-Poblacion, en la orilla derecha del rio, y apro- tipo de ingenio mencionado en primer lugar, ya que vecha, como Villanueva del Rio tres km mas abajo, el molino de rueda vertical precisa de caudales de una pequefia red de canales adaptados a la planitud de agua importantes y su coste resulta mas elevado 51 . La este tramo de la ribera. En Cestillos poseia el documentacion medieval castellana distingue con monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion, ademas de la frecuencia entre el molino simple - molendino, parroquia de San Juan, importantes propiedades terri- molendinum, molino- y el complejo de rueda vertical toriales y a! menos un ingenio molinero 48 . Final- - acenia, aceiia 52 , del arabe saniya -, pero lo cierto mente, el monasterio de San Zoilo poseia su propio es que la simple mencion de la palabra "molino" canal, que nacia, cuando menos hasta el siglo XVIII, encubre en ocasiones la existencia de una acefia, algo a! Sur de Poblacion de Soto, en la ribera dere- aunque tal cosa no sucede en sentido inverso 53 . Pero cha49 y tras recorrer unos seis km se reintegraba a! rio en el caso que tratamos, a !as razones antedichas en Carrion inmediatamente despues de la villa del mis- favor de un uso generalizado del molino de rueda mo nombre, discurriendo a unos 250 metros del curso horizontal en este espacio, se une la circunstancia de del rio y dejando a su izquierda el monasterio de San que la documentacion en el generada parece poner Zoilo y su barrio anejo, el de San Zoles. A la altura cuidado en la distincion entre molinos y acefias. Asi, de este, Ios monjes habian derivado un canal que por ejemplo, el monasterio de San Zoilo de Carrion, desembocaba tambien en el rio Carrion, atravesando uno de Ios principales propietarios de molinos en esta Ios huertos inmediatos a! monasterio: era elllamado zona, extendia sus dominios tambien por la vega del Arroyo Forero. El canal de Ios monjes regaba !as Duero, mas concretamente en Toro. Alii era poseedor plantaciones de Ios mismos y de sus concesionarios, de varias acefias que se mencionan como tales en la a la vez que daba movimiento a un complejo moli- documentacion ya desde mediados del siglo XIV y nar50. asi se seguira hacienda en adelante 54 . No es preciso Conviene efectuar, finalmente, algunas considera- aclarar que el caudal del Duero resulta mucho mas ciones sobre el regimen de aprovechamiento de Ios apropiado que el de sus afluentes - y que el de !as ingenios y Ios cultivos mencionados. Por lo que res- acequias derivadas de estos- para la implantacion de pecta a los molinos, cabe decir que nos hallamos en tales ingenios; y, asi, tanto en Toro como en Zamora presencia de ingenios que responden de modo gene- la presencia de acefias era un hecho comun ya en la ralizado a! prototipo de rueda horizontal que trans- Edad Media. Lo cierto es que el rio Carrion conocera mite en tal disposicion su movimiento directamente la implantacion de estas maquinas, pero estimamos, a !as muelas, quedando en general excluidos, a! en general, que en tiempos posteriores y con un men os para estos tiempos medievales, Ios mol in os de caracter selectivo: en Palencia, situada inmediata- rueda vertical que llevan a cabo su transmision a !as mente antes de la desembocadura del Carrion en el 48 En !2!3 consta que el monasterio tenia dos molinos en de !482 -,La Cespedera- Documen/acion ... (f 30 I -/400), refe- Cestillos (PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documentacion ... (l 047-1 300), rencia de 1338, doe. 2!5, y Libra 2"... , afio !482 -, Tapia- doe. 80, pero posteriormente hemos haladfo la menci6n de tres Libra 2" ... , fol. 41, refs. de !48! y !482- y del Huerto- Libra a principios del siglo XV (AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeos, fol. 5). Asi- 2"... , fols. 4! y 49 v•, refs. de !48! y !484; se indica en ambas mismo, existe una referencia al molino del Campo en !448 que este molino tiene dos paradas o ruedas -. Hay asimismo (AHPP. lndice ... , fol !75). menciones del Molino de Mediavilla, que no era de Ios monjes 49 En AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328. Relacion de Ios fundamen- - AHN. Clero, Legajo 5328, ref. de !530 -.Se habla tambien de /os ... , se hacen una descripci6n inequivoca en estos tenninos y un molino de La Salceda en el barrio propiedad de Ios monjes- una remisi6n a la pesquisa realizada en !203 que hemos citado AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328, afio !546, en que se arrienda, hacien- reiteradamente. · dose menci6n de que esto se venia realizando con anterioridad. 50 51 El Arroyo Forero, mencionado reiteradamente en la docu- CARO BAROJA J., Tecno/ogia popular espaiiola, Madrid, mentaci6n, es descrito en !527 en estos terminos: " ... el arroyo !983, 263-265; VILLAR GARCIA L.M., La Extremadura castel- forero que sale del cuernago de nues/ro monasterio de San Zoyl lano-leonesa, Valladolid, !986, 335. e pasa por nuestras lwertas" (AHN. Clero. Legajo 5328, 25-IX- 52 CAS ADO ALONSO H., op. cil., !92 y ss. !527). Los molinos de Ios monjes que alimentaba su propio 53 Ibidem. cuemago- y que salvo el que mencionamos en primer lugar se 54 PEREZ CELADA J.A., La "casa" de San Pelayo de Toro y sus hallaban en el barrio de San Zoles- son Ios siguientes en el siglo depencencias entre Ios siglos XI y XV. Una aproximaci6n al XV: Yuanades- en el que Ios monjes ccdieron su participaci6n sefiorio cluniacense en la provincia de Zamora, en: Aetas del I en 1399 (PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documenlacion ... (J 301-1 400), Congreso de His/aria de Zamora, T. !!!, Medieval y Moderna, doe. 338) -,El Pison- Libra 2" de Apeos, fol. 42 v•; referencia Zamora, 1988, 223-23!. 280 Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso medio del rio Carrion en la edad media Pisuerga, la expansion de !as manufacturas textiles !as pequefias a ideas que jalonan el curso del rio y que determino la presencia de acefias en la Edad Modema, se hallan alejadas de ambitos economicamente dina- si no antes 55 . Por lo demas, !as descripciones disponi- micos como Saldafia o Carrion, algunas comunidades bles del equipamiento de Ios ingenios hidraulicos que hubieran podido mantener en su seno, total o parcial- 11 menciona la documentacion nos ponen ante molinos mente, !as "veces que correspondieran a sus vecinos simples 56 . hasta tiempos avanzados. Es importante hacer hin- Otra cuestion es la mencion en la documentacion capie en la generalizada resistencia de Ios senores, de Ios molinos en plural o en singular y, en conexion una vez que Ios han adquirido, a desprenderse de la 11 con ello, la del vocablo "parada H. Casado ha • propiedad de sus molinos y aun a perder el control sefialado la identidad existente entre la "parada" y el efectivo de Ios mismos mediante figuras de con- "sitio para hacer un molino", de tal suerte que cuando cesion hereditarias 58 . Lo que predominara de modo la documentacion indica la existencia de x "paradas" claro cuando menos en Ios siglos XIV y XV - que es en un molino, nos esta hablando de x ruedas con sus cuando !as fuentes son explicitas al respecto- sera la correspondientes muelas, rodeznos, etc. Ello explica cesion de Ios mismos en arrendamiento a corto plazo tambien el hecho de que un mismo molino se men- - entre tres y seis afios - a concesionarios a Ios que, cione en unas ocasiones en singular y otras en plural, en ocasiones, se atribuye explicitamente en Ios docu- porque, efectivamente, lo usual era que un molino mentos la condicion socio-laboral de "molineros" 59 . constara de varias paradas a la vez. Asi, el monasterio Las condiciones de !as cesiones establecen que la de San Zoilo era propietario de "dos casas de moli- contraprestacion que ha de hacer efectiva el arrenda- 11 nos en Calzada de Ios Molinos, !as de Palacio y La tario sea en especie - en cereal - a lo largo del siglo Sema, que contaban respectivamente, con cuatro y XV, aunque en la centuria anterior conocemos rentas tres paradas. En el caso de Ios de Palacio, la docu- dinerarias 60 . Por lo demas, el concesionario corren1 mentacion desglosa cada una de !as paradas por el con Ios gastos de mantenimiento del canal y del equi- nombre que se les daba - "Cabe el postigo "El 11 , pamiento del molino 61 . Respecto a la cuestion del 11 11 11 Gall ego "Chamorro y "El Cabo , y describe el - "valor"de Ios molinos, lo costoso de su construccion equipamiento de cada una de las mismas, lo que deja y su mantenimiento, cabe decir,en conexion con lo claro que, en efecto, cada "parada" era un ingenio apuntado mas arriba, que la idea de que Ios mismos molinero 57 • resultaban muy elevados, conviene que sea matizada En otro orden de cosas, cuando la documentacion por cuanto, siendo cierto que la aten cion a un ingenio se hace explicita, Ios molinos se presentan en manos de estas caracteristicas habia de ser intensiva y que de Ios senores o en trance de estarlo, sean estos ecle- Ios gastos de reposicion de sus componentes - siasticos o laicos - incluido el propio monarca. No particularmente el canalillo que proyectaba el agua cabe, sin embargo, descartar la posibilidad de que en sobre la rueda, el rodezno, la turbina y !as mueles 55 A principios del siglo XVIII tuvo lugar un agrio enfren- tenia "el martillo y rodeznero, ... el rodezno ... "; el de El Gal/ego, tamiento entre la ciudad de Palencia y !as poblaciones de las "rodezno sin hierro, la rodeznera ... "; el de Chamorro, "rodezno vegas de Saldana y Carrion, pues la Chancillerfa de Valladolid sin hierro, martillo y rodeznera ... "; el del Cabo, "rodezno sin privo a estas de cualquier forma de aprovechamiento de Ias aguas hierro, martillo y rodeznera ... "(AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeas, fols. del rio Carrion en favor de aquella, que afirmaba precisarlas para 47 y 48). sus molinos, acenas y pisones aplicados en gran medida a la 58 Hasta 1500 solo conocemos, explicitamente, el caso del produccion textil. No obstante, el recurso de las vegas pros- molino de Yuanades (PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documenta- perani poco despues y senin restituidas en sus derechos (LALANDA cion ... (/301-1400), doe. 338. CARROBLES P., art. cif., 160-161). RUIZ T.F., ha detectado una 59 Asi, y aparte de Ios reiterados arrendamientos de Ios moli- relacion entre el desenvolvimiento de las manufacturas y la con- nos de Las Huelgas en Poblacion de Soto citados supra, ver Ios version de Ios molinos en acenas: asi, en Burgos, las acenas que, de modo sistematico hacia, en !as condiciones de duraci6n comienzan a aparecer con frecuencia en la documentacion en !os antedichas,el monasterio de San Zoilo en la segunda mitad del siglos XIII y XIV (Tecnologia y division de la propiedad. Los siglo XV de Ios que poseia en su barrio y en el entorno de Cal- molinos de Burgos en la Baja Edad Media, en Sociedad y poder zada en AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeas, fols 40-76 v•. En dicha fuente real en Cast ilia, Barcelona, 1981, 77 -80). aparece- fol. 51 - un concesionario a qui en se atribuye la condi- 56 Compartimos con CASADO H.(op. cif., 194) la afirmacion ci6nde "molinero"; una condicion que debia de ser por lo demas de que "la existencia de un rodezno indica claramente que nos comun en quienes arrendaban Ios molinos monasticos, aunque encontramos ante un molino horizontal". En tal sentido, las no debe descartarse la posibilidad de subarrendamientos. Una descripciones de Ios molinos del monasterio de San Zoilo en Ios cesion vitalicia en ibidem, fol. 43 v•. 60 afios 80 del siglo XV, incluyen siempre menciones al rodezno, En el siglo XIV, concretamente en 1338, si que observamos, la rodeznera, etc (AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeos, fols. 47-49 v"). en cambio entregas en dinero pore! disfrute de cuatro molinos 57 CASADO H., op. cit., pag 195. Entre Ios molinos de San Zoilo, cercanos al monasterio (PEREZ CELADA J.A., Documenta- vemos, en efecto, a fines del siglo XV, que el de Cabe el Postigo cion ... (/301-1400), doe. 215). 281 J.A. Perez Celada estriadas - habfan de ser frecuentes, no parece en Carrion de Ios Condes, de una gran proliferaci6n de cualquier caso que puedan calificarse de excesivos, a estas explotaciones, lo que se corresponde, por lo tenor de !as informaciones de que disponemos cor- demas, con el caracter de activo centro de intercam- respondientes a fines del siglo XV, en que el equi- bios comerciales de dicha villa. Pero Ios regadios pamiento completo de un ingenio superaba apenas en tienen tambien una importante presencia rio arriba, precio al de una mula 62 . consecuentemente con la adecuada disposici6n del Para concluir, y por lo que respecta a Ios cultivos terreno. Los sefiores se presentan como Ios mayores de regadfo, la documentaci6n reitera durante todo el propietarios de estos bienes, y a traves de !as cartas periodo !as menciones de linares, herrenes, arboles de cesi6n de Ios mismos- y muy especialmente de frutales y otros de vega como el sauce o el olmo y, Ios huertos- comprobamos que su puesta en valor de sobre todo, de huertos, y nos pone ante la circun- se realizaba a traves de concesionarios, aunque, a stancia, habida cuenta de que el mayor volumen diferencia de Ios molinos, !as concesiones tenfan casi documental disponible corresponde a! entomo de siempre el caracter de vitalicias 0 hereditarias 63 . 61 AHPP. Libra 2" de Apeos. Ibidem. 62 Asf, en 1484, Ios equipamientos productivos de Ios ya cita- dos molinos del Postigo, el Gal/ego, de Chamorro y el Cabo son "apreciados ", respectivamente, en 834, 1776, 2354 y 2193 maravedfs (ibidem, fol 47), mientras que una "bestia parda"- una mula- lo es, en el mismo momento, en 1300 maravedfs Julio A. Perez Celada (ibidem, fol 49 v•). 63 Las citas se multipiicarfan hasta la saciedad. Basten solo Universidad de Burgos algunas: AHN. Clero. Carpeta 1709, n• 6 (3-IV-1410); AHPP. Cl. Zaragoza N° l-6°A lndice de San Zoilo, fol. 163 ( 1421 ), fol. 164 v• ( 1448), fol. 158 0900 I Burgos (1470); AHN. Clero. Legajo 5329 (5-IV-1472). Espaiia 282 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Auto1lio Fermindez Ugalde El almacenamiento subterraneo y la conquista feudal en la peninsula iberica: aportaciones de la arqueologia Introducci6n ciones raramente se aportan secciones o estimaciones de capacidad. Este trabajo avanza sobre Ios planteamientos ex- Efectuamos aqui un primer intento de aproxi- puestos por nosotros con anterioridad basados, como maci6n a la posibi!idad de una secuencia de aban- principal hip6tesis, en que Ios silos subtern1neos de dono de silos vinculable a! avance de la conquista y epoca medieval localizados en diversas regiones de la imposici6n de estructuras de poder feudales en la la Peninsula Iberica (Reino de Toledo, especialmente Peninsula Iberica. Madrid, Catalufia, Arag6n, Valencia, Baleares, Cas- tilla y Le6n, Andalucia, Sur de Portugal) son estruc- turas de almacenamiento a largo plazo caracteristicas El almacenamiento subternineo en la peninsula de formaciones sociales en general pre-feudales, a iberica: caracteristicas y antecedentes pre- menudo de raiz tribal, re!acionadas con formas de medievales propiedad familiares, privadas o comunales y, en general, con sistemas de distribuci6n que permiten Los silos subterraneos constituyen una soluci6n una cierta autonomia en la acumulaci6n privada y simple y econ6mica para conseguir un almacena- domestica de excedentes (Femandez Ugalde 1994). miento a largo plazo de cereales y otros productos Presentamos un primer mapa de distribuci6n de silos agricolas que contribuye a la minimizaci6n de !as medievales en la Peninsula Iberica, elaborado a partir crisis de subsistencia peri6dicas. El silo suele llegar de !as mas de 200 referencias publicadas en la a nosotros con una utilizaci6n secundaria, reem- bibliografia arqueol6gica. pleado como contenedor de desperdicios en un Consideramos que el declive del almacenamiento momento posterior a su abandono como almacen. Por a largo plazo en silos, privado o colectivo, puede ser esta raz6n, son muy contadas !as ocasiones en !as que un buen indicador de la extension de relaciones de se han preservado silos junto a restos de su con- producci6n feudales, y coincidir con cam bios estruc- tenido1. Frente a Ios t6picos frecuentes en la biblio- turales relacionados con transformaciones en la dis- grafia arqueol6gica, deben tenerse en cuenta dos tribuci6n del excedente y con su disponibilidad por nociones basicas: parte de !as unidades familiares. Desde tales plantea- - un silo no requiere habitualmente enlucidos de mientos, la oclusi6n generalizada de silos subterra- protecci6n de !as paredes (lo habitual es aislarlas con neos es un e!emento de especial valor a la hora de paja); . determinar el avance de la sociedad feudal. Ios materiales que se encuentran en el interior de Sorprendentemente, Ios estudios arqueol6gicos de un silo fechan el momento de su abandono, y nunca silos son escasos e incompletos: la simple identi- el de su utilizaci6n. ficaci6n funcional suele rehuirse, y en !as publica- El sistema de conservaci6n en silos es conocido en la Peninsula Iberica y, en general, en el continente europeo, a partir del Neolitico. Segun algunos inves- tigadores, el hecho mismo de la "neolitizaci6n" (esto Un caso excepcional en ambito islamico es el de Mesas de es, el paso desde la economia de caza y recolecci6n a Castelinho (Almodovar, Algarve, Portugal), que contenia varios una economia productora) pudo estar precedido de centenares de granos de Triticum diccocum Schrank, especie una intensificaci6n del almacenamiento como prac- tetraploide hoy desaparecida de la Peninsula, y de trigo comun tica econ6mica (Testart 1985). (Triticum aestivum L.) (Pais 1993). En cuanto al Norte En la Peninsula Iberica, el procedimiento de con- peninsular, se distinguieron restos de cereales en Ios silos de Monte Cantabria (La Rioja) (Perez Arrondo y Andres 1986) y servaci6n subterranea del excedente se hace relati- Burad6n (Rioja alavesa) (Martinez Salcedo & Cepeda 1994). vamente frecuente en epoca romana imperial y 283 A. Fernimdez Ugalde tardia. Sin embargo, es obvio que Ios silos coexis- rable. Conviene destacar que Ios aparentes vacios que tieron con otros procedimientos de conservacion no presentan ciertas zonas, especialmente La Mancha, subternineos: Ios graneros construidos (horrea o gra- pueden deberse esencialmente a la ausencia de inves- naria) y Ios h6rreos o graneros sobreelevados (gra- tigacion arqueologica de epoca medieval, mas que a naria sublimata o sublimia, horrea pensilia). Los una carencia real de silos medievales. Es obvio que silos siguieron siendo empleados habitualmente la consulta exhaustiva de "cartas arqueologicas" puede durante el reino visigodo, tanto en contextos ecle- densificar la presencia de silos, aunque - creemos - siasticos o monasticos como domesticos, urbanos y no variaria en demasia !as areas de extension de este rurales. En lo que se refiere a Ios oscuros momentos procedimiento. entre !as postrimerias del reino visigodo y la apa- ricion de la primera documentacion sefiorial o ecle- Los silos en al-Andalus siastica, en zonas de Catalufia como el Maresme, se ha podido comprobar una perduracion del uso de Paralelamente a la perduracion de silos desde silos entre !as epocas tardorromana y altomedieval. epoca tardorromana, la conservacion subterranea de Asimismo, en la Submeseta Norte, en ciertos asen- Ios excedentes parece adquirir un renovado desar- tamientos tardorromanos y altomedievales que algu- rollo a partir de Ios momentos de dominacion nos investigadores interpretan como pertenecientes a islamica, cuando Ios vemos extendidos por buena comunidades de aldea se han localizado silos sub- parte de al-Andalus y del Magreb, tanto en espacios terraneos considerados como de uso comunal (Reyes urbanos como rurales. En nuestra opinion, estos 1986). Con todo, la evidencia de estos momentos almacenes subtemineos fueron construidos y utili- entre Ios siglos VIINIII y XI parece todavia dema- zados como medias de conservacion de reservas siado tenue y escasa coma para sentar argumenta- alimenticias por productores insertos en formaciones ciones de tipo diacronico sabre continuidad o sociales de raiz comunal o tribal o por grupos fami- discontinuidad de Ios sistemas de almacenamiento. liares extensos, y su gran difusion se debe proba- blemente a la conjuncion de al menos otros dos factores: la existencia de un subsuelo impermeable y Los silos medievales en la peninsula iberica facilmente excavable y la especial adaptabilidad de Ios silos a su insercion en o junta a unidades de Coma precision inicial, hay que dejar sentado que habitacion 2• Los silos andalusies deben entenderse es probable que el cereal no constituyera la base de como elementos de almacenamiento de una parte de la explotacion agricola hasta la implantacion de la Ios excedentes agricolas (cere ales y quiza algunos renta feudal: en Ios silos se almacenaria una parte del tipos de leguminosas: es decir, Ios productos suscep- excedente agricola, en sociedades que, generalmente, tibles de almacenamiento a largo plaza) para con- tendieron a desarrollar una agricultura diversificada stituir una reserva esencialmente destinada a la segu- que no era prioritaria o basicamente cerealista, olei- ridad alimenticia en afios de penuria. Ciertos objetos cola o viticultora. De hecho, paradojicamente, el frecuentemente hallados en silos, que interpretamos declive del uso de silos medievales coincidira con la como amuletos, apuntan a la importancia de la pre- introduccion de una agricultura eminentemente servacion de !as reservas de grana en !as sociedades cerealista como es la feudal, derivada de !as exi- andalusies (Femandez Ugalde e.p.). Con todo, !as gencias de renta. referencias en Ios tratados de agronomia hispano- El mapa adjunto permite comprobar la localiza- musulmanes son casi anecdoticas - sabre todo, Ibn cion de silos medievales en la Peninsula Iberica. Sin al-Awwan 1988, I, XVI) y, para el reino de Toledo, pretensiones de exhaustividad, pues no se ha hecho Yaqut (Bolens, 1979) -, y !as noticias escritas son una revision sistematica de publicaciones locales ni asimismo escasas, aunque constan algunas consultas de "cartas arqueologicas", en else recoge la mayoria juridicas sabre el particular fechadas a partir del siglo de Ios hallazgos publicados de silos fechados entre IX (Lagardere 1995). Ios siglos VII y XVI. Los ejemplos de silos son casi Los silos de epoca andalusi que conocemos inexistentes en el cuadrante Noroccidental de la Pen- gracias a !as excavaciones arqueologicas son general- insula, debido a su litologia paleozoica, poco favo- mente fosas de forma cilindrica, ultrahemiesferica o piriforme, excavadas en el firme geologico (a menu- do de arenas y arcillas terciarias, pero tambien en sustratos rocosos). Su boca suele ser circular, con un Aparte de su localizaci6n en ambientes rurales y urbanos, ditimetro de alga mas de 1 m., y poseen por lo general consta tambien el hallazgo de silos en areas fortificadas (castil- los o alcazabas), que en este caso deben vincularse al una profundidad de alrededor de 1,40 m., que puede abastecimiento de !as guamiciones. alcanzar (y superar) Ios 3 m. En ocasiones, se aprecia 284 El almacenamiento subterraneo y la conquista feudal en la peninsula iberica: aportaciones de la arqueologia I • 6 I I .. .. ·. . .... ••••• 'c;:~~: ~. ..· .. . ..... .. .. ~ ... .. ..· .. .. • .~ ... .. ... i• ·.· I Fig. 1.- Distribuci6n de silos medievales en la Peninsula Jberica segun !as referencias en bibliografia arqueol6gica. en la boca un rebaje destinado a encajar una tapadera o construcciones anexas como corrales. Conside- de madera o de piedra. Las paredes de los silos estan ramos que la iniciativa de la excavaci6n de silos cuidadosamente redondeadas y alisadas y, en algunos como los descritos debi6 de corresponder a unidades de los ejemplares cilindricos de mayor profundidad, familiares que desarrollaran una actividad de pro- poseen agujeros escalonados para facilitar el ascenso ducci6n agricola y que, en cualquier caso, poseerian desde el interior. La capacidad de estos silos subter- una cierta capacidad de almacenamiento domestico raneos no es regular: en los excavados por nosotros del excedente. En ocasiones, los grupos familiares en Madrid suele encontrarse entre 13 y 34 Hecto- pueden asociarse para constituir espacios de almace- litros; en la ciudad de Lerida, su capacidad suele namiento colectivos, si bien la propiedad de cada uno oscilar entre 6 y 14 HI. de los silos seguia probablemente siendo privada o En general, puede afirmarse que en todo el terri- familiar, no comunal. torio de al-Andalus se recurre a la construcci6n de Sin duda, no los silos no son el unico sistema de silos subterraneos siempre que el subsuelo lo per- almacenamiento empleado por las sociedades his- mite, bien relacionados con viviendas urbanas pano-musulmanas, aunque sean el mas reconocible: (Merida, Vascos, Calatrava la Vieja, Lerida), dentro por ejemplo, las algorfas o sobrados de las viviendas de las mismas o en corrales o estructuras anejas, o y las bodegas cumplieron sin duda esta funci6n, como bien agrupados para constituir areas de almacena- lo hacian en la Sevilla del XIII y, sobre todo, los alho- miento ~Madrid?). La distribuci6n espacial de los silos ries, trojes o graneros ventilados, las estructuras de que aparecen en agrupaciones urbanas no parece obe- almacenamiento (hri) que se encontraban en los cor- decer a una planificaci6n organica. Aunque a menudo rales o dentro de las viviendas, y el almacenamiento han desaparecido los restos de las viviendas coeta- en tinajas de ceramica. Hay que citar, finalmente, la neas, es probable que cada silo o conjunto de silos se extension de los graneros en cuevas artificiales sobre relacionara con estructuras de habitaci6n familiares, acantilados por amplias zonas de Levante y del Sud- bien en el interior de las viviendas, bien en espacios este, y la reciente excavaci6n de un granero fortifi- 285 A. Fernandez Ugalde cado similar a Ios ksar(s) marroquies, en Murcia (De pretan como pertenecientes a la fase condal de la Meulemeester, Matthys & Amigues 1995). ciudad (fines del siglo XI-siglo XII) (Menchon, Macfas & Mufioz 1994), y fueron amortizados en el siglo XIV. Los silos en territorios "cristianos" del tercio norte peninsular: Cataluiia, Cantabria, Castilla y Leon, Alava El almacenamiento subterraneo a largo plazo en epoca medieval La mayoria de Ios ejemplos de silos en territories cristianos se encuentran en ubicaciones rurales, a Es evidente que !os silos subterraneos pueden diferencia de Ios islamicos, que son tanto urbanos funcionar dentro de regimenes de almacenamiento como rurales. A la luz de Ios hallazgos arqueologicos, comunales, domesticos o sefioriales e, incluso, de Castilla se revela como uno de Ios nucleos mas densos acumulacion capitalista. Por tanto, si en determi- de extension de Ios silos. En La Rioja, un buen ejemplo nados momentos o zonas su aparicion puede coin- de silos relacionados con viviendas es el de la primera cidir con un proceso de feudalizacion (por ejemplo, ocupacion medieval del asentamiento de Monte Can- en las sagreras de la Catalunya Vella entre Ios siglos tabria, en Logrofio, datada entre el siglo X y principios XI y mediados del XII) (Marti 1988), en otros es su del XII (Perez Arrondo & Andres 1986). cancelacion la que indicani la implantacion de estruc- La Catalufia feudal es otra de !as zonas con mayor turas feudales (por ejemplo, con posterioridad a la densidad de silos medievales y para la que contamos conquista castellana del reino de Toledo). con informacion arqueologica sistematica. Varias En general, parece observarse que, historicamente, excavaciones proporcionan argumentos para consi- la construccion y mantenimiento de silos subtemineos derar la continuidad del uso de silos entre la epoca suele responder a iniciativas particulares o comunales, romana y la altomedieval: destacan secuencias como coincidir con un almacenamiento domestico (suele la observada en L'Aiguacuit (Tarrasa), villa romana mantenerse la propiedad privada de los silos, aunque a la que se superponen un poblado de cabafias del esten agrupados o formen parte de graneros colec- siglo VII, asociado a un "campo de silos", y, despues, tivos) y con modos de produccion antiguos o no un nuevo poblado de viviendas con zocalo, en Ios feudales. Cuando Ios silos perviven en epoca feudal, lo siglos VIII-IX asociado a otro "campo de silos" hacen generalmente como sistemas de almacena- (Coil, Molina & Roig 1993). Una modalidad de loca- miento de excedente organizados y, a menudo, cen- lizacion de silos bien documentada en el area cata- tralizados, establecidos por iniciativa de entidades lana es la agrupacion en sagreras en torno a las igle- nobiliarias, momirquicas, eclesiasticas o concejiles. sias. Se conocen ejemplares que funcionaban en !os En nuestra opinion, la evidencia historica y etno- siglos X y XI, aparecidos durante !as intervenciones grafica parece inequivocamente demostrar que !os arqueologicas en iglesias romanicas. En ocasiones se silos subterraneos son una solucion preferente para la ha enunciado su asociacion a ocupaciones de epoca conservacion del excedente a largo plazo por parte de "de repoblacion", como en el caso de Santa C<'mdia Ios productores insertos en formaciones sociales de d'Orpi en Barcelona (Lopez Mullor, Caixal & Fierro raiz tribal o pre-feudal. Aun mas, como demuestran 1986), aunque se destaquen Ios precedentes del estudios historicos relativos a! Magreb moderno, la ensagrerament entre Ios siglos VII y X - caso, por capacidad de almacenamiento de alimentos es clave ejemplo, de Ios silos de Santa Margarida (Navarro & para el mantenimiento de la autonomia familiar Mauri 1986, 1994) o de Ios de Sant Mar9al de (Bergeret 1985, 152; Rosenberger 1985), y el simbo- Terrassola (Fierro-Macia & Domingo 1987) -; estos lismo tradicional asocia Ios silos a la vitalidad del autores han hipotetizado que la constitucion de sagre- grupo (Lefebure 1985). Viceversa, como demuestra ras podria relacionarse con una busqueda campesina la experiencia colonial en el siglo XX, la destruccion de la proteccion sacra en momentos de feudalizacion del autoabastecimiento campesino es la clave de la y bandolerismo sefiorial. Sin embargo, coincidimos sumision y de la dependencia, y la estrategia prio- con Marti en considerarlas mas bien como parte del ritaria de los conquistadores. proceso de reorganizacion del espacio rural por la Iglesia y !os sefiores feudales que entre el siglo XI y mediados del XII conduce a la sustitucion de la El fenomeno del abandono de silos en la peninsula estructura eclesiastica de villae por la parroquial, iberica: algunas evidencias arqueologicas unido a la concentracion del poblamiento en torno a fortificaciones, a modo de incastellamento (Marti Un problema fundamental a la hora de profun- 1988). Ciertos silos aparecidos en Tarragona se inter- dizar en un estudio diacronico es el de las dataciones 286 El almacenamiento subterraneo y la conquista feudal en lapeninsula iberica: aportaciones de la arqueologia de Ios estratos de relleno de silos: solo una cuarta dencias de perduracion del procedimiento de con- parte de !as referencias bibliognificas aportan una servacion en silos a partir de epoca bajomedieval o en cronologia mas o menos precisa y/o fiable. No entra- epoca modema. En cuanto a la Marca Superior, y remos, en general, a discutir !as cronologias adjudi- especialmente a! territorio leridano, el momento su- cadas por sus excavadores. No obstante, conside- puesto de amortizacion de la mayoria de Ios silos del ramos que a menudo se tiende a elevar !as dataciones, Antic Portal de Magdalena es poco anterior a la con- en buena medida por planteamientos reduccionistas quista (1150) (Loriente 1990), aunque podria quiza que contraponen lo "islamico" y lo "cristiano". Con retrasarse algunos decenios, y se constatan rellenos todo, mencionemos que la gran mayoria de Ios de silos ya en epoca de taifas. En todo caso, las rellenos de silos no han sido excavados estratigra- viviendas de nueva planta edificadas en Lerida en el ficamente ni insertos en cronologias relativas junto a siglo XIII carecen de silos. secuencias extemas a! propio silo. De particular interes resulta el analisis de la evo- Una de !as zonas en !as que la hipotesis de un lucion de Ios silos en !as regiones conquistadas entre abandono de silos coincidente con la creciente feuda- mediados del siglo XII y mediados del siglo XIII: lizacion parece verificarse es en Barcelona, donde se Valencia, Baleares, Sevilla, el Algarve. En cuanto a observa una sistematica oclusion de silos en tomo a! Andalucia, es sintomatico que la mayor parte de !as siglo XII. La secuencia de abandono es bien conocida posibles estructuras de tipo silo conocidas posean en el Maresme y en algunas otras comarcas: se rellenos datables "en epoca almohade", que bien produce una reutilizacion de silos como contenedores podrian remontarse al final de la dominacion musul- de basuras fechable hacia fines del siglo XI o prin- mana de la zona. Un ejemplo que se adapta perfec- cipios del XII (Clariana et al. 1986, 1987). Los silos tamente a la hipotesis es el de Villa Julia (Carcabuey, agrupados en sagreras eclesiasticas parecen asimismo Cordoba), presunta alqueria en la que el momento de sufrir una oclusion general fechable entre fines del cegado intencionado de Ios ocho silos localizados siglo XI y principios del XIII (Lopez Mullor et al. podria coincidir con la conquista por la orden de 1986; Moro & Roig 1994; Navarro & Mauri 1994). Calatrava (1240-45), constatandose una subsiguiente Algunos autores ya han relacionado la oclusion de continuidad del asentamiento (Carmona 1995). En silos y el abandono de algunos poblados con la reor- Levante y Baleares, la mayoria de Ios rellenos de ganizacion territorial derivada del establecimiento silos pueden enmarcarse en un periodo proximo a la del poder condal (Coil, Molina & Roig 1994 para el conquista o inmediatamente posterior a ella. Asi, Ios Valles). dos silos hallados en Paterna, empleados como tales En Castilla y Leon, un caso de oclusion gene- hasta fines del siglo XII (Mesquida 1990), o el con- ralizada de un conjunto de silos, producida hacia el junta de cinco silos junto a la Torre de Silla, que siglo XI o quiza todavia en el X, es la observada parece haber sido inutilizado a fines del siglo XIII. recientemente en la Tierra de Campos palentina (De Otros posibles casos similares son Ios de un silo la Cruz & Lamalfa 1994); tambien se ha querido rela- domestico en Alhama de Murcia (Bafios & Bemabe cionar con la reorganizacion del poblamiento im- 1994), Ios diversos silos localizados en Javea y la puesta por el poder condal. En general, abundan en comarca de la Marina Alta alicantina o el de ciertos Castilla y Leon los casos de cegados producidos "pozos" descubiertos en la ciudad de Elda (Alicante), genericamente entre Ios siglos XI y XIII, aunque hay rellenos a fines del XII o principios del XIII. que hacer mencion a la particular imprecision de !as cronologias en la zona. Inutilizaciones generales de silos se han observado en las viviendas de la fase Conclusiones medieval temprana del asentamiento de Monte Can- tabria (Logrofio ), a principios del siglo XII (Perez En nuestra opinion, puede afirmarse que existen Arrondo & Andres 1986) o en Ios 36 silos del yaci- zonas de la Peninsula Iberica en !as que parece veri- miento medieval de Los Paletones (Cenicero, La ficarse la hipotesis esbozada y otras que presentan Rioja) (Gomez Martinez 1989). Casos de oclusiones casos discordantes. Por supuesto, existen en todas !as discordantes, por tardias, se constatan en A.Iava, Bur- zonas ejemplos de silos cuya oclusion se data en gos y, sobre todo, en la ciudad de Valladolid, donde momentos demasiado tardios para lo planteado en se extienden, e incluso superan el siglo XV. este articulo - por cierto, buena parte de ellos en el El reino de Toledo, objeto de estudios pormeno- entomo de fortificaciones militares, residencias sefio- rizados por nuestra parte (Femandez Ugalde 1994), riales o edificios religiosos -, y es obvio que existen parece ser una de !as principales zonas de confir- abandonos de silos antes de la conquista feudal por macion de la hipotesis de una oclusion subsiguiente diversas razones; ademas, el relleno de un silo no a la conquista cristiana de 1085, y no existen evi- implica necesariamente que haya seguido en uso 287 A. Femandez Ugalde hasta el momento de su oclusion, y el abandono de Bibliografia una parte de Ios silos puede ser producto de procesos particulares o de la expulsion de poblacion musul- BANOS J. & BERNABE M. 1994: Excavaciones arque- mana. Todo lo anterior no invalida la hipotesis de la ologicas en el casco antiguo de Alhama de Mur- contradiccion de Ios sistemas de almacenamiento a cia, Revista de arqueologia 157, 60-61. largo plazo, privados, familiares o chinicos, con el BERGERET A. 1985: Les reserves de grains des feudalismo. Insistimos, por ultimo, en que el modelo societes africaines au Proche-Orient, au Maghreb propuesto se aplica esencialmente a Ios silos domes- et dans les pays du Sahel, en: Gast, Sigaut & ticos o a Ios silos comunales de comunidades de aldea Beutler (eds.), fasc. 1, 151-153. o tribales, y se verifica esencialmente en yacimientos BOLENS L. 1979: La conservation des grains en con continuidad de ocupacion. Andalousie medievale d'apres les traites d'agro- Lo cierto es que desde la epoca bajomedieval, nomie hispano-arabes, en: Gast & Sigaut F. (eds.), cuando las fuentes documentales comienzan a ser rela- vol. 1, 105-112. tivamente abundantes y ha desaparecido del registro CARMONA R. 1995: Los silos hispanomusulmanes de arqueologico toda evidencia de almacenamiento do- Villa Julia (Carcabuey, Cordoba), Antiquitas 6, mestico y subterraneo, Ios t1nicos sistemas de almace- 133-140. namiento mencionados son !as alhondigas, de canicter CLARIANA J.F., 0ROBITG M.J., PORTILLO T. & comunitario, concentrado u organizado, es decir, no PREVOSTI M. 1986: Datos para el estudio del relacionadas directa y fisicamente con las viviendas de poblamiento rural altomedieval del Maresme Ios productores sino vinculadas a un cierto grado de (Barcelona), Aetas del I Congreso de arqueologia centralizacion, y Ios graneros o conjuntos de silos medieval espafiola, Zaragoza, vol. IV, 569-585. vinculados a castillos, edificios palatinos, nobiliarios, COLL J.M., MOLfNA J.A. & Roro J. 1993: L'Aigua- monasticos o eclesiasticos: en la ciudad feudal se cuit (Terrassa, Valles occidental). La transicio tienden a concentrar el almacenamiento y la distribu- d'una vila romana en un vilatge medieval, IV cion de Ios productos, a menudo mediante la concesion Congreso de arqueologia medieval espafiola, de monopolios. Asf pues, la cuestion clave no es que Resumenes, Alicante. desaparezca el procedimiento de conservacion en silos DE LA CRUZ A. & LAMALFA C. 1994: Monzon de en si, sino el fin de su utilizacion generalizada en el Campos: la transformacion del sistema de alma- entomo domestico, y la evidencia de una concentra- cenamiento como consecuencia del cambio en !as cion fisica de Ios excedentes. Es sintomatico que Ios estructuras agricolas, IV Congreso de arqueologia moriscos del reino de Granada conservaran en uso Ios medieval espafiola, Alicante, vol. III, 605-610. silos todavia a mediados del siglo XVI, o que en Ceuta, DE MEULEMEESTER J. MATTHYS A. & AMIGUES F. donde Ios cronistas portugueses de la conquista 1995: Un grenier collectif fortifie hispano-musul- destacan la amplia extension de Ios silos por el espacio man? Le Cabezo de la Cobertera (Vallee du rio urbano, se distingan oclusiones a partir de la conquista Segura/Murcie), Bilan provisoire d'une approche de 1415. ethnoarcheologique, en: BAZZANA A. & DELAI- La ruptura de la autonomfa campesina por el GUE M.C. (eds.), Ethno-archeologie mediterra- feudalismo es un fenomeno parangonable a otros neenne. Finalites, demarches et resultats, Madrid, procesos mejor conocidos: la disgregacion de las 181-196. familias extensas, fenomeno observado historica- DEMERSON J. & ZOZA YA, J. (1983): Ceramicas isla- mente en Galicia y el valle del Duero o, arqueologi- micas de C'an Portmany (Ibiza), Boletin de la camente, a traves de la transformaci6n de !as vivien- Sociedad Espafiola de Orientalistas XIX, 163-184. das moriscas de las sierras alicantinas (Torr6 & Ivars FERNANDEZ UGALDE A. 1994: El fenomeno del 1990); la extension de Ios derechos banales sobre relleno de silos y la implantacion del feudalismo molinos o la prohibicion de uso de tanores u homos en Madrid y en el reino de Toledo, IV Congreso de pan porta tiles (del arabe tannur) impuesta por Ios conquistadores catalanes de la ciudad de Valencia (Gutierrez 1996, cit. trabajos de Torro): el epflogo de Es notorio que el almacenamiento en silos dificulta per se todos estos procesos es la dependencia sefiorial de la la extracci6n de renta, al esconder el total de la cosecha (aspecto poblacion rural y urbana. En buena medida, el mucho mas dificil de conseguir mientras se empleen estructuras almacenamiento a largo plazo en silos, que dificulta al aire libre). En epoca carolingia, el Cartulario carolingio de la "visibilidad" y, por tanto, la cuantificacion y fisca- Villis prohfbe la ocultaci6n subterranea de cosechas (Mauny 1979). Noticias sobre una tardfa ocultaci6n subterranea de lizacion de !as cosechas3 , supone una contradicci6n cosechas en la Ibiza del siglo XVIII, con la consiguiente con la imposicion de renta feudal. indignaci6n del obispo por el impago de diezmos y tributos, pueden consultarse en Demerson & Zozaya 1983. 288 El almacenamiento subterraneo y la conquista feudal en la peninsula iberica: aportaciones de la arqueologia de arqueologia medieval espafiola, Alicante, vol. ovoides et silos, en: Gast & Sigaut F. (eds.), vol. Ill, 611-61 7. 1, 48-53 .. FERNANDEZ UGALDE A. e.p.: jQue Dios nos MENCHON J., MAciAS J.M. & MuNOZ A. 1994: conserve el grano! Una interpretacion de !os omo- Aproximaci6 a! proces transformador de la ciutat platos con inscripcion arabe procedentes de yaci- de Tarraco. Del Baix Imperi a I 'Edat Mitjana, mientos medievales, Al-Qantara. Pyrenae 25, 225-258. FIERRO-MACIA J. & DOMINGO R. 1987: Excava- MESQUIDA M. 1990: Plaza del Pueblo. Paterna, ciones en la iglesia de Sant Maryal de Terrassola 1'Horta, Excavacions arqueologiques de salva- (Torrelavit, Barcelona), If Congreso de arque- ment a la Comunitat Valenciana 1984-1988. I. ologia medieval espafiola, Madrid, Ill, 421-428. Intervencions urbanes, Valencia, 112-114. GAST M. & SIGAUT F. (eds.) 1979: Les techniques de MORO A. & ROIG J. 1994: El conjunt de sitges alt- a conservation des grains long terme. Leur role medievals de Sta. Maria d'Egara per a l'emmagat- dans la dynamique des systemes de cultures et des zematge de cereal, IV Congreso de arqueologia societes, Vol. 1, Paris. medieval espafiola, Alicante, vol. Ill, 619-624. GAST M. & Sigaut F. (eds.) 1981: Les techniques de NA v ARRO R. & MAURI A. 1986: La excavacion de un a conservation des grains long terme, Leur role silo medieval en Santa Margarida (Martorell, dans la dynamique des systhnes de cultures et des Barcelona), Aetas del I Congreso de arqueologia societes, Vol. 2, Paris. medieval espafiola, vol. V, 435-452. GAST M., S!GAUT F. & BEUTLER C. (eds.) 1985: Les NA VARRO R. & MAURI A. 1994: Santa Margarida de techniques de conservation des grains along Martorell: la transici6 de I' antiguitat tardana a! terme, Leur role dans la dynamique des systemes m6n medieval, IV Congreso de arqueologia de cultures et des societes, Vol. 3, fasc. 1 y 2, medieval espafiola, vol. Ill, 341-344. Paris. PAIS J. 1993: Sementes de urn silo omiada (UE 67) de G6MEZ MARTINEZ J.R. 1989: Carreteras y arqueo- Mesas de Castelinho (Almodovar), Arqueologia logia, Revista de arqueologia 101, 6-7. medieval2, 109-110. GUTIERREZ S. 1996: La producci6n de pan y aceite en PEREZ ARRONDO C.L. & ANDRES VALERO S. 1986: ambientes domesticos. Limites y posibilidades de El poblamiento medieval en el yacimiento arque- una aproximaci6n etnoarqueol6gica, Arqueologia ol6gico de Monte Cantabria (Logrofio, La Rioja), medieval 4 (Formas de habitar e alimentar;:iio na Aetas del I congreso de arqueologia medieval Idade Media), 237-254. espafiola, Zaragoza, vol. IV, 485-505. IBN AL AWWAN 1988: Libra de agricultura. Su REYES F. 1986: Excavaciones en la ermita de Santa autor, el Doctor excelente Abu Zacaria Iahia Cruz (Valdezate, Burgos), Aetas del I congreso de Aben Mohamed ben Ahmed Ebn el Awam, arqueologia medieval espafiola, Zaragoza, vol. V, sevillano, Ed. facsimil de la de J.A. Banqueri 7-27. ( 1802), 2 vols, Madrid, Ministerio de Agricultura. RosENBERGER B. 1985: Reserves de grains et pou- LAGARDERE V. 1995: Histoire et societe en accident voir dans le Maroc precolonial, en: Gast, Sigaut & musulman au Moyen Age. Analyse du "Mi 'yar" Beutler (eds.), vol. 3, fasc. 1, 237-268. d'Al Wansarisi, Madrid. TEST ART A. 1985: Les reserves alimentaires dans les LEFEBURE C. 1985: Reserves cerealieres et societe: societes de chasse-cueillette. Presentation, en: 1'ensilage chez les marocains, en: Gast, Sigaut & Gast, Sigaut & Beutler (eds.), vol. 3, fasc. 1, 9-13. Beutler (eds.), vol. 3, fasc. 1, 210-235. ToRR6 J. & IV ARS J. 1990: La vivienda rural mudejar LOPEZ MULLOR A., CAIXAL A., FIERRO J., DOMINGO y morisca en el Sur del pais valenciano, en: R. & JUAN M. 1986: Excavaciones en la iglesia de BERMUDEZ J. & BAZZANA A. (coords.): La casa Santa O'mdia d'Orpi (Barcelona), Aetas del I con- hispano-musulmana. Aportaciones de la arqueo- greso de arqueologia medieval espafiola, vol. V, logia. La maison hispano-musulmane. Apports de 95-109. I 'archeologie, Granada, 73-97. LORIENTE A. 1990: L 'horitz6 andalusi de I 'antic Portal de Magdalena, Monografies d'arqueologia urbana 2, Lerida. MARTi R. 1988: L'ensagrerament: l'adveniment de les sagreres feudals, Faventia 10, 153-182. Antonio Femandez Ugalde MARTINEZ SALCEDO A. & CEPEDA J.J. 1994: Con- 'AREA Sociedad Cooperativa Arqueologica junto arqueol6gico de Buradon (Salinillas de cl Villa, 3 - 2° D Buradon), Arkeoikuska 93, 257-270. 28005 Madrid MAUNY R. 1979: Contribution a !'etude des fosses Espaiia 289 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference - Volume 6 Elena Serrano, Antonio Fermindez Ugalde & Leonor Peiia-Chocarro Los Silos Medievales en el Reino de Toledo 1 Introducci6n cionadas con Ios vigentes programas de intervencion arqueologica vinculada a proyectos constructivos y, Comentarios de geografos musulmanes de Ios en buena medida, todavia ineditas 1• siglos XI y XII ilustran sobre la singular difusion que alcanzo este sistema de conservacion de reservas de cereal en la region de Toledo. Los silos son Ios vesti- 2 La identificaci6n de las estructuras como silos gios arqueologicos mas caracteristicos de la Meseta iberica desde la prehistoria reciente, a partir de media- No ha sido hasta epoca relativamente reciente dos del tercer milenio antes de nuestra era, y su uso cuando, en contra de la opinion generalizada, se han perdura durante !as epocas prerromana, romana y empezado a interpretar Ios numerosos "agujeros" ex- visigoda, habiendo alcanzado incluso hasta el siglo cavados directamente en el terreno natural arcilloso 2 XIX. y generalmente carentes de recubrimiento, como En este trabajo se trata la informacion arqueo- silos subternineos destinados a! almacenamiento de logica relativa a Ios silos medievales en el reino cereal u otro tipo de reservas alimentarias. La inter- musulman de Toledo y a su evolucion posterior. El pretacion predominante era la de basureros, ya que su reino de Toledo fue uno de Ios pequefios Estados que excavacion proporcionaba evidencias de la deposi- surgieron como resultado de la descomposicion del cion de vertidos de diversa naturaleza, y el interes de Califato de Cordoba a partir de principios del siglo XI la investigacion se limitaba a la informacion aportada (Fig. 1). La conquista castellano-leonesa de la capital por Ios objetos contenidos en Ios estratos de relleno y de gran parte del reino en 1085 supone el primer de estos "agujeros". Los estudios se han centrado en gran avance de la expansion feudal en la Peninsula Ios artefactos como unidad de amllisis, destinados a Iberica; sin embargo, una parte del antiguo territorio la elaboracion de tipologias (generalmente cerami- de Toledo perdura bajo el poder del imperio almo- cas) que, aunque necesarias, han ocultado informa- ravide durante el siglo XII. cion sobre la funcionalidad original de !as estructuras Los hallazgos de silos se multiplican en epoca excavadas. islamica (711-1 085) en ambientes urban os y rurales: Efectivamente, la identificacion de !as estructuras ciudades, castillos, fortificaciones, alquerias. No ob- es problematica. Pozos de captacion, pozos de noria, stante, nuestro interes nos lleva a centramos en Ios pozos negros, etc. podrian ser considerados como ejemplares documentados estratigraficamente en con- interpretaciones plausibles que, de no ser convenien- textos urbanos con continuidad temporal durante la temente refutadas para cada caso, serian tan validas Baja Edad Media (lo cual, por desgracia, nos limita como la aqui esbozada. Carecemos, en la mayoria de casi exclusivamente a la ciudad de Madrid). En el Ios casos, de informacion relativa a! uso original de entomo de Madrid son abundantisimos Ios silos loca- !as estructuras, ya que no nos ha llegado ni el con- lizados en !as excavaciones recientes, en general rela- tenido original ni elementos susceptibles de relacio- Entre las excavaciones madrilefias publicadas sinteticamente por Ios firmantes, mencionemos Fem{mdez Ugalde 1996; Femandez Ugalde & Serrano 1997 (e.p.); Serrano 1996; Serrano & Yanez 1996; Vallespin et al. 1990 y Yafiez et al. 1992. 2 En el caso peninsular si parece observarse una asociaci6n entre el sustrato geo16gico arcilloso (terrenos terciarios) y el empleo de tecnicas de almacenamiento subterraneo. No obstante, y a modo de ejemplo, vease el caso de Ios asentamientos de la Edad del Hierro inglesa donde Ios vestigios arqueo16gicos mayoritariamente representados son tambien "agujeros" excavados en varios tipos de rocas, para Ios que se ha demostrado un uso original como silos subterraneos (Reynolds 1979). En cualquier caso, clima y condiciones naturales del subsuelo condicionan, que no deterrninan, la elecci6n de una determinada tecnica de almacenamiento. 291 E. Serrano, A. Femandez Ugalde & L. Peiia-Chocarro Fig. 1. - a) Distribuci6n general de silos medievales en la Peninsula Iberica y limites del Reino de Toledo. b) Lugares de hallazgo de silos medievales en el reino de Toledo. ,·,~··· . . . . ~:: •.' I. TALAMANCA 2. GUADALAJARA 3. LAS CHORRERAS 1 4. FRJAS DE ALBARRACIN u 2 5. ALCALA DE HENARES u u 5 6. RECOPOLIS 11 9 19 7. HUETE uUU 'D2 8. PAJARONCILLO 13 14 10 u .24 9. MADRJD uu []25 10. PINTO 12. ESCALONA 026 13. 0LMOS 14. lLLESCAS 15. MELQUE 16. BEL VIS 17. VASCOS 18. CALATRAVA LA Y!EJA 19. LAS FUENTECILLAS 20. MAQUEDA 21. ALCOHUJATE 22. PERALES DEL RIO 23. CANAVERUELAS 24. V!LLAREJO DE SAL VANES 25. PANTOJA 26. MAGAN narse con esta primera funcion. La presencia de La falta de evidencias en el propio contexto arque- enlucidos no constituye por si misma un argumento, ologico ha dificultado la identificacion, clasificacion por cuanto Ios silos medievales del reino de Toledo, e interpretacion de !as fosas. Una vez vaciado del con- y en general Ios del resto de la Peninsula Iberica, no tenido final, Ios principales elementos susceptibles presentan revestimientos permanentes, siendo lo de amilisis y cuantificacion son Ios relacionados con habitual el empleo de capas de paja protectoras. En aspectos morfologicos y volumetricos, a partir de Ios conclusion, en la mayoria de Ios ejemplos analizados cuales se pueden efectuar estimaciones sobre capaci- se observa una ausencia de elementos aportados por dad. Inevitablemente tenemos que acudir a! apoyo de el registro arqueologico que apoyen la hipotesis del fuentes documentales, que para el caso que nos ocupa uso como silos. Como problema afiadido, a menudo resultarian suficientemente explfcitas (Ibn al-A wwan se echa en falta en !as publicaciones de estructuras 1988, I, cap XVI; Bolens 1979), a ejemplos consta- como !as aqui analizadas la aportacion de la nece- tados arqueologicamente fuera de la region y, con las saria documentacion planimetrica y de secciones debidas precauciones, a paralelos etnograficos en el arqueologicas. mundo ishimico meditemineo (Lefebure 1985). 292 Los Silos Medievales en el Reino de Toledo Para Ios ejemplos analizados del reino de Toledo es notoria la ausencia de elementos que corroboren la hip6tesis esbozada sobre la vinculaci6n de las estruc- turas excavadas a la conservaci6n de alimentos. Lamentablemente, carecemos en general de asocia- ciones entre viviendas y silos. Un solo caso docu- mentado en Madrid (Cava Baja 30), cuya fiabilidad estratigrafica no es total, plantea la posible relaci6n entre una estructura construida y uno de Ios silos documentados; salvo en el caso de la ciudad de Vascos, donde su excavador documenta la presencia u V de un pozo o silo en el interior de una estancia de una u de las viviendas excavadas, el resto de Ios ejemplos u publicados son hallazgos de silos aislados. Excava- ciones en curso en Madrid y otras comarcas del cen- tro de la Peninsula pueden, sin embargo, proporcionar V nuevos elementos sobre la asociaci6n entre silos y viviendas. lgualmente interesante es el analisis del ultimo contenido de los silos. Como han demostrado traba- jos de investigaci6n encaminados a la resoluci6n de 2m. problemas similares, los vertidos que han sido anali- zados presentan un elevado componente de materia organica susceptible de ser destinada a fines prac- ticos como el abonado de los campos mas pr6ximos. La explicaci6n de su deposici6n final en fosas debe Fig. 2. - Secciones de silos excavados en la ciudad de vincularse al abandono forzado de una estructura Madrid. subterranea preexistente o a imposiciones de distinto caracter (profilacticas, higienicas, etc.). Por ultimo, mencionemos que deterrninados obje- mas profundos, y la ausencia de elementos estructu- tos hallados en el interior de silos (amuletos, omopla- rales anexos impide plantear su interpretaci6n como tos inscritos en arabe, ceramicas romanas recortadas, letrinas o pozos negros de viviendas. Las capacidades cuemos de ciervo) remiten posiblemente a practicas de los silos oscilan generalmente entre Ios 13 y 34 magicas vinculadas a la conservaci6n de las reservas Hect6litros. Si atendemos a la documentaci6n medie- de grano (Femandez Ugalde e.p.). val de la Geniza de El Cairo estudiada por Goitein, alrededor de 32 HI. de trigo constituian el abasteci- miento medio durante un afio de una familia hebrea 3 Capacidades, morfologia, distribuci6n, estrati- de 8 a 10 personas de Fustat (Goitein 1983, 129). ficaci6n interna Otros silos mas pequefios pueden haber sido destina- dos al almacenamiento de la sementera o de frutos Parad6jicamente, el momento de la utilizaci6n de secos. los silos como tales es aquel de que poseemos menor En cuanto a su distribuci6n en entomos urbanos, inforrnaci6n. Raramente se han preservado Ios estra- hacia el siglo XI, en una ciudad del reino de Toledo tos de ocupaci6n coetaneos a los silos. Esto hace de importancia secundaria, como es el caso de Madrid, imprescindible proceder a analisis detallados de la Ios silos poseian una amplia dispersion: hasta la fecha capacidad y distribuci6n espacial de cara a la aproxi- aparecen forrnando agrupaciones en la practica totali- maci6n a su funcionalidad original. dad de !as numerosas excavaciones efectuadas intra- Los silos documentados en Madrid consisten en muros del denominado "segundo recinto" (area amu- fosas piriforrnes, troncoc6nicas o cilindricas, excava- rallada a fines del siglo XI o principios del XII, que das en el substrato terciario de arenas o arcillas (Fig. se considera habitada desde epocas algo anteriores) 2). Las paredes estan cuidadosamente alisadas y, en (Fig. 3; Lam. 1). Faltan por el momento elementos ocasiones, se observan rebajes para encajar tapaderas que perrnitan asegurar si nos encontramos ante areas u oquedades a ambos lados de la boca. Las profun- de almacenamiento en espacio abierto, como podrian didades Ios diferencian netamente de Ios pozos de indicar el emplazamiento periferico de la mayor parte captaci6n de agua o de los pozos de noria, mucho de !as excavaciones efectuadas y la general ausencia 293 E. Serrano, A. Femandez Ugalde & L. Peiia-Chocarro 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cava Baja 30 0 'Casa de San lsidro' Fig. 3. -Madrid medieval: limites de la madina emiral y del "segundo recinto "amurallado. En Ios recuadros, planta de Ios silos de !as excavaciones urbanas en a "Casa de San Isidro "yen Cava Baja, 30. de estructuras, o bien si Ios silos se relacionaron estratos diferenciables dentro de un mismo silo oscila fisica y economicamente con unidades de habitacion. entre 2 y 13. Es frecuente que fragmentos ceramicos En general, Ios silos excavados en la region de un mismo recipiente se encuentren repartidos en toledana presentan un relleno pluriestratificado. Los distintos estratos, y no solo en Ios inmediatamente estratos de relleno, compuestos esencialmente de contiguos, lo cual indica que, en general, el relleno de tierras con elevada proporcion en materia organica Ios silos se produjo rapidamente y de una sola vez. En carbonizada que contiene numerosos fragmentos cera- nuestra opinion, la estratificacion que se observa en micos y restos oseos, son de superficies sensible- el interior de la mayoria de Ios silos esta generada por mente horizontales y casi siempre netamente diferen- la limpieza de ambientes domesticos y el ulterior ciables por su composicion (mayor o menor proper- transporte de Ios desperdicios en contenedores de cion de cenizas y materia organica carbonizada) y su escasa capacidad (a cuestas en espuertas o en alforjas, color. En Ios excavados por nosotros, el numero de a lomos de bestias de carga), procedimiento que pue- 294 Los Silos Medievales en el Reino de Toledo Lam. 1. - Vista de !os silos aparecidos en la excavaci6n de Cava Baja, 30 (ivfadrid),junto a la muralla del "segun- do recinto ". de llegar a producir estratos de escasa potencia, como toledanos de epoca islamica, a pesar de la escasa evi- es el caso de los silos rellenos por numerosos estratos dencia de asociaci6n a viviendas y estratos andalu- sutiles. sies, recientes trabajos plantean la existencia de indicios suficientes para hipotetizar su abandono generalizado en el reino a partir de la conquista 4 Cronologia feudal, desde fines del siglo XI y durante Ios siglos XII y XIII. El proceso de oclusi6n pudo comenzar ya La informaci6n que habitualmente ha generado la en las postrimerias del reino de taifas, pero puede excavaci6n de silos se refiere a dataciones o aproxi- seguirse sin dificultades en el siglo posterior a la maciones cronol6gicas procedentes del amilisis de conquista, gracias al reestudio de materiales cenimi- los artefactos contenidos en los estratos de relleno, y cos y a la documentaci6n de objetos de preciso valor a estudios tipol6gicos centrados en el material cera- datante, entre ellos monedas. Este proceso de amorti- mice. Al emplearse referentes tipol6gicos, se vienen zaci6n subsiguiente a la conquista acaso puede reco- mayoritariamente encuadrando Ios silos entre los nocerse en otras regiones de la Peninsula (Femandez siglos IX-XI y XII-XIII, a partir de la presencia/ Ugalde 1994). ausencia de determinados f6siles directores, como las decoraciones en "verde y manganese" y "cuerda seca", 0 de determinadas formas ceramicas emplea- 5 Analisis del material organico das para obtener precisiones mas certeras. Las data- ciones evidencian un rigido panorama reduccionista Habitualmente, la ultima funci6n de Ios silos que contrapone lo islamico a lo cristiano, a partir del medievales es la de contenedores de desperdicios cual resulta dificil establecer evoluciones diacr6ni- domesticos. Por ello, una de las principales ventajas cas, y que tiende a sobrevalorar Ios cam bios esteticos de su excavaci6n es la de proporcionar abundantes reflejados en las diferentes producciones materiales contenidos de materia organica, generalmente en y en ningun caso a cuestionar hip6tesis relativas a! buen estado de conservaci6n. Sin embargo, no se proceso hist6rico que ha generado el registro. Debe- conocen en el reino de Toledo ejemplos de silos mos hacer una vez mas hincapie en la noci6n de que medievales que conserven su contenido de cereal u Ios materiales de relleno de un silo fechan el mo- otras reservas alimenticias. Con todo, la f1otaci6n mento de su amortizaci6n, y nunca el de su uso, salvo sistematica de los estratos de relleno permite la recu- en Ios casos excepcionales en Ios que se ha preser- peraci6n de restos vegetales conservados por carbo- vado el silo junto a !as reservas que contenia. nizaci6n y mineralizaci6n. En particular, la excelente Asi pues, si parece clara la amplia difusi6n del conservaci6n de los restos mineralizados ha permi- sistema de silos en Ios ambientes urbanos y rurales tido recuperar frutos enteros y numerosas semillas de 295 E. Serrano, A. Fermindez Ugalde & L. Pena-Chocarro diferentes especies. Este tipo de restos aporta una HERNANDEZ CARRASQUILLA F. 1993: Una fauna informaci6n raramente asequible a traves de restos medieval inusual: !as aves de Cava Baja (prov. de conservados a partir de otro tipo de procesos. Madrid, Espafia), Archaeofauna 2, 169-174. Un estudio preliminar de Ios restos vegetates de IBN AL-AWWAN 1988: Libra de agricultura. Su varios silos reutilizados como basureros del Madrid autor, el Doctor excelente Abu Zacaria Iahia medieval sefiala el potencial de Ios estudios arqueo- Aben Mohamed ben Alzmed Ebn el Awam, botanicos. Los restos vegetales recuperados en este sevillano, Ed. facsimil de la de J.A. Banqueri tipo de contextos proporcionan una valiosa informa- (1802), 2 vols, Ministerio de Agricultura, Madrid. ci6n a la hora de reconstruir no solo la dieta, sino LEFEBURE C. 1985: Reserves cerealieres et societe: tambien algunas de !as actividades relacionadas con !'ensilage chez les marocains, en: GAST M., la preparaci6n de alimentos, procesado de cereales y S!GAUT F. & BEUTLER C. (eds.): Les techniques utilizaci6n de plantas con otros fines diferentes a la de conservation des grains along terme 3' fasc. 1' alimentaci6n. Paris, 210-235. Los analisis faunisticos de restos contenidos en REYNOLDS P.J. 1979: A general report of under- estratos de relleno estan asimismo proporcionando ground grain storage experiments at the Butser interesantes resultados, especialmente en lo referente Ancient Farm Research Project, en: GAST M. & a la avifauna, con indicios de cetreria y observaci6n SIGAUT F. (eds.): Les techniques de conservation de especies ausentes hasta la fecha del registro arque- des grains a long terme. Leur role dans la ol6gico peninsular (Hem{mdez Carrasquilla 1991, dynamique des systemes de cultures et des soci13- 1993). tes 1, Paris, 70-78. SERRANO E. 1996: Intervenci6n arqueol6gica reali- zada para la canalizaci6n de GASNATURAL en Bibliografia cl Hileras-Pza. de Ramales, Reunion de arqueo- logia madrilefia, Madrid, 71-73. BoLENS L. 1979: La conservation des grains en SERRANO E. & Y Mmz G.I. 1996: Intervenci6n arque- Andalousie medievale d'apres les traites d'agro- ol6gica en el inmueble de c/ del Rollo n° 7 nomie hispano-arabes, en: GAST M. & SIGAUT F. (Madrid), Reunion de arqueologia madrilefia, (eds.), Les techniques de conservation des grains Madrid, 74-76. along terme. Leur role dans la dynamique des sys- VALLESPiN 0., SERRANO E., L6PEZ MARCOS M.A. & temes de cultures et des societes 1, Paris, 105-112. MARiN F. 1990: Excavaciones en el solar 'Casa de FERNANDEZ UGALDE A. 1994: El fen6meno del San Isidro', Madrid del siglo IX al XI, Madrid, relleno de silos y la implantaci6n del feudalismo 287-296. en Madrid y en el reino de Toledo, IV Congreso Y ANEZ G.l., SERRANO E. & LOPEZ MARCOS M.A. de arqueologia medieval espafiola, vol. Ill, 1992: La Capilla del Obispo, Arqueologia, pale- Alicante, 611-617. ontologia y etnografia 3, 277-318. FERNANDEZ UGALDE A 1996: Excavaciones en la Cava Baja, 38, 32 y 30 de Madrid: muralla del 'se gun do recinto' y vestigios del poblamiento medieval, Reunion de arqueologia madrilefia, Madrid, 21-29. FERNANDEZ UGALDE A. e.p.: jQue Dios nos con- serve el grano! Una interpretaci6n de Ios omopla- tos con inscripci6n arabe procedentes de yaci- mientos medievales, Al-Qantara. FERNANDEZ UGALDE A. & SERRANO E. 1997 e.p.: Elena Serrano Las murallas de Madrid: excavaciones recientes y T.A.R., Madrid apuntes para su evoluci6n, Estudios de prehistoria y arqueologia madrilefias 10. Antonio Femandez Ugalde AREA Sociedad Cooperativa Arqueologica GorTEIN S. 1983: A Mediterranean Society. The cl Villa, 3 - 2° D Jewish Communities of the Arab World as Por- 28005 Madrid trayed in the Documents of the Cairo Geniza, vol. 4, Berkeley-Los Angeles-Londres. Leonor Pefia-Chocarro HERNANDEZ CARRASQUILLA F. 1991: Las aves del Laboratorio de Arqueozoologia, Universidad yacimiento de Angosta de Ios Mancebos (Madrid), Aut6noma de Madrid Boletin de arqueologia medieval 5, 181-191. Espana 296 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Jiirg Tauber Landliche Siedlu.ngen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zu.m Mittelalter Archaologische Qu.ellen u.nd historische Interpretation Die Landschaft, mit der ich mich im folgenden einem Erdbeben urn die Mitte des 3. Jahrhunderts befasse, ist das linksrheinische Hinterland von Base!, und den wohl auch hier nicht folgenlosen Alaman- d. h. jene Gegend, die si.idlich an den Rhein angrenzt neneinfallen gingen die Bevolkerungszahlen und und sich bis zum Kamm des Juragebirges erstreckt 1• damit auch die Bedeutung der Stadt massiv zuri.ick. In diesen Raum greift von Norden her die Oberrhei- Das Gebiet wurde aber nicht aufgegeben, sondern in nische Tiefebene ein, zu welcher der Unterlauf der die Anstrengungen zur Sicherung des Reichsgebietes Birs von Aesch bis zur Mi.indung in den Rhein geh6rt. im 4. Jahrhundert einbezogen; verwaltungstechnisch Westlich schliessen die si.idostlichsten Auslaufer des wurde es der Maxima Sequanorum zugeschlagen. Von Sundgauer Hi.igellandes an, ostlich das Tal des hier dieser Konstellation haben wir auszugehen, wenn wir von Osten nach Westen fliessenden Hochrheins. Der uns mit der Siedlungsgeschichte des fri.ihen und grosste Teil des Untersuchungsgebietes ist jedoch hohen Mittelalters befassen. dem Juragebirge zuzurechnen. Der Tafeljura schliesst Noch eine Vorbemerkung zum Inhalt meiner an das Rheintal an und ist gekennzeichnet durch Ausfi.ihrungen: es handelt sich nicht urn die Resultate fruchtbare Hochflachen und tief eingeschnittene Tal er. eines einzelnen Forschungsprojektes, sondern urn Gegen Si.iden grenzt er an den Ketten- oder Fatten- einen Bericht zum Stand der Arbeiten in einer ganzen jura, der aus ost-west-verlaufenden steilen Gebirgs- Reihe verschiedener parallellaufender Untersuchun- zi.igen besteht. Die zum Gegenstand meiner Betrach- gen. Aufhanger ist die in den spaten 80er und fri.ihen tungen gewahlte Region ist somit nicht ein vollig 90er Jahren durchgefi.ihrte Grabung in Lausen-Bette- willki.irlich ausgewahltes Gebiet, sondern kann als in nach bzw. die laufende Detailauswertung dieser Gra- sich geschlossenes Siedlungsgebiet betrachtet werden. bung (Schmaedecke & Tauber 1992; Schmaedecke Die Zeitspanne, welche die Ausfi.ihrungen umfas- 199 5) 3• Ein historisch ausgerichtetes Projekt, das die sen sollen, reicht vom Ende der Antike bis ins Einbindung der in Lausen zum Vorschein gekomme- Mittelalter. Das Einsetzen in oder am Ende der nen Siedlung im historischen Umfeld zum Ziel hatte, Romerzeit ist nicht einfach eine wissenschaftliche ist eben zu Ende gegangen 4 . Ausserdem werden Konvention, sondern ist durch tatsachlich existie- Ergebnisse einfliessen, die im Rahmen einer Disser- rende Traditionen vorgegeben: wir befinden uns im tation zur fri.ihmittelalterlichen Siedlungsgeschichte Hinterland der Romerstadt Augusta Raurica bzw. des erarbeitet werden5 . Schliesslich werden auch Aspekte Castrum Rauracense 2 . Dieses Hinterland war er- der Burgenforschung in der Nordwestschweiz beri.ick- schlossen durch ein dichtes Netz romischer Gutsh6fe, sichtigt. sowie Infrastrukturbauten wie Strassen und die romi- Das Ziel ist nicht eine Zusammenstellung der sche Wasserleitung von Lausen nach Augst. Nach archaologisch erforschten landlichen Siedlungen 6 ; !m wesentlichen beschaftige ich mich mit dem Gebiet des Der Titel des Projektes lautet "Lausen-Bettenach- ein frilh- Kantons Basei-Landschaft, das gegen 520 Quadratkilometer um- und hochmittelalterlicher Herrenhof und seine historische Ein- fasst, sowie einzelnen Ausblicken auf die westlich (Kanton Jura) bindung in das Hinterland einer ehemaligen romischen Gross- und ostlich (Fricktal, Kanton Aargau) anschliessenden Gebiete. stadt. Studien zur genetischen Siedlungsforschung". Es wird 2 D;e Oberreste der romischen Stadt verteilen sich auf die ftnanziert vom Schweizerischen Nationalfonds zur Forderung Gemeinden Augst (Kt. Basel-Landschaft) und Kaiseraugst (Kt. der wissenschaftlichen Forschung. Aargau), jene des Kastelles liegen in Kaiseraugst. 5 Dissertation von Reto Marti unter der Leitung von Max 3 Die Auswertungsarbeiten werden von Michael Schmaedecke Martin. koordiniert. Da sie jedoch nicht durch ein eigenes Projektteam Allgemeine Aspekte landlicher Siedlungen in der Schweiz durchgefiihrt werden konnen, sondem neben dem "courant nor- behandelt Michael Schmaedecke in der schriftlichen Fassung mal" vonstatten gehen milssen, kommen sie !eider nicht in der eines Referates, das er in Prag (Ruralia 1996) gehalten hat erwilnschten Geschwindigkeit voran. (Schmaedecke im Druck). 297 J. Tauber vielmehr mochte ich zu zeigen versuchen, wie auf- tion in einem grossen Teil unserer Region zur Besei- grund entsprechender Grabungen und ihrer Interpre- tigung von Traditionen geftlhrt, die unter Umstanden tation neue Impulse fUr die Geschichte gegeben altere Patrozinien noch batten i.iberliefem konnen. werden konnen. Archaologische Quell en Zur Quellenlage Dass die bei Ausgrabungen zutage geforderten Schriftliche Quellen Befunde und Funde in der historischen Forschung einen hohen Stellenwert einnehmen, wird heute auch Traditionellerweise werden bei der Erorterung von eingefleischten Schriftquellen-Enthusiasten kaum historischer Themen die schriftlichen Quellen als mehr bezweifelt. Vor all em die Tatsache, dass immer erste behandelt. Der Bestand an Urkunden und ande- neue Quellen erschlossen werden, lasst die Kolle- ren Schriftsti.icken, die sich konkret auf die hier zur ginnen und Kollegen der Nachbarwissenschaften vor Diskussion stehende Region beziehen, ist jedoch so Neid erblassen. Ein Blick auf die Verhaltnisse in der liickenhaft und zuHi.llig, dass ein darauf aufbauender Nordwestschweiz Hisst erkennen, dass der Zuwachs Entwurf zu einer Siedlungsgeschichte als spekulativ an archaologischen Quellen in den letzten 15 Jahren oder gar unmoglich erscheinen muss. Die Quellen- enorm war. Insbesondere filr die Zeit zwischen dem armut hat dazu gefllhrt, dass die Gegend am Rhein- Ende der Romerzeit und der Jahrtausendwende hat knie als weitgehend unbedeutend, als Machtvakuum die Zahl neuer Befunde und Funde derart zuge- weitab der wichtigen Schaupliitze und Heerstrassen nommen, dass verschiedene altere Thesen widerlegt der Geschichte betrachtet wurde. Diese Einschatzung oder aber durch Fakten massiv untermauert werden betrifft auch das Bistum, das zunachst in Augst, dann konnten. in Base! angesiedelt war und bis urn die Jahrtausend- wende merkwOrdig schemenhaft erscheint?. Ich mochte im folgenden versuchen, die verschie- denen Quellenarten zu kombinieren und aufzuzeigen, wie auf diese W eise neue Erkenntnisse oder Thesen Ortsnamen erarbeitet werden konnen, welche das Geschichtsbild erweitem oder verandem, und zwar nicht nur, was Der Bestand an Orts-(und Flur-)Namen wird geme die blosse Feststellung der Existenz landlicher Sied- zur Nachzeichnung von Siedlungsentwicklungen her- 1ungen und der darin vorherrschenden Lebensweise angezogen. In unserer Region ist schon mehrfach ein angeht, sondem auch in herrschafts- oder besitzge- starkes Substrat vorgermanischer Ortsnamen konsta- schichtlicher Hinsicht. Man darfnicht vergessen, dass tiert worden, das ein Uberleben romanischer Tradi- jede landliche Siedlung in ein Netz von Beziehungen tionen erschliessen lasst. Daneben kann ein reicher und Abhangigkeiten eingebettet ist, die nicht unter- Namensbestand von "klassischen" germanischen Orts- schlagen werden di.irfen. Ausserdem muss man sich namen auf -ingen, -inghofen (=-ikon), -wil, -dorfund immer wieder vor Augen halten, dass abgesehen von ausnahmsweise -heim nachgewiesen werden. Frtiher wenigen punktuell als eindeutig stadtisch definier- wurden diese Namen stark chronologisch (und ideo- baren Siedlungen grundsatzlich jede Siedlung zu- logisch) beladen und klar trennbaren Stufen des Lan- nachst einmal als landlich zu gelten hat. desausbaus seit der "alamannischen Landnahme im 5. Jahrhundert" zugewiesen. Heute ist man in dieser Hinsicht vorsichtiger geworden 8. Kontinuitiit und Wandel zwischen Romerzeit und Mittelalter Kirchenpatrozinien Dass die Romerzeit nicht mit einem Schlag zu Ende ging, ist seit langerem bekannt9 . In den Kastell- Ein weiteres Indiz fur die (Re)Konstruktion von Siedlungsvorgangen konnen Kirchenpatrozinien sein (Wittmer-Butsch 1995). Ich erinnere an die Martins- Die Quell en zum frtihen Bistum und das historische Umfeld Patrozinien, die oft mit frankischem Einfluss in Ver- beleuchtet Btittner 1939. bindung gebracht werden. Allerdings ist diese Gruppe Ausgewahlte Beispiele fOr die Aussagemi:iglichkeiten von Ortsnamen bei Marti 1995. Dort auch Verweise aufweiterfOhrende historischer Indizien nicht unproblematisch. Zum Literatur. einen sind !angst nicht alle Kirchen schon im Hoch- Ich stiitze mich bei den folgenden Ausfiihrungen v.a. auf mittelalter erwahnt, zum anderen hat die Reforma- die Arbeiten von und Diskussionen mit Reto Marti, der dieses 298 Uindliche Siedlungen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zum Mittelalter nekropolen von Kaiseraugst und Basel-Aeschenvor- den Befunden zeitlich entsprechender Siedlungen stadt liess sich eine kontinuierliche Belegung bis ins tiberwiegt diese Ware; daneben findet sich haufig 7. Jahrhundert seit langern nachweisen (Marti 1995, auch die altere gelbtonige Drehscheibenware, die 11 ). Auch der vorgermanische Ortsnamensbestand wohl aus dern Elsass starnrnt. wurde schon rnehrfach als Indiz fUr ein Oberleben Der in den vergangenen Jahren erfreulich forge- romanischer Inseln irn Hinterland von Augst heran- schrittene Forschungsstand bei der Kerarnik hat gezogen (Marti 1995, 9). Unklar war bis vor wenigen erlaubt, die Siedlungsbefunde chronologisch richtig Jahren, ob si eh dieses Oberleben auf die unrnittelbare einzuordnen. Diese fruh- und hochrnittelalterlichen Urngebung der Kastelle beschrankte oder noch etwas Spuren sind jedoch nicht sehr zahlreich. Haufig han- weiter ins Hinterland hinein fassbar sein konnte. delt es sich urn Einzelfunde und -befunde, die in Funde der letzten Jahre haben nun gezeigt, class der einern heute noch bestehenden Dorf oder seiner rornanische Siedlungsraurn doch etwas grosser gewe- unrnittelbaren Urngebung entdeckt werden. Sied- sen sein muss als frtiher angenornrnen, auch wenn lungsbefunde rnit Resten von Gebauden wie in nicht zu bestreiten ist, class zahlreiche rornische Reinach (Marti 1990) und Aesch (unpubliziert) sind GutshOfe aufgegeben oder nur noch in reduzierter eher selten. Erstaunlich ist femer die Tatsache, class Weise weiterbenutzt wurden. Die gesicherten Funde die Belege rnit fortschreitender Zeit abnehmen, d.h. des 4., 5. oder gar 6. Jahrhunderts sind in der Umge- Befunde und Funde des Hoch- und Spatrnittelalters bung der Kastelle und an den Hauptverkehrsachsen sind wesentlich seltener als jene der rneorwingisch/ nachzuweisen, wahrend aufgrund der heutigen Kennt- karolingischen Epoche! An die Stelle der Reste von nisse die Siedlungen in den abgelegeneren Talem landlichen Siedlungen treten von der Jahrtausend- zeitweise abzubrechen scheinen. wende an vermehrt die Kirchen und die Burgen. Rornische Traditionen tiber das 4./5. Jahrhundert Nicht zu vergessen sind femer die frtih- und hoch- hinaus sind sehr schwierig nachzuweisen, da die in rnittelalterlichen Siedlungsspuren in den Kastellen von frtiheren Zeiten so zuverlassigen Datierungssttitzen Base! (Helmig 1982) und Kaiseraugst (Prey 1992; wie irnportiertes Luxusgeschirr oder Mtinzen nach Marti 1997), auf die ich jedoch in unserern Zusam- 400 zunehmend ausfallen. Deshalb brauchte es einige rnenhang nicht naher eingehen werde. Besonders her- Modellbefunde, welche die Lticken ftillen halfen. vorheben rnochte ich jedoch eine Kleinregion urn Einer dieser Befunde ist ein Grubenhaus der Zeit urn Liestal, die rnit Lausen-Bettenach und Liestal-Rosem- 600 in Reinach (Marti 1990). Die in der Verftillung tal zwei Fundstellen geliefert hat, die beide fUr ganze gefundene Kerarnik zeigt, class bis urn diese Zeit Problembtinde1 als Schlusselgrabungen gelten dtirfen. "rornische" Keramik in Form rauhwandiger Dreh- scheibenware produziert wurde. Besonders eindrtick- Lausen-Bettenach ist eine Siedlung, die eine lich lasst sich eine Kontinuitat antiker Traditionen in Kontinuitat von der mittleren rornischen Kaiserzeit Lausen-Bettenach nachweisen. Ich werde auf diesen bis zum Beginn des 13. Jahrhunderts aufweist. Sie Fundort zurtickkornmen. zeichnet sich durch eine ausserordentliche Befund- Kontinuitat schliesst aber einen Wandel nicht aus, dichte aus (Schrnaedecke/Tauber 1992; Schrnaedecke und so lasst sich- vorausgesetzt, es steht genug Ma- 1995). Zahlreiche Gruben und Grubenhauser sowie terial zur Verftigung- auch bei dieser rauhwandigen Reste von Pfostenbauten werden erganzt durch Stein- Drehscheibenware eine Entwicklung beobachten bauten einmal des 5. (ev. 6.), aber auch des 9. oder (Marti 1994). Eine Zasur ist erst im 7. Jahrhundert 10. Jahrhunderts. Eine frtihe Kirche wird im 11. fassbar: jetzt setzt rnit einer sandigen Drehschei- Jahrhundert unter radikaler Anderung der Orientie- benware eine deutlich unterschiedliche Keramik ein, rung durch eine dreischiffige Basilika ersetzt. Wohl die auf andere Traditionen zurtickgeht. Man ist ver- zur selben Zeit wird auch das Siedlungsareal urnge- sucht, sie rnit gesellschaftlichen Veranderungen in staltet, indern die Steinbauten niedergelegt werden; Beziehung zu bringen. Dass diese Kerarnik eindeutig an ihrer Stelle entstehen Grubenhauser, die gegen eine einheirnische Ware ist, zeigen Funde von Ende des 11. Jahrhunderts abgebrochen und wieder TopferOfen in Oberwil (Steinle/Tauber 1974), Ther- zugeschtittet werden. Zu Beg inn des 13. Jahrhunderts wil und Reinach (Tauber 1988; Marti 1990). Auch in wird die Siedlung allmahlich verlassen; nur die Kirche bleibt stehen. Westlich der Kirche wird ein Bau errichtet, der in der ersten Halfte des 15. Jahr- hunderts bereits wieder aufgegeben wird, wohl irn Thema im Rahmen seiner Dissertation vertieft behandelt. Bisher Zusamrnenhang rnit dern Anbau des heutigen greitbare einschlagige Artikel sind etwa Marti 1994 (zur Ent- wicklung der Keramik) und Marti 1995 (methodisch orientierter "Sigristenhauses" an die Westfassade der Kirche. Oberblick mit einer knappen Zusammenfassung des Forschungs- Die Kirche- es handelte si eh bis zur Reformation urn standes; dart auch weiterfilhrende Literaturangeben). eine Nikolauskirche- blieb Pfarrkirche des jenseits 299 J. Tauber der Ergolz auf der anderen Talseite liegenden Dorfes lung, in der neben Landwirtschaft auch Eisenver- Lausen. Neben den Steinbauten weisen auch Funde arbeitung eine Rolle spielt, liegt in den Gemeinden auf eine Bewohnerschaft mit gehobenem Standard Develier und Courtetelle (Kt. Jura); dieser Fundort hin: Hufnagel und Hufeisen dokumentieren die weist einen vollig anderen Charakter auf, mit kleinen, haufige Anwesenheit von Berittenen, Funde von ilber grossere Distanzen gestreuten Siedlungskernen kostbaren Kreuz- und Emailscheibenfibeln fehlen (Fellner et al. 1995; Schenardi 1995; Fellner & ebensowenig wie ein Stilus. Die Liste ausserge- Schenardi 1995). wohnlicher Funde liesse sich verlangem und ent- spricht jedenfalls nicht dem Spektrum, das in einer Zwischen Lausen-Bettenach und Liestal-Munzach rein Hindlichen Siedlung erwartet werden wilrde. Der bzw. Roserntal liegt Liestal, auf das ich ebenfalls Fundort gibt also Gelegenheit, im Vergleich mit noch kurz eingehen mochte. Der Ort wurde im fri.ihen anderen Siedlungen Fragen zur sozialen Gliederung 13. Jahrhundert durch die Grafen von Frohburg zur der Gesellschaft und zur Funktion der einzelnen Stadt erhoben, geht aber ebenfalls aufaltere Wurzeln Fundstellen zu diskutieren. zuri.ick. Der Kern der Altstadt, d.h. das Geviert urn die Kirche, die St. Martin und Brida geweiht war, Etwas anders gelagert sind Liestal-Munzach und di.irfte seinen Ursprung in einem romischen Kastell Liestal-Rosemtal: Die Siedlung Munzach liegt im haben, wie nicht nur der Grundriss, sondern auch Area! des romischen Gutshofes. Sie zeigt eine Funde aus der mehrere Jahrzehnte zuri.ickliegenden Koninuitat wie Lausen-Bettenach. Allerdings liegen Grabung im Kircheninnern erschliessen lassen (Marti die Grabungen einige Jahrzehnte zuri.ick und wurden 1988) 10 • Weitere Spuren des romischen oder fri.ih- auch ftir damalige Verhaltnisse nicht sehr fach- bzw. hochmittelalterlichen Liestal sind ausserhalb mannisch durchgefi.ihrt, sodass die Dokumentation der Kirche allerdings ausgeblieben, da das Gelande sehr zu wilnschen i.ibrig Hisst. Auch auf dem Area! in der Fri.ihen Neuzeit offenbar auf dem ganzen der Villa Munzach entsteht aufantiken Wurzeln eine Stadtareal abgetragen worden ist. Immerhin sind seit fri.ih- und hochmittelalterliche Siedlung, die zu kurzem Funde des 10. und 11. Jahrhunderts bekannt; Beginn des 13. Jahrhunderts aufgegeben wurde. Hier ihre Fundlage in einem Hauseingang sechzig Zenti- stand die in Spuren nachgewiesene Kirche St. meter i.iber dem heutigen Strasseniveau bestatigt die Laurentius, die erst im 19. Jahrhundert abgebrochen These der Gelandeabsenkungen. Die Konstellation in wurde. Die Funde weisen aber ein deutlich beschei- Liestal bringt uns zur Problematik von Besitzge- deneres Spektrum auf als jene von Lausen. schichte und Herrschaftsbildung, ausserdem weist sie auf eine weitere Quellengattung hin, die siedlungs- Die Siedlung im Rosemtal hingegen ist eine geschichtlich von hervorragender Bedeutung ist: die Neugri.indung der Zeit urn 800 (Tauber 1993; Lavi- Kirchen. cka 1995): Die alteste Keramik entspricht einer spaten Variante der sandigen Drehscheibenware. Noch Auch wenn es mitunter schwierig ist, allein im Laufe des 12. Jahrunderts wird der Platz wieder aufgrund von Grundrissen eine einigermassen pra- aufgegeben. Was ihm zu einer Bedeutung i.iber das zise Datierung vorzuschlagen, so zeigen mehrere Ubliche hinaus verhilft, sind die nachgewiesenen Beispiele mit beigabenfi.ihrenden Grabern, dass der handwerklichen Tatigkeiten. Neben Spuren von Glas- Bau von Kirchen schon im 7. Jahrhundert einsetzt und Buntmetallverarbeitung sind es vor allem Dber- und die auf spatantike Wurzeln zuri.ickgehende An- reste der Verhi.ittung von Eisenerz und der Verar- lage in Kaiseraugst erganzen. Mit der einzigen bisher beitung des gewonnenen Eisens (Semeels 1995). nachgewiesenen holzernen Ausnahme von Buus Mehrere Tonnen Schlacken wurden wahrend der (Ewald 1996) bestehen in der Nordwestschweiz alle Ausgrabung geborgen und analysiert; sie belegen die fri.ihmittelalterlichen Kirchen aus gemorteltem Verhi.ittung verschiedener Erze in RennOfen sowie Mauerwerk (Ewald 1991). mehrere darauf folgende Abeitsschritte bis hin zur Wenn wir die fri.ihmittelalterlichen Siedlungs- Fertigung von Geraten. Auffallend ist, dass diese spuren und Kirchen kombinieren, erhalten wir zwar Siedlung deutlich von der gleichzeitigen Siedlung eine erfreuliche Anzahl von Einzelbelegen, aber kein auf dem Area! der ehemaligen Villa getrennt ist. Hi er geschlossenes Bild. Eine wichtige archaologische lassen sich Dberlegungen zu wirtschaftlichen Aspek- Quellengattung fehlt namlich: die Graber und Gra- ten ausserhalb der Landwirtschaft im engeren Sinn sowie Fragen zur Arbeitsteilung ankni.ipfen. In diesem Zusamenhang zu erwahnen ist, dass auch in 10 Neben der rauhwandigen Drehscheibenware vor allem Lausen Eisenverhi.ittung durch Schlacken nachge- Argonnensigillata sowie ein Fragment der Sigillee Paleochre- wiesen ist. Eine weitere fri.ihmittelalterliche Sied- tienne. 300 Ltindliche Siedlungen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zum Mittelalter Abb. 1.- Frilhmittelalter!iche Siedlungsfunde (5.-9. Jh.). 301 J. Tauber berfelder. Die Verbreitungskarten der Siedlungs- Dieses Bild kann durch die Betrachtung der Orts- befunde und der Grabfunde machen deutlich, wie namen noch verdichtet werden; es zeigt sich, class unverzichtbar die Betrachtung der Grabfunde ist diese drei Jahrhunderte als Zeit eines intensiven (Abb. 1 und 2). Fur die Siedlungsgeschichte (Marti Landesausbaus verstanden werden mtissen (Marti 1995, mit weiterflihrender Literatur) von Bedeutung 1995). Bis zur Jahrtausendwende scheint sich an ist die Moglichkeit einer zeitlichen Differenzierung: diesem Bild wenig geandert zu haben. Es kann Neben den Grabem des 5. Jahrhunderts in den rechts- vermutet werden, class der Landesausbau in etwas rheinischen alamannischen Graberfeldem von Basel- verlangsamter Form fortgeftihrt wurde, doch fehlen Kleinhtiningen, Base1-Gotterbarmweg und Herten uns mangels Beigaben in den Grabem und vor allem sowie zeitlich entsprechenden Grabem in den Kas- mangels Funden aus den Dorfem selbst entspre- tellnekropo1en von Kaiseraugst und Base! zeigen sich chende archaologische Hinweise 11 • links des Rheins erst im Laufe des 6. Jahrhunderts Soweit das aufgrund der archaologischen Quellen nach germanischer Sitte mit Beigaben versehene und der Ortsnamen gewonnene Siedlungsbild, das Graber, etwa in Basel-Bemerring, Therwil und zeigt, class die Anzahl der landlichen Siedlungen schon Liestal-Radacker - wohl nicht zufallig in der Nahe vor der Jahrtausendwende im wesentlichen bereits spatankiker Zentren oder wichtiger Verkehrswege. eine Zahl erreicht haben muss, die von der heutigen Die Funde in diesen Grabem zeigen tiberdies, class nicht sehr stark abweicht. Dies heisst aber nicht, class die frtihesten im linksrheinischen Gebiet fassbaren eine gewaltige Bevolkerungsvermehrung postuliert Germanen Franken oder doch stark frankisch beein- werden soil, denn man muss davon ausgehen, class flusst waren. Erst im 7. Jahrhundert intensiviert sich die Siedlungen sehr klein waren. Die Anbauflachen der Landesausbau, die Dichte der Graberfelder in den zum Teil engen T~ilem batten einer grossen wachst. An diesem Bild konnten durch Neufunde Bevolkerung keine gentigende Lebensgrundlage lie- allenfalls noch Retuschen angebracht werden; ange- fern konnen, und man ist versucht zu fragen, was die sichts der bereits heute mehr oder weniger flachen- Menschen bewogen hat, sich in den unwirtlichen deckenden Erfassung unseres Arbeitsgebietes dtirfen Talkesseln niederzulassen. Ein Grund (selbstver- wir jedoch davon ausgehen, class das heute greifbare standlich unter anderen) konnten die reichen Vor- Material als reprasentativ gelten kann. kommen an Eisenerz gewesen sein, dessen Aus- Interessant ist die Beobachtung, class tiber die beutung im Jura nachweislich im Frilhmittelalter auf Grabbeigaben Beziehungen Richtung Norden ins breiter Front einsetzt (Tauber 1992 und 1993; Pelet Elsass bzw. ins Gebiet des stidlichen Oberrheins 1993; Eschenlohr/Semeels 1991; Semeels 1993 ). sowie Richtung Westen und Stidwesten (also in den Bereich der spatantiken Maxima Sequanorum) er- schlossen werden konnen, wahrend Kontakte ins Versuch einer historischen Einbindung rechtsrheinische Kemgebiet der Alamannen wesent- lich seltener nachzuweisen sind. Urn die archaologischen Ergebnisse historisch Allein aufgrund dieser archaologischen Befunde fruchtbar zu machen - und dies ist letztlich ja das zeigt unser Arbeitsgebiet bereits ftir das 7. bis 9. Jahr- Ziel unserer Arbeit - sollten sie in einen gesamt- hundert eine erstaunlich dichte Besiedlung. Sie geschichtlichen Zusammenhang gestellt werden, der umfasst zunachst zwar noch nicht die maximale i.iber den Versuch hinausgeht, die Lebensbedingun- Ausdehnung der in romischer Zeit besiedelten gen der in den nachgewiesenen Pfostenhausem Flache, sondem nur die besseren Lagen an Verkehrs- lebenden Menschen zu (re)konstruieren. Dieser An- wegen, auf fruchtbaren Talboden und in der Nahe der satz ist zwar legitim, klammert aber aus, class jede Zentren (z.B. der Kastelle), greift aber bald auch auf landliche Siedlung eingebunden ist in ein Geflecht eher marginale Gebiete aus, die in romischer Zeit aus Besitz, Macht und Herrschaft und deshalb nicht nicht besiedelt waren. Beispiele hieftir sind etwa isoliert betrachtet werden kann. Die folgenden Aus- Eptingen und Reigoldswil, zwei Dorfer ganz am ftihrungen versuchen, einige Aspekte dieser Thema- oberen Ende von tief in die Berge des Faltenjura tik zu skizzieren. Gewiss ist dies eine Arbeit mit eingeschnittenen Talem. Hypothesen, was sie auf den ersten Blick als zwei- felhafter erscheinen lasst als die aufgrund der mit "handfesten" archaologischen Quellen erarbeiteten 11 Nur aufmerksamsten Beobachtungen ortsansassiger Inte- Ergebnisse; auch die Archaologie liefert aber niemals ressierter ist es zu verdanken, dass hin und wieder entsprechende "Beweise", sondem lediglich Indizien, die von uns Funde aufgelesen werden wie jungst in Rothenfluh, wo beim in interpretiert und zu einem sinnvollen Ganzen zusam- Quellen der frilhen Neuzeit genannten Hof "Wcrdlingcn" cin- zelne Scherben des 6.17. und des 8. Jahrhunderts zum Vorschein mengefligt, im schlimmsten Fall auch zurecht- kamen (Rippmann 1996). gebogen werden. 302 Uindliche Siedlungen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zum Mittelalter Abb. 2. - Friihmittelalterliche Grabfunde m it Beigaben. 303 J. Tauber Angesichts der sparlichen schriftlichen Oberlie- Dass das Bistum Base! bis zur Jahrtausendwende ferung stellen sich beim Versuch einer historischen wenig bedeutend war und offensichtlich nicht Interpretation allerdings erhebliche Probleme. Wir vermochte, sich eine Machtbasis zu schaffen (Btitt- konnen nicht einfach von den wenigen Urkunden ner 1939), konnte mit der starken Prasenz anderer ausgehen, sondem milssen auch die allgemeinhisto- Machte zusammenhangen. Neben dem Bistum Strass- rischen Gegebenheiten berilcksichtigen. Das Fehlen burg und allenfalls den elsassischen Herzogen kamen von Urkunden ist namlich nicht zwingend mit einem auch das merowingisch/karolingische Konigtum und siedlungsgeschichtlichen "Vakuum" gleichzusetzen, seine Rechtsnachfolger in Frage. da sie in den meisten Fallen Handanderungen betref- Auffallend ist die Existenz gleich dreier Fundorte fen. Ihr Ausbleiben kann deshalb auch anzeigen, class (Lausen-Bettenach, Liestal, Munzach) mit einer archa- die Besitzverhaltnisse in der entsprechenden Region ologisch nachgewiesenen Kontinuitat von der Spat- stabil blieben. Angesichts des dichten Netzes von antike bis ins Hochmittelalter auf engstem Raum urn Siedlungen, die archaologisch nachgewiesen werden Liestal, das mit einiger Wahrscheinlichkeit aus konnen, sowie der Bedeutung der Jurapasse, insbe- einem spatromischen Kastell hervorging. Lausen- sondere des Oberen Hauensteins, mochten wir eher Bettenach liegt am oberen Ende der romischen dieser Interpretation den Vorzug geben. Wasserleitung, die an der rechten Talflanke an Liestal Betrachten wir zunachst die "politische Gross- und Munzach vorbei nach Augst filhrt. Alle drei Orte wetterlage": Die zur Diskussion stehende Region fie! saumen wichtige Verkehrswege vom Rhein in Rich- im Vertrag von Verdun 843 ans Mittelreich, injenem tung der Jurapasse. Die starken antiken Traditionen von Meersen 870 ans ostfrankische Reich. Noch im im Hinterland von Augst und die Tatsache, class die 9. Jahrhundert aber fie! sie dem Konigreich Hoch- frilhesten linksrheinisch nachweisbaren Germanen burgund zu. Erst 1033 gelangte sie mit diesem ans Franken waren, lasst die Hypothese zu, class reichlich Reich. Dass dies aber nicht mit einer Losung der vorhandenes romisches Fiskalgut zu merowingischem burgundischen Bindungen einherging, zeigen ein- Konigsgut geworden ware (zu diesem Problem siehe drticklich die Verhii.ltnisse im Investiturstreit: So- Kaiser 1993). Dass Konigsgut vorhanden gewesen wohl der Basler BischofBurkard von Fenis (Stamm- sein muss, zeigt etwa die Schenkung 12 Kaiser Amulfs burg zwischen Bieler- und Neuenburgersee) als auch von 891 an Anno: sie betrifft die Kirche und sieben sein Widersacher Rudolfvon Rheinfelden (bzw. von Hufen in Augst (=Kaiseraugst, dem Standort des spat- Schwaben), also der Gegenkonig hOchstpersonlich, romischen Castrum Rauracense und frilhen Bischofs- stammen beide aus burgundischen Hochadelsge- sitzes). In dieselbe Richtung weist auch die Schen- . schlechtem. kung Heinrichs Ill. an das B is turn Base! von 1041: Neben Beziehungen zu Burgund bestanden auch Heinrich schenkt dem Bistum die Grafschaft Augst starke Bindungen zum Elsass, die in verschiedenen im Augst- und im Sisgau (comitatum Augusta Aspekten greifbar sind: vocatum in pago Ougestgowe et Sisgowe situm) 13 . Ottilia, die Tochter Etichos, vermacht in ihrem Die Konigsgut-Hypothese mochten wir mindes- Testament 708 die Curia von Arlesheim mit zuge- tens flir Liestal und Lausen-Bettenach in Anpruch hOrigen Gtitem in elsassischen Dorfem dem Kloster nehmen, was aufgrund der aussergewohnlichen Lau- Hohenburg. sener Funde nicht abwegig erscheint. In Munzach Das Dorf Muttenz mit seiner St. Arbogast- konnten die Dinge etwas anders liegen: in einer zwar Kirche und wohl auch der vorderen Burg auf dem undatierten, aber aufgrund verschiedener Indizien ge- Wartenberg (die in karolingische Zeit zurilckgeht) ist gen 790 angefertigten Zeugenliste wird es als Gerichts- nicht nur durch dieses Patrozinium mit Strassburg ort erwahnt (Wittmer-Butsch 1995). Dies weist auch verbunden; es befindet sich auch im Besitz des Munzach eine ilber das Mass des Durchschnitts hin- dortigen Bistums, wie aus der Lehenshoheit in spa- ausgehende zentralortliche Bedeutung zu. teren Zeiten ersichtlich ist. Unklar ist lediglich, wann In einer weiteren Munzach betreffenden Ur- und wie es in den Besitz dieses Bistums gelangte. kunder4 von 824/25 zeigt sich, class das postulierte Besitz an wichtigen Stellen, insbesondere an der Konigsgut im Tal der Ergolz nicht flachendeckend Passstrasse zum Oberen Hauenstein, ist auch filr das gewesen sein kann: Dort schenkt namlich ein sonst Kloster Murbach belegt. nicht nachgewies~ner Uppert ein Drittel seiner Gilter in Filllinsdorf und Munzach, die er vom Vater und der Mutter geerbt hat, an das Kloster St. Gallen. Wir 12 Heinrich Boos, Urkundenbuch der Landschaft Base/ I, mochten in unserem Fundort Rosemtal, dem Base!, 1881, Nr. 8. 13 "Schmiededorf', das urn diese Zeit gleich neben dem Heinrich Boos, Urkundenbuch der Landschaft Base/ I, Base!, 1881, Nr. 12. Dorf Munzach gegrilndet wird, eine Einrichtung 14 WARTMANN, Urkundenbuch der Abtei St. Gal/en I, Nr. 191. dieses Klosters sehen (Tauber 1995, 61). 304 Ae Aesch Ep Eptingen Ar Arlesheim Fii Fiillinsdorf Mz Munzach Au Augst He Herten Ob Oberwil Ba Base! Ka Kaiseraugst Re Reinach Bu Buus La Lausen Rw Reigoldswil CO Courtt~telle Li Lies tal Rh Rheinfelden De Develier Mu Muttenz Th Therwil r "'' ;:l e: c;· ::::r- (1) ;... . _., ...------..---------, C/J o;· 0" 10 2Qkm p.. ?" 2" V. A ;:l (IQ N. (!) ~ ;:l ..., s· ~ ~ ,..., ~ z0 ~- a. ~ ~ (!) ~ ~ ~ en ~ () ;:: ::::r- I:> ;:: ~ (1) ;:: N. ~ ;:: < 0 a ;:l ~ p.. (1) ,..., <" (;"' 0 ~ s· [JQ ,.., (l) N g.. 0"' c;;;· N c 3 3:.: ~- (1) ;;;- w 0 (p V\ .... J. Tauber Ob solche Beziehungen sich im Fundgut Hind- Zeit markante Veranderungen beobachten lassen. licher Siedlungen niederschlagen, ist eine offene Am augenfalligsten ist der Neubau einer Kirche, die Frage. Anhand der drei Beispiele Lausen-Bettenach, nicht nur anders orientiert ist als der Vorgangerbau, Liestal-Munzach und Liestal -Rosemtal ist aber sondem zu einer fi.ir eine kleine landliche Siedlung auffallend, dass sehr wohl Unterschiede auszuma- i.iberdimensionierten dreischiffigen Basilika ausge- chen sind. Gewiss geht ein Teil davon auf die unter- baut wurde. Etwa gleichzeitig mit dem Kirchenneu- schiedlichen Grabungsbedingungen zun1ck, doch bau wurde auch die Siedlung umgestaltet (s. oben). lassen sich damit nicht alle Unterschiede erkHiren. Ein solcher Kirchenbau kann nicht einfach mit Dass In Lausen deutlich mehr Funde von hoher einem Wachstum der Gemeinde begri.indet werden; QualiUit i.iberliefert sind als an den anderen beiden er ist vielmehr ein Programm. Dass damit auch die Fundorten, ist kaum ein Zufall. Auch das haufige Einfi.ihrung eines neuen Patroziniums verbunden sein Vorkommen von Lavezgeffissen in der Siedlung im di.irfte, ist wahrscheinlich. Das Nikolaus-Patrozinium Rosemtal konnte auf Beziehungen zur Ostschweiz der Kirche von Lausen erOffnet Perspektiven, die und zum Alpenraum hindeuten - vermittelt eben geradezu ideal zum ganzen restlichen Umfeld passen durch das Kloster St. Gallen. Ob sich schliesslich im (Wittmer-Butsch 1995, 50ff.). Demnach ware Lausen haufigen Vorkommen der alteren gelben Drehschei- einer jener nicht seltenen Orte in der Nordwest- benware in allen drei Fundorten, schwergewichtig schweiz, wo ein Nikolauskult schon vor 1087 (der aber doch in Lausen, Beziehungen zum Elsass able- Translation der Gebeine nach Bari) zu fassen ist. sen lassen, ware nur durch aufwendige Analysen des Unbestritten ist, class Rudolf von Rheinfelden ein entsprechenden Materials zu eruieren. grosser Forderer dieses Kultes war. Folgerichtig ware Nach der Jahrtausendwende wird der Informations- es ebendieser Rudolf von Rheinfelden gewesen, der stand zu den landlichen Siedlungen nicht wesentlich in Lausen als grosser Umgestalter gewirkt hat. Bleibt besser; es sind immer noch die erwahnten Ausgra- die Frage, wie er in den Besitz dieses Hofes gelangt bungen im Tal der Ergolz, die am meisten Material ist, der von uns ja als Konigshof interpretiert wird. liefem. Aus schriftlichen Quell en ist vor der Zeit urn Akzeptiert man diese These, so bietet sich eine ver- 1100 ebenfalls nicht mehr zu erfahren 15 , und so mi.is- haltnismassig einfache Losung an: Lausen ware 1059 sen wir einmal mehr versuchen, die archaologischen als Mitgift der Kaiserstochter Mathilde, der ersten, Quellen mit den historischen Gegebenheiten zu nach einem Jahr Ehe bereits verstorbenen Frau kombinieren, urn unsere Schli.isse daraus zu ziehen. Rudolfs in seinen Besitz gelangt. Die landliche Bei der Betrachtung der fri.ihen Burgen haben wir Siedlung Lausen ist somit nicht nur als archaologisch bereits fri.iher festgestellt, dass sich mit dem Bau der weiterflihrende Ausgrabung zu verstehen, sondem- drei grossen Burgen Alt-Tierstein, Alt-Homberg und in Verbindung mit anderen Grabungen und histori- Odenburg eine fri.ihe Herrschaftsbildung fassen lasst schen Forschungen- als eine Schli.isselstelle fi.ir das (Tauber 1995). Der Erbauer dieser Burgen ist zwei- Verstandnis der Geschichte in jener Zeit, in der wir fellos jener "comes Rudolfus", der 1045 in einer nach wie vor mehr auf archiiologische Quell en als auf Urkunde erwahnt wird 16 . Wir halten ihn sowohl fi.ir Schiriftsti.icke bauen mi.issen. einen Vorfahren der Grafen von Alt-Homberg und Alt-Tierstein, die urn 1100 a us dem Nichts auftau- chen, zum hohen Reichsadel zahlen und Rudolf als Fazit dominanten Leitnamen fi.ihren, als auch fUr identisch mit Rudolf von Rheinfelden (bzw. von Schwa ben). Die Erforschung der landlichen Siedlungen hat in Dies wi.irde bedeuten, dass die Grafen von Rhein- der Schweiz in den letzten Jahren einen erfreulichen felden schon urn die Mitte des 11. Jahrhunderts fest Verlauf genommen (Schmaedecke im Druck). Wo fri.i- in unserer Gegend etabliert waren. Diese Hypothese her entsprechende Befunde unbeachtet zerstort wurden, konnte gesti.itzt werden durch die Erwahnung eines erlangen sie heute die Aufmerksamkeit, die sie ver- Grafen im Elsass Kuno im Jahre 1052, in dem die dienen. Fi.ir die Forschungen der Nordwestschweiz neuere Forschung (Hlawitschka 1991, S. 202) den lassen sich folgende wichtige Punkte herausschalen: Vater Rudolfs annimmt. 1. Die landliche Siedlung an sich gibt es nicht. Betrachtet man die in den letzten Jahren erforschten Betrachten wir unter diesen Aspekten die archii- Siedlungen wie Lausen-Bettenach, Liestal-Rosemtal, ologischen Befunde in Lausen, wo sichjust in dieser Reinach-Alte Brauerei, aber auch Develier/Courte- telle, so ergibt sich eine reichhaltige Palette ver- 15 Zusammenstellung der Erstcrwahnungen bei Rippmann schiedenartiger Auspragungen. 1995. 2. Eine wichtige Rolle bei der wirtschaftlichen 16 MGH 0 H m., 219. Ausrichtung scheint die Eisenverhi.ittung gespielt zu 306 Uindliche Siedlungen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zum Mittelalter haben, wie nicht nur die Untersuchungen entspre- HELMIG G. 1982: Fri.ihmittelalterliche Grubenhauser chender Gewerbeanlagen durch Ludwig Eschenlohr auf dem Mi.insterhi.igel. Ein Kapitel Basler Stadt- in den kantonen Jura und Bern zeigen, sondern auch geschichte, Archaologie der Schweiz 5/Heft 2, die Reste von Verhi.ittungsschlacken in den fri.ih- und 153-157. hochmittelalterlichen Siedlungen von Lausen, Rosern- HLA WITSCHKA E. 1991: Zur Herkunft und zu den tal und Develier/Courtetelle. Seitenverwandten des Gegenkonigs Rudolf von 3. Die reine Feststellung der in den einzelnen Rheinfelden- Genealogische und politisch-histo- Siedlungen feststellbaren Unterschiede bringt uns rische Untersuchungen, in: WEINFURTER S. (Hsg.), nicht weiter; wir mi.issen versuchen, diese Unter- Die Salier und das Reich 1. Salier, Adel und schiede auch in Richtung einer gesellschaftsge- Reichsverfassung, Sigmaringen, 175-220. schichtlichen Interpretation zu deuten. KAISER R. 1993: Das romische Erbe und das Mero- 4. Schriftliche und andere nichtarchaologische wingerreich, Enzyklopadie deutscher Geschichte Quellen sind konsequent einzubeziehen und mit den 26,Mi.inchen. archaologischen zu konfrontieren. Dies ermoglicht LA VICKA P. 1995: Eine Eisengewerbesiedlung des 9. eine standige gegenseitige Befruchtung der Denk- his 12. Jahrhunderts in Liestal-Roserntal, in: ansatze und Hypothesen. Wie unsere Beispiele zei- Schrnaedecke (Bearb.) 1995, 27-34. gen, werden damit weitgehende historische Perspek- MART! R. 1990: Bedeutende fri.ihmittelalterliche Sied- tiven erOffnet. lungsreste in Reinach BL, Archaologie der Schweiz 13, 136-153. MARTI R. 1994: Kontinuitat und Wandel am Beispiel Literatur fri.ihmittelalterlicher Keramik aus der Nordwest- schweiz, in: Keramik zwischen den Epochen. BOTTNER H. 1939: Die Landschaft urn Base! von der Funktion-Formenwandel- Technik. Wissenschaft- Einwanderung der Alamannen his zur Mitte des 8. liche Fachtagung vom 19.120. August 1994 auf Jahrhunderts, Vom Jura zum Schwarzwald NF, Schloss Miinchenwiler BE, Bern, 49-55. 59-82. MARTI R. 1995: Ansatze zu einer fri.ihmittelalter- ESCHENLOHR L. & SERNEELS V. 1991: Les bas four- lichen Siedlungsgeschichte der Nordwestschweiz, neaux merovingiens de Boecourt, Les Boulies in: Schmaedecke (Bearb.) 1995,9-16 (JU, Suisse), Cahier d'archeologiejurassienne 3. MARTI R. 1996: Fri.ihrnittelalterliche Siedlungsbe- EWALD J. 1991: Kitchen und Kirchengrabungen im funde aus dem Castrum Rauracense (Grabung Baselbiet. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Kir- Kaiseraugst, "Jakobli-Haus" 1994.02), mit Bei- chen-Landschaft der Nordwestschweiz, in: Tauber tragen von S. Fi.infschilling & Markus P., Jahres- (Hsg.) 1991, 57-84. berichte aus Augst und Kaiseraugst 17, 149-195 EWALD J.1996: Zur Baugeschichte der Kirche St. PELET P-L. 1993: Une industrie reconnue: Fer Michael zu Buus, Baselbieter Heimatblatter 6114, Charbon Acier dans le Pays de Vaud, Cahiers 121-136. d'archeologie romande 60. FELLNER R., POUSAZ N. & TAILLARD P. 1995: Le site RIPPMANN D. 1991: Zur Geschichte des Dorfes im de Courtetelle, Tivila (JU, Suisse), Haut moyen Mittelalter am Beispiel des Kantons Baselland, in: age et age dufer, Fouilles 1994, (avec les contri- Tauber (Hsg.) 1991, 31-55. butions de M. Guelat, geologue, L. Eschenlohr, V. RrPPMANN D. 1996: Bauern und Herren. Rothenjluh Friedli, C. Peter, M-H. Paratte-Rana, archeolo- im Mittelalter. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der gues), Republique et Canton du Jura, Section landlichen Gesellschaft im Mittelalter, mit einem d'archeologie de !'office du patrimoine historique Beitrag von J. Tauber , Liestal. et N16 39. SCHENARDI M. 1995: Le site du haut moyen age de FELLNER R. & SCHENARDI M. 1995: Le haut moyen Develier, La Pran (JU, Suisse). Fouilles 1994, a a age Develier, La Pran et Courtetelle, Tivila (avec les contributions de M. Guelat, geologue, (JU, Suisse). Synthese- premier bilan, (avec les L .. Eschenlohr, F. Lorenz, C. Peter, archeolo- contributions de L. Eschenlohr, archeologue, M. gues), Republique et Canton du Jura, Section Guelat, geologue, C. Peter, archeologue, S. Ste- d'archeologie de !'office du patrimoine historique koffer, historienne de 1'art), Republique et Canton et N16 38. du Jura, Section d'archeologie de !'office du SCHMAEDECKE M. (Bearb.) 1995: Landliche Sied- patrimoine historique et N16 40. !ungen zwischen Spatantike und Mittelalter. FREY P. 1992: Mittelalterliche Siedlungsbefunde in Beitrage zum Kolloquium in Liestal (Schweiz) Kaiseraugst, Jahresberichte aus Augst und Kai- vom 13. bis 15. Marz 1995, Archaologie und seraugst 13, 231-262. Museum 33. 307 J. Tauber SCHMAEDECKE M. 1996: Liindliche Siedlungen des TAUBER J. (Hsg.) 1991: Methoden und Perspektiven frtihen und hohen Mittelalters in der Schweiz, in: der Archaologie des Mittelalters. Tagungsbe- Ruralia 1996, Pamatky archeologicke Supple- richte zum Kolloquium vom 27.-30. September mentum 5, im Druck. 1989 in Liestal (Schweiz), Archaologie und SCHMAEDECKE M. & TAUBER J. 1992: Ausgra- Museum 20. bungen in Lausen-Bettenach. Vorbericht iiber die TAUBER J. 1992: Zum Stand der Eisenarchaologie im archaologischen Untersuchungen 1985-1992, Kanton Basei-Landschaft, Minaria Helvetica 12 (unter Mitarbeit von J. Obrecht und mit Beitragen a, 22-30. von H. Hi.ister und S. Jacomet), Archaologie und TAUBER J. 1993: Zum Stand der Eisenarchaologie im Museum 25. Kanton Basel-Landschaft - das Beispiel einer SERNEELS V. 1993: Archeometrie des scories de fer. Handwerkersiedlung im Rosemtal bei Liestal, Recherches sur la siderurgie ancienne en Suisse Archiiologische Informationen 16/2, 243-251. occidentale, Cahiers d'archeologie romande 61. TAUBER J. 1995: Archaologie und Geschichte. Zur SERNEELS V. 1995: Du minerai a l'objet: un village Frage der Rolle von Konigtum und Hochadel in de siderurgistes du IXe au XIIe siecle a Liestal- der mittelalterlichen Siedlungsgeschichte der Rosemtal, in: Schmaedecke (Bearb.) 1995,35-43. Nordwestschweiz, in: Schmaedecke (Bearb.) STEINLE S. & TAUBER J. 1974: Ein karolingischer 1995, 57-67. Topferbezirk in Oberwil, Kanton Basel-Land- WITTMER-BUTSCH M. 1995: Hypothesen zur Deu- schaft (Schweiz), Archaologisches Korrespon- tung ausgewahlter Quellenfragmente, in: Schmae- denzblatt 4, 181-188. decke (Bearb.) 1995, 45-56. TAUBER J. 1988: Ein karolingischer Topferofen in Reinach, Archiiologie und Museum 11, 69-83. Ji.irg Tauber Kanton Basei-Landschaft Archaologie und Kantonsmuseum Regierunsgebaude CH -441 0 Liestal 308 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 J.-L. Abbe Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques Depuis le milieu du XIXe siecle, les bastides ont vales. Les bastides offrent un terrain d'investigation attire 1'attention des chercheurs. La regularite geo- privilegie: les chartes de fondation et de franchises metrique des plans de village ou de ville, les privi- datent les creations, les plans cadastraux et les leges accordes par les chartes de franchises au photographies aeriennes restituent I' empreinte d' ame- moment des fondations (aux XIIIe et XIVe siecles), nagements ruraux geometriques. Quelques etudes ont focalise 1'attention des historiens, des geogra- monographiques menees depuis le debut des annees phes, des architectes et des urbanistes. A tel point que 1990 et d'autres avenir laissent entrevoir la richesse ces villeneuves ont ete considerees comme le de ce chantier apeine ouvert3 • symbole de l'urbanisme et des libertes au Moyen Il reste que la genese des parcellaires agraires des Age 1• Les travaux de C. Higounet ont perrnis de rec- bastides n 'est pas si aisee que cela a men er. Certes, tifier certaines exagerations et constituent le fonde- les textes sont relativement explicites sur I' organi- ment du sa voir actuel sur ce phenomene exceptionnel sation du futur village. La dimension des parcelles a par son ampleur 2 • Pourtant, cela vient d'etre dit, les batir figure souvent, avec des mesures de longueur et etudes ont surtout porte sur deux aspects: les con- de largeur precises. La confrontation avec les plans ditions historiques des fondations et la morphogenese cadastraux perrnet alors d'identifier les llots lies a des agglomerations. A !'inverse, le parcellaire agraire 1' operation, et meme de calculer la valeur des unites des nouveaux villages, creations rurales par excel- de mesure utilisees 4 • Les textes sont par contre moins lence, a ete pendant longtemps le grand absent de precis au sujet des parcelles amettre en valeur. Leur I 'interet des chercheurs. Il a fallu attend re 1' essor mention, leurs mesures, sont tres lacunaires et les recent des etudes de parcellaires conduites par les modalites du parcellement ne figurent pas non plus antiquisants pour que I 'attention se porte sur le pay- dans les chartes. Pourtant des systemes parcellaires sage que peuvent engendrer les villeneuves medie- reguliers, prenant la forme d'un quadrillage tres F. PUJOL, L'eiaboration de !'image symbolique de la offre un cadre de travail primordial pour I'etude des parcellaires bastide, Annales du Midi I 03, 1991, 345-367. medievaux. Le colloque d'Orleans de mars 1996 sur "I' Archeo- Les principaux articles de C. HIGOUNET sont rassembles logie des parcellaires" et les deux volumes sur Les formes du clans Paysages et villages neufs du Moyen Age, Federation paysage, G. CHOUQUER (dir.), t. I, Etudes sur les parcellaires, historique du Sud-Ouest, Bordeaux, I975 et Villes, societes et et t. 2, Archeologie des parcellaires (Actes du colloque d 'Or- economies medievales, Federation historique du Sud-Ouest, leans), collection Archeologie Aujourd'hui, Errance/ARCHEA, Bordeaux, I992. ll n' est pas possible de fa ire etat ici de toute la Paris, 1996, traduisent les progres de cette recherche et font le litterature relative aux bastides depuis M. A. CURIE-SEIMBRES, point sur les connaissances actuelles. Voir en particulier le biian Essai sur les villes fondees dans le Sud-Ouest sous le nom des travaux sur le Moyen Age: J.-L. ABBE, Perrnanences et generique de bastides, Toulouse, 1880. Parmi les travaux d'en- mutations des parcellaires medievaux, t. 2, 223-233. Deux semble recents, il faut relever: J. HUGUENEY & P. LAVEDAN, monographies sur les parcellaires agraires des bastides sont a L 'urbanisme au Moyen Age, Droz, Geneve, I974; G. BERNARD, re lever: J.-L. ABBE, L 'amenagement de l'espace: le parcellaire Les bastides du sud-ouest de la France. Morphologie et fonc- rural de la bastide de Saint-Denis (Aude), clans: Travaux reunis tion. Etude de geographie historique, these de doctorat de par E. MORNET, Campagnes medievales: I 'homme et son espace. Illeme cycle, Universite de Paris IV, I983; F. DIYORNE, B. Etudes ojfertes aRobert Fossier, Publications de la Sorbonne, GENDRE, 8. LAVERGNE & P. PANERAI, Essai sur la regularite. Paris, 1995, I 03-119 et C. LA VIGNE, Recherches sur les sys- Les bastides d 'Aquitaine, du Bas-Languedoc et du Beam, temes parcellaires de fondation en Gascogne au Moyen Age, Archives d 'Architecture Modeme, Bruxelles, I985; A. LAURENT, clans: G. CHOUQUER (dir.), op. cit. t. I, I82-I98 (sur les basti- R. MALEBRANCHE & G. SERAPHIN, Bastides, vi lies nouvel/es de des de Barcelonne-du-Gers, de Mielan, clans le Gers, et de Moyen Age, Toulouse, 1988. Grenade-sur-Garonne, en Haute-Garonne). C. Lavigne prepare 3 Le projet collectif interregional "Cartographie des anciens une these de Doctorat sur Fondations d'habitats et restruc- parcellaires de la France" (UMR 9966 "Archeologie et terri- turations des paysages au Moyen Age dans le bassin de la toires", CNRS!Universite de Tours), coordonne par G. Chouquer, Garonne (dir. J.-8. Marquette, Universite de Bordeaux Ill). 309 J.-L. Abbe homogene, ont ete observes a plusieurs reprises, soit regroupes a la peripherie immediate du nouveau aux environs immediats de la bastide (a Saint-Denis, village. C'est pourquoije delaisserai les textes ne fai- par exemple) ou sur la majorite de son territoire (a sant reference qu 'aces deux categories de parcelles Barcelonne-du-Gers, Mielan et Grenade-sur-Garonne, urbaines ou peri-urbaines pour ne retenir que les voir n. 3). Les photographies aeriennes revelent documents mentionnant de maniere explicite des d 'autres cas evidents et ont deja ete interpretees clans parcelles rurales avec des donnees chiffrees. L'objec- ce sens 5 • I1 reste que photographies et cadastres sont . tif est d' observer et d' interpreter le contenu des char- des documents tres posterieurs aux operations d'ame- tes a propos du parcellaire rural. nagement et qu, il fa ut se mefier des interpretions Le tableau elabore a partir de ces criteres (fig. 1) hatives, surtout si elles ne peuvent etre soutenues par ne se veut pas exhaustif. Tous les textes conserves des sources ecrites. n'ont pas ete vus. Neanmoins, les travaux de C. Aussi, il semble utile de reflechir sur les methodes Higounet et le repertoire contenu dans I' ouvrage Bas- qui peuvent etre mises en oeuvre pour mieux detecter tides, villes nouvelles du Moyen Age permettent de et caracteriser les paysages issus des bastides meri- dresser une liste significative completee par les dionales et, au-dela, des diverses formes d'habitats editions de textes ou la consultation des documents fondes ou developpes pendant la periode de crois- eux-memes 7 • Le petit nombre de chartes recensees, sance economique des XIe-debut du XN e siecles. En dix -sept, retient d' abord I' attention. La mention de particulier, quels peuvent etre les apports respectifs superficie en vignes, terres labourables, pres ou bois des sources ecrites et des sources planimetriques qui se justifie par les avantages offerts, a sa voir de faibles viennent d 'etre evoquees ? Que fa ire pour les rend re redevances ( cens ou agrier pour les cereales). A complementaires ? La reponse a ces interrogations l'instar des modalites equivalentes sur les lots a batir necessite des etudes monographiques nombreuses, ce et sur les jardins, I' objectif est de dynamiser le peu- qui n' est pas encore le cas. I1 ne sera done question plement et l'activite agricole en rendant les con- ici que de proposer des pistes de reflexion a partir de ditions de residence et d'exploitation attrayantes. quelques exemples. Comment interpreter alors le peu de textes rencon- tres? La rarete des mentions de terres a mettre en valeur la is se entendre, c 'est en tout cas une hypo these Les chartes seigneuriales et la restructuration des envisageable, que ce n 'est pas une priorite pour les terroirs seigneurs. L' essentiel est de favoriser I' installation de nouveaux venus au village neufpar un faible cens Les chartes seigneuriales, cela vient d'etre dit, sur la maison et sou vent aussi le jardin. En accordant sont plutot avares de renseignements sur les lots de des "remises" sur les redevances agraires, le seigneur terres alloues aux tenanciers clans le cadre de ces risque d'oberer exagerement ses revenus fanciers. I! fondations. I1 arrive assez souvent qu'en plus de la s'en dispense done la plupart du temps. parcelle a construire - local ou ayral - i1 soit fait A I 'inverse, il est possible de comprendre la pre- mention du jardin- art, casal ou casalere. Mais au sence des biens ruraux comme une volonte accrue de lieu de donner les mesures de longueur prevues pour reussir !'operation et de lui donner une plus forte ces demiers, le texte indique de preference la super- dimension agraire. Le cas des fondations de Sicard ficie, ce qui rend I' identification de ces parcelles sur Alaman est tout a fait revelateur. Homme de con- un plan un peu peu moins simple que pour les fiance des comtes de Toulouse Raymond VII et habitations 6 . Les jardins sont cependant toujours Alphonse de Poitiers, il beneficie de nombreuses situes clans l'aire de !'agglomeration, soit attenant a infeodations qu' il complete par des achats fanciers I 'habitation, so it - le plus souvent, semble-t-il - en Albigeois et en Toulousain 8 • Sur les cinq fonda- Sur !'etude mathematique de la metrologie des unites de ou le jardin do it mesurer 8 perches sur 24 (voir fig. I). longueur apartir d 'un groupe de bastides: H. LEBLOND, Recher- 7 References des ouvrages n. 2. Les auteurs de Bastides, ches metrologiques sur les plans de bastides medievales, villes nouvelles du Moyen Age font un repertoire (279-305) de Histoire et Mesure, 1987, 11-3/4, 55-87. toutes les agglomerations identifiees par eux comme bastides, 5 Des les annees 1960, J. SoYER analysait plusieurs cliches soit 600. Pour chaque notice, les chartes de fondation et de verticaux de I'IGN et attirait !'attention sur le parcellaire des coutumes sont indiquees lorsqu' elles sont connues (date, seig- bastides dans: La vie urbaine, nouvelle serie, 2, avril-juin 1960, neur(s) a I' origine de I' acte ). Les informations originales, 81-88; Photo-interpretation, no 2, 1962, fascicule I 0 et no 4, comme les mentions de lots attribues, sont parfois citees. Les 1966, 47-50. G. Bemard (voir n. 2) presente de nombreux sche- sources utilisees pour chaque document sont repertoriees ala fin mas d 'interpretation de cliches, mais sans veritablement les de !'article. analyser (entre les p. 87 et 88). Voir a son sujet: C. HIGOUNET, Les Alaman, seigneurs 6 Quelques exceptions a noter, cependant, comme a Gargas bastidors et peagers du XIIIe siecle, op. cit. n. 2, 1975, 305-323. 310 Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques commune- date seigneurs maison jardin vigne terre pre bois departement AIGNES 31 1242 Hospitaliers 1 1 1 seteree 1aboureurs 0 0 0 1 1 1/2 seterree brassiers 0 0 0 1 1 0 seteree femmes 0 0 0 BARRAN 32 1270 Cte Armagnac 4*12 perches 114 arpent 1 arpent 0 1 arpent 0 - Eveque Auch 32*64perches 32*64 perches 8ASSOUES 32 1295 Eveque Auch 4*12 perches 1/4 arpent I arpent 0 1 arpent 0 32*64 perches 32*64 perches BEAUMONT-DE- 1278 Roi-Cisterciens 1 I 1 arpent 0 0 0 LOMAGNE 82 BOULOC 31 1242 S. Alaman 1 I pugnen!e I eminee I cartonnee 0 0 BUZET-SUR-TARN 31 1241 Cte Toulouse 4*6 brasses 1 pugneree I carteree I seteree 0 0 CASTELNAU-DE- 1256 S. Alaman 4*6 cannes 112 carteree I eminee 0 0 0 LEVIS 81 0ARGAS 32 1240 Seigneur I 8*24 perches 1 arpent 0 1 arpent 0 GIMONT 32 1266- Cte Toulouse 1 arpent 1 arpent 0 1 arpent 0 1274 Cisterciens GRENADE-SUR- 1291 Roi-Cisterciens 5*15 brasses 1/4 arpent 0 1 arpent 0 0 GARONNE 31 MONSEGUR 33 1265 Roi Angleterre 24*72 pieds 1 esturon 1 concade 1 paire boeuf/jour 0 0 MONTASTRUC 31 1242 S. Alaman 1 0 1 eminee 2 cartonnees 0 0 0RNEZAN 32 1322 Seigneur 12*35 coudees I 1 concade 1 seteree 0 0 PLAGNE 31 1303 Templiers 5*12 periones 1 0 1 arpent 0 1/2arpent 32*64 periones PUYBEGON 81 1246 S. A1aman 4*6 brasses 1 carteree 1 eminee 1seteree 1 seten!e 0 SAINTE-GEMME 33 1275 Cte Armagnac- 4*12 stades 2/5 arpent 1arpent 1 arpent 1 arpent 0 2 coseigneurs 32*64 perches 32*64 perches SAINT-PAPOUL 11 1255 Benedictins l l eminee l seteree 1 modiatee 0 0 Fig. 1.- Tableau des mesures relatives aux parcelles rurales concedees par chartes defondation ou de franchises des localites du a sud-ouest de la France aux XII!e et X!Ve siecles. Legende: Seigneur: seigneur de rang secondaire; 0: absence de mention de cette categorie de parcelle; 1: la parcelle est mentionmie, mais sans mesure. References des chartes en fin d 'article. tions rurales qu' i1 realise entre 1242 et 125 6, quatre si elles en sont le revelateur. Les textes ne font pas (Bouloc, Castelnau-de-Levis, Montastruc, Puybegon) etat de mesures de longueur pour les parcelles precisent les superficies des terres privilegiees. A rurales, a quelques exceptions pres. A Barran, Bas- Puybegon, elles concement les jardins, les vignes, les soues et Sainte-Gemme, les arpents de vigne et de pre terres labourables et les pres: c 'est 1' exemple le plus font 32 perches sur 64 et a Plagne I' arpent de terre complet, avec Sainte-Gemme, des dix-sept chartes labourable, 32 periones sur 64 9 • Ces dimensions retenues. I! s'agit d'une veritable politique de peu- peuvent correspondre a un format de parcelle trapue plement et de mise en valeur des terroirs. M ais c 'est (la longueur double de la largeur) effectivement le seul cas ou elle se manifeste aussi bien. Pourtant il repandu dans les regions meridionales. Pourtant a ne faut pas negliger les trois fondations en pareage Plagne, C. Higounet n 'a pu identifier des arpents de des cisterciens avec les Capetiens. Beaumont-de- terre reguliers qui correspondraient a ceux des Lomagne, Gimont et Grenade-sur-Garonne appartien- franchises alors qu' i1 a restitue les casaleres et les nent au groupe des plus eminentes bastides cister- parcelles habitees d' origine 10 • I1 convient plutot d' en- ciennes. Elles relevent d'une autre generation que visager que ces mesures de longueur servent a celles de Si card Alaman puisqu' elles datent du der- rappeler la valeur de I' arpent pour determiner I' as- nier tiers du XIIIe siecle. Et les avantages octroyees siette de la redevance. Le plus sou vent, d 'ailleurs, les sont plus limites: les vignes seulement aBeaumont et parcelles de vigne, de pre et de terre sont indiquees a Gimont, les terres, sans precision, a Grenade. par des unites de mesures agraires de superficie (un I! reste a savoir si ces dispositions incitatives arpent, une seteree, une eminee ... ) 11 • La surface im- debouchent sur un amenagement du paysage agraire, porte plus que la forme en la matiere. 11 L'exemple des jardins est significatif. A Sainte-Gemme, Sur cette mesure "conventionnelle", voir C. HIGOUNET, Une bastide de colonisation des Templiers clans les pre- a l'arpent servant faire un casal doit 4 deniers, tout comme celui Pyrenees: Plagne, op. cit. n. 2, 1975, 295. pour le pre ou la vigne do it l 0 deniers. M a is les droits de 10 Ibid., 300-303. retroacapte sont de 5 deniers par arpent de casal et de 2 deniers 311 J.-L. Abbe N 0 1 100 200 m Azas Fig. 2. - Le parcellaire de Buzet-sur- Tarn (Haute-Garonne) d 'apres le plan cadastral de 1836. Dessin J. -L. Abbl a a Le relief n 'est pas represente car il est tres plat cet endroit de la rive gauche de la vallee du Tarn, part quelques faibles escarpements en bordure de la riviere. L 'altitude varie entre 109 et 112 m. Il faut done confronter les chartes aux plans une grande partie du territoire communal actuel. cadastraux et aux photographies aeriennes pour eva- Ainsi, a Grenade, deux trames agraires paraissent luer 1'impact des fondations sur le paysage rural et le liees a la fondation 12 • I! est par consequent possible lien avec les franchises. Pour les trois bastides cister- d'affirmer que ces entreprises mettent en oeuvre une a ciennes, cet amenagement est tout fait sensible: des gestion rationalisee par 1'uniformisation des redevan- zones quadrillees entourent les nouveaux villages sur ces et un nouveau parcellaire regulier. Il reste nean- 312 Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques anc. chAteau / '' '',, '~ '1--.s ,, '',, ' '' ' ' '-. '-. I I '- I -< ' ' '" ' ' ' ~ '- ' I ', ',;''', ) ", I I I I I I I ' I I ', ,j I I N I I I 1 1'- l 1 I I '-..._ I I I I I 0 100 200 m Fig. 3.- Schema d 'interpretation du parcellaire de Buzet-sur- Tarn (Haute-Garonne) d 'apres le plan cadastral de 1836. Dessin J.-L. Abbe. Legende: 1. !lots urbains. 2. Parcellaire N- 23°£. 3. Parcellaire N- l9°E. 4. Trace suppose de la premiere enceinte villageoise. par casal. Ainsi le casal fait en principe 2/5 d'arpent et non I arpent comme le cens pourrait le Iaisser croire. L'arpent sert done d'etalon pour calculer les redevances et non pas d'indicateur de la superficie reelle. 12 Sur ces trois bastides, voir Ies schemas clans G. BERNARD, op. cit. n. 2. Pour Grenade, etudes des parcellaires clans: C. LAVIGNE, art. cil. n. 3, I 92- I95 avec la bibliographie des etudes relatives au fin age de cette bastide. A Beaumont-de-Lomagne, des operations de parcellement ont lieu en 1280 et I282 (0. DE SAINT-BLANCAT, Lafondation des bastides royales dans la semichaussee de Toulouse aux XII!e et X!Ve siecles, these de I'Ecole des Chartes, I 94 I, CRDP, Toulouse, 1985, 62). 313 J.-L. Abbe TF. du SIGNAL ACCUMULATION 1 0.96 0.00 O.?e 2 0.60 3 o.se 0.40 0.3e 0.20 0.10 20 4(:) 6(:) 80 1(:)(:) 12(:) 140 160 180 2(:)(:) Fig. 4.- Saint-Denis (Aude). Traitement numerique d'un agrandissement du clicle IGN 1976 FR 2810/200, no/869. Transformation de Fourier du signal d 'accumulation des !ignes verticales (d 'orientation ouest-est). D. Charraut, laboratoire d'Optique P.-M. Duffieux de l'Universite de Besanr;on. Legende: 1, 2 et 3: pies remarquables. Abscisses: frequences spatiales, ordonnees: importance des pies. moins a determiner si les arpents de terre evoques Par consequent, i1 semble difficile d'etablir une dans les coutumes se retrouvent comme unites de correspondance etroite entre les mesures de longueur parcellement, a l'instar des jardins et des ayrals. et de superficie consignees dans les chartes et 1' orga- Pourtant, cette adequation entre la charte et le nisation du parcellaire rural, a la difference de 1, es- paysage rural de la bastide n'est pas une constante. Si pace urbanise ou maisons et jardins sont disposees les fondations de Sicard Alaman sont prises en con- selon les mesures figurant dans les textes. Autrement sideration, le resultat est tres different. Les plans dit, les franchises sur les terres revelent la pre- cadastraux du XIXe siecle montrent bien la regularite occupation des seigneurs d'attirer ceux qui !es met- des !lots des villages, mais rien dans le parcellaire tent en valeur, mais n' engendrent pas necessairement rural proche ne correspond a une restructuration un nouveau parcellement. Les situations sont en fait organisee et geometrique 13 • C'est le cas aussi pour tres diverses. Ainsi a Aignes, les Hospitaliers ne Gargas 14 et apropos de Monsegur, C. Higounet arrive donnent des mesures et des redevances que pour les aux memes conclusions. Neanmoins, le parcellaire vignes, en distinguant une seteree pour les labou- proche de cette bastide met en valeur des orientations reurs, une demi-seteree pour les brassiers, alors que et un maillage qui pourraient etre le fruit d 'operations les femmes, faisant 1'objet d 'un article specifique, concertees 15 • n'ont qu'une maison et un jardin. Cette hierarchie, 1l Plans parcellaires: Bouloc: A. D. Haute-Garonne, 3P2 I 66, Castelnau-de-Levis: A.D. Tarn, 3P 432 I 5, Montastruc: A.D. Haute- Garonne, 3P2 I 326, Puybegon: A.D. Tarn, 3P I 2438. ' 4 A.D. Haute-Garonne, 3P2 I 189. 1s Pour C. Higounet, "La concession achaque habitant de Monsegur en 1267 (sic, 1265 en fait) d'autant de terrain qu'une paire de boeufs pouvait en labourer en un jour n 'a laisse aucune trace clans le plan cadastral" (Bastides et frontieres, op. cit. n. 2, 1975, 249). Schema clans G. BERNARD, op. cit. n. 2. 314 Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques charte de coutumes aux habitants presents et a venir AFFICHAGE DES PERIODICITES DETECTEES de Buzet 16 . I1 vient d'acheter cette seigneurie a divers Critere (0-1 ): .40 seigneurs entre 1237 et 1239 et en a fait delimiter le 512 pixels en x = 1445 m territoire 17 . L 'agglomeration existe deja puisque le comte FnSquence PIC Periode (m) s 'adresse a ceux qui habitent in castro nostro de Buzeto. Le castrum designe a la fois une fortification 27 (1.00) 27 54 - le senechal de Carcassonne s 'y rend en 1271 18 - et 26 ( .90) 27 56 1'habitat villageois. En effet, la charte de 1241 dis- 2 ( .79) 2 723 tingue, parmi les habitants, ceux habentes domum vel 99 ( .73) 99 15 locale infra clausuram sive parietes dicti castri de 7 ( .70) 7 206 ceux qui possedent domum vel locale ... extra 94 ( .62) 94 15 castrum, in villa seu in boria. Un rempart entoure 5 ( .61) 5 289 done le "chateau" et des maisons. Le premier, aujour- 3 ( .58) 2 482 d'hui disparu, etait situe sur un promontoire rocheux 51 (.57) 51 28 au confluent du Tarn et du ruisseau de Marignol. Le 11 ( .56) 11 131 plan cadastral du XIXe siecle (fig. 2) montre la plu- 25 (.51) 27 58 sieurs grandes parcelles formant presque un anneau 41 (.50) 41 35 rappelant !'emplacement des fosses 19 . Une rue plus 97 ( .49) 97 15 large que les autres, en arc de cercle a 1'est de 1'eglise 58 ( .49) 58 25 (XIIIe siecle), pourrait correspondre au premier 13 ( .47) 13 111 rempart villageois mentionne clans la charte, mais 52 ( .46) 51 28 cela reste a verifier. Les maisons situees "hors du 98 ( .46) 99 15 castrum " se trouvent in villa, qui serait la partie 30 ( .45) 30 48 ouverte du village et in boria, dans un domaine 144 ( .44) 144 10 ruraF0 • 49 ( .43) 49 29 Buzet, a une trentaine de kilometres au nord-est 34 ( .43) 34 43 de Toulouse, est bien situe sur le Tarn, voie navi- 92 ( .43) 92 16 geable. Le chateau controle un pont qui franchit la 110 ( .42) 110 13 riviere, permettant d'aller de Toulousain en Albi- 76 ( .42) 76 19 geois21. Son role important pour les communications 160 ( .42) 160 9 et le commerce regionaux permet de comprendre 121 ( .41) 121 12 l'interet du comte qui rejoint celui de Sicard Alaman 130 ( .40) 130 11 dont les fondations sont toutes proches 22 • C'est un 12 ( .40) 11 120 Fig. 5. Saint-Denis (Aude). Affichage des periodicites 16 detectees a partir de la transformation de Fourier La charte est connue par la copie faite au XVe siecle d'une precedente (jig. 4). copie d'un vidimus de Louis XI date de mars 1462. 17 0. DE SA!NT-BLANQUAT, op. cit. n. 12, 35 et Y. OOSSAT, Saisimentum comitatus tholosani, Collection de documents qui n 'est pas sans rappeler la dichotomie entre les inedits sur I'histoire de France, serie in-8°, vol. I, CNRS, Paris, manses libres et les manses serviles du haut Moyen 1966, p. 189, n. I. 18 Age, est de nature sociale et favorise les paysans Y. OOSSAT, op. cit. n. 17, 187-193. 19 Plan parcellaire de 1836, A.D. Haute-Garonne, 3P2 I 79. aises. Mais il ne s'agit pas de reorganiser le vignoble 2 ° Cette interpretation du vocabulaire lie a I'habitat et au local. terroir est proposee avec prudence. 0. de Saint-Bianquat consi- dere que villa et boria sont synonymes dans le texte. Le deux- ieme terme sera it une latinisation de I'occitan barri design ant le L' exemple de Buzet-sur-Tarn faubourg (op. cit. n.l2, p. 132 et 137, n. 1). 11 est difficile de trancher. 21 Le pont medieval de Buzet a ete emporte par les crues au Il m'a paru interessant de s'arreter sur le cas de XVIlle siecle. Le plan cadastral represente les deux piles sub- Buzet-sur-Tarn (Haute-Garonne, canton de Monta- sistantes au X!Xe siecle. Son emplacement, aux abords imme- struc, fig. 2 et 3) pour illustrer les apports des sources diats du chateau, est marque sur les fig. 2 et 3 par des tirets. 22 Sur les objectifs economiques, comrnerciaux et agricoles de ecrites et planimetriques et leurs eventuelles corre- ces fondations, voir: C. Higounet, art. cit. n. 8, et L'occupation lations en matiere de parcellaire agraire. Le comte de du sol du pays entre Tarn et Garonne au Moyen Age, op. cit. n. Toulouse Raymond VII accorde le 15 aout 1241 une 2, 1975, 129-150. 315 J.-L. Abbe chef-lieu de bailie dont dependent cinq bastides et six grande superficie, afin de juger s'il tient compte ou castra en 1271. Le succes de la charte de franchises non des limites communales, et done s'il correspond se lit sur le plan du village. L'agglomeration com- a une mise en oeuvre locale, clans le cadre d'un prend une serie de rues et d 'ilots dont le trace n 'est finage, ou a une organisation a plus grande echelle. I1 pas d'une geometrie parfaite - le raccord avec le faut cependant observer qu'aucun chemin du cadas- castrum en est probablement la raison - mais 1'ho- tre ne s 'integre ases orientations, sauf le tronc;:on v5. mogeneite de !'ensemble est significative. La charte Par contre, la limite v3 deja evoquee joue le role de franchises prevoyait d'ailleurs des localia pour les d'axe sur lequel butent les autres parcelles. Si c'est maisons de quatre brasses sur six. effectivement un ancienne voie, cela attesterait la L' amenagement urbain est-il developpe par celui relative anciennete de la formation de ce parcellaire, de 1'espace rural ? Raymond VII concede a chaque son anteriorite a celui identifie en premier. La meme habitant, present'ou futur, unjardin d'une superficie observation peut etre faite apropos de la limite v4. d'une pugneree avec un cens d'un denier toulousain, I1 est difficile de proposer une chronologie abso- une carteree pour faire une vigne avec un cens de lue des formes parcellaires identifiees. La trame trois deniers et une seteree de terre a labourer sans proche de Buzet parte le temoignage d'un amenage- aucun cens (fig. 1). Chacun peut defricher, s'ille veut, ment modeste mais ordonne qui doit etre consecutif en acquittant un agrier correspondant au neuvieme de a l'essor de !'habitat au XIIIe siecle. Cependant la recolte. Ces dispositions visent bien sur a accorder !'orientation (23° Est) ne correspond a rien clans le des avantages pour les redevances. Debouchent-elle village: il ne s' agit pas d 'une operation integrant les sur un nouveau paysage agraire ? La fig. 3 propose parcellaires urbain et agraire. La deuxieme trame, une interpretation du parcellaire autour de Buzet23 • dont I' empreinte est plus vive, correspond a une autre Deux ensembles ont retenu !'attention. phase: !'orientation differe (19° Est) avec une pre- Aux abords meridionaux immediats du village, dominance des limites est-ouest, contrairement au plusieurs limites de parcelles, parfois des tronc;:ons de premier parcellaire. Elle pourrait correspondre a une chemins, esquissent une trame lanieree reguliere. phase ulterieure de 1'amenagement medieval, mais Elle est reperable jusqu' a environ 700 metres du vil- son extension et son agencement interne (role de v3 lage et structure nettement 1'espace entre le ruisseau et v4) font plutot envisager son anteriorite. de Marignol et le grand chemin allant a Lavaur et a L 'exemple de Buzet-sur-Tarn con vie a prendre en Castres. Les secteurs de voies v1 et v2, perpendi- compte la complexite des amenagements agraires culaires entre eux, semblent lies a une reorganisation medievaux lies aux villages neufs. L' octroi en 1241 du reseau viaire que trahit le trace en baYonnette du de coutumes semble trouver un prolongement sur le chemin de Bels et d' Azas ainsi que !'axe v3, limite sol autour de village. Mais c'est une operation visi- parcellaire pouvant reveler une ancienne voie. Le blement modeste, qui ne bouleverse pas le paysage, developpement du castrum du Buzet a engendre, a la difference des bastides cisterciennes apparaissant c' est ain si qu 'il est possible de 1'interpreter, la trans- clans le tableau. Au lieu de faire table rase de ce qui formation partielle de la trame via ire et du parcellaire existe, le parcellaire anterieur a ete globalement rural. Cependant, la superficie concernee reste assez maintenu. Sur ce point, Buzet est en definitive ami- reduite. chemin des fondations de Sicard Alaman et de celles L'examen du parcellaire a aussi mis en valeur un de C1teaux, pour rester clans le cadre comparatif deuxieme ensemble original. Situe plus a l'ecart de dresse clans cette etude. Les operations du comte de Buzet, il s'etend par contre sur un espace relative- Toulouse et de son conseiller ont en commun des ment important. Caracterise par un fort lanierage, sa mesures de superficie identiques ou proches (pour les densite est remarquable clans les quartiers de la maisons, les jardins, les terres labourables) et !'im- Mouline, du Gres, jusqu'au moulin de Laberano, sur pact des dispositions dans 1'amenagement transparait environ 1, 7 km. Il se prolonge, semble-t-il, au-dela surtout dans le lotissement villageois. Il faut attendre du ruisseau de Marignol, et surtout quelques grands les annees 1260 et plus encore 1270 pour que des axes du parcellaire lui sont isoclines a I' est (v6 - 1 operation d' envergure touchent des fractions impor- km de long- et v7), bien que relativement eloignes. tantes de finages lies a des fondations: la regulari- Comment comprendre cet ensemble parcellaire? Son sation des champs proches de Buzet n'en serait etendu est telle qu'il faudrait l'etudier sur une plus qu'une ebauche. Les etudes deja menees sur 23 Le schema a ete realise a !'aide d'une grille orthonormee et en reportant les limites parcellaires qui s'integraient aux orientations selectionnees. Le territoire a l'ouest du ruisseau de Marignol n'est pas represente: le parcellaire n'adopte pas du tout les memes dispositions qu'a !'est et ne paralt pas lie morphologiquement aux transformations du XII!e siecle. 316 Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: I' apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques Grenade-sur-Garonne, Mielan, Barcelonne-du-Gers lyse des paysages. La recherche des orientations et et Saint-Denis prouvent nettement la radicalisation des des periodicites metrologiques contenues dans un changements ulterieurs" 4 • cliche de I 'IGN perm et aujourd 'hui de detecter les traits dominants d 'une organisation parcellaire. Les principes du traitement numerique ayant ete exposes Traitement statistique et numerique des sources dans d'autres publications, je n'y reviendrai pas 25 • I! s 'agit de de gager les orientations majeures du par- Jusqu'a maintenant, i1 a ete question de l'apport cellaire en eliminant progressivement celles qui sont des chartes de fondation et de coutumes a la con- secondaires: c'est le "filtrage" de !'image numerique naissance du paysage rural des bastides et a a leur obtenue a partir du cliche. De la, le calcul des perio- mise en correlation, delicate parfois, cela vient d'etre dicites principales est realise par la recherche des vu, avec les plans cadastraux. Or, dans de nombreux ecarts types entre les !ignes selectionnees. Comme cas, les chartes ont disparu et les conditions d'ela- dans le cas des cadastres antiques, cette methode boration des paysages neufs ne peuvent etre appre- convient parfaitement a I 'etude des villeneuves ayant hendees que par d 'autres sources. Ainsi 1'etude de la engendre leur propre parcellaire. Lorsque celui-ci est bastide audoise de Saint-Denis m'a amene a recher- organise selon un quadrillage regulier, le traitement cher la genese de son parcellement a partir d 'un d'image permet de mettre en valeur son etendu et ses censier realise en 1490 et des documents plani- rythmes dominants. C. Lavigne pour Barcelonne-du- metriques. Les chartes d 'origine de cette fondation Gers et moi-meme pour Saint-Denis avons mis en royale des annees 1290-1293 ne sont pas connues. oeuvre cette methode d'analyse" 6 • Or, a la suite d'un traitement statistique, le censier a A Saint-Denis, le filtrage numerique d'une photo- revele que les 2/3 (31/50) des jardins et des vergers graphie aerienne de 1'IGN de 197 6 met en valeur les avaient une superficie d'une carteree ou de deux grands axes du nouveau parcellaire organise selon un pugnerees (la moitie d'une carteree). Or, la carteree, quadrillage orthonorme rigoureux autour de la basti- ou quart d' arpent, est une mesure frequente des de27. Les fig. 4 et 5 temoignent des etapes du traitement jardins (voir fig. 1) dans les chartes. I! a a us si indique du ca!cul des periodicites. La transformation de Fou- que la superficie d 'un journal correspond a celles de rier du signal d'accumulation (fig. 4) represente par treize grandes parcelles carrees. Chacune est limitee une courbe les ecarts types entre les !ignes de pixels par quatre chemins et occupee par des pres. Ces selectionnees par le filtrage numerique, autrement dit parcelles constituent en fait le module de base de la les intervalles entre les !ignes du parcellaire. Trois bastide, celui aussi des llots batis et des jardins. Le "pies" emergent assez nettement (1, 2 et 3). Le tableau journal, 36 ares, est I' equivalent de la seteree ou de d'affichage des periodes detectees (fig. 5) convertit en l'arpent local. Ceux-ci sont effectivement des super- metres les pixels suivant un ordre decroissant en ficies recurrentes des parcelles rurales dans les char- fonction de la frequence (la hauteur des pies sur le tes. Verifies sur le plan cadastral, les resultats ainsi graphique) et degage ainsi les ecarts dominants: obtenus par le traitement des donnees du censier le pie 27 (le 1, de loin le plus eleve) correspond a permettent de proposer des hypotheses fondees sur le une periode metrique de 54 a 58 m, parcellement de Saint-Denis (activites et superficies, - le pie 99 ( le 2), a une periode de 15 m, unites de mesure). Ils vont aussi dans le sens d'une - le pie 51 (le 3), a une periode de 28 m. prise en compte des mesures inscrites dans les chartes La relation est etroite entre les trois periodes: la pour I' amenagement des terroirs puisqu' elles se premiere est le double de troisieme et pratiquement le retrouvent mises en pratique. Par contre il n'a pas ete quadruple de la deuxieme. I1 est aise d'identifier la possible d'etablir de telles correlations pour les periode de 54-58 m au cote des !lots cam~s de la bas- vignes et les terres labourables. tide (voir supra ). Calculee a partir du plan parcel- Le traitement numerique des photographies aerien- laire, leur superficie moyenne est de 36 ares (le jour- nes offre depuis peu de nouvelles possibilites d'ana- nal du censier de 1490), soit 60 m de cote. Le 24 C. LAVIGNE et J.-L. ABBE, arts. cits. n. 3. partir d'un logiciel mis au point au laboratoire d'Optique P.-M. 25 Duffieux de l 'Universite de Besanc;:on (D. Charraut). D. Charraut, F. Favory, C. Raynaud, avec le concours de P. JOURDAIN, M.-J. OURIACHI et H. PERRIN, Paysages rythmes: 26 C. LAYIGNE, art. cit. n. 3. J'ai effectue le traitement d'image recherches sur l'empreinte des mesures antiques dans le par- sur Saint-Den is au laboratoire d 'Optique de Besanc;:on avec D. cellaire agraire languedocien, Mappemonde, 311992, 28-33; D. Charraut et G. Chouquer le 13 novembre 1992. 27 Le cliche IGN ( 1976 FR 2810/200, n° 1869) est reproduit CHARRAUT, G. CHOUQUER & F. FAVORY, Traitementnumerique de l' image, Archeologia, n° 307, decembre 1994, 24-32, et C. avec une image du filtrage obtenu dans D. CHARRAUT, G. LAYIGNE, art. cit. n. 3, 183-184. Traitement de !'image realise a CHOUQUER & F. FAVORY, art. cit. n. 25, 30. 317 1.-L. Abbe traitement numerique arrive a un resultat tres voisin. Apres 1260 la mise en valeur des terres s'accom- Les subdivisions de la periode de 54-58 m repre- pagne souvent d'une reorganisation etendue du par- sentent les divisions intemes de ces !lots, en demi ou cellaire dont les sources planimetriques, et meme des en tiers, en particulier pres du village. La presence documents ecrits comme les censiers ou les compoix, sur le tableau des periodicites d'un pie de frequence gardent 1' empreinte, les unes a travers les formes et 11, so it 120-131 m, c 'esH't-dire le double du module les orientations, les autres a travers les mesures de de 60 m, confirme la validite du traitement. Le pay- superficie. Les chartes seigneuriales concedees dans sage de la bastide de Saint-Denis apparait par conse- ces cas-la peuvent etre revelatrices de ces operations quent fortement marque par le parcellement issu de concertees. Mais elles n 'en donnent pas les modalites sa fondation a la fin du XIIIe siecle. pratiques: ce n'est pas leur finalite. La difference est La bastide de Barcelonne-du-Gers resulte d'un nette avec les parcelles a batir, voire les jardins, pour pare age entre le comte Bemard VI d' Armagnac et les lesquelles les dimensions sont fixees precisement et Hospitaliers en 1316. Le texte est perdu, de meme dont les plans attestent la realite des dispositions. que les coutumes, mais la bastide est erigee peu apres Les textes retenus dans cette etude attirent encore 1336. Dans une etude exemp1aire menee a partir de deux remarques. En premier lieu, la mention des photographies aeriennes, C. Lavigne individualise vignes est tout aussi systematique que celle des mai- quatre trames parcellaires quadrillees sur le finage de sons et des jardins. Ce n' est pas le cas pour les terres Barcelonne. Le traitement numerique des cliches labourables, les pres et plus encore les bois. Cela confirme une periode majeure, de 150 m, qui cor- demontre la presence generalisee de la culture de la respond a 1'ecart entre les chemins servant de line- vigne, mais aussi de son interet pour les villageois: aments a ces trames. Surtout il revele six autres proposer une redevance avantageuse parait neces- periodes sous-multiples de la premiere. A partir de saire. A 1'inverse, la rarete des pres est sou vent reelle ces donnees, la recherche des parcelles dont les cotes dans les surfaces cultives, mais leur grande valeur equivalent a ces periodes debouche sur 1'identifica- n'incite pas non plus les seigneurs a etre trop larges tion de 533 unites. Les superficies de ces parcelles en ce domaine. C'est encore plus vrai pour les bois apparaissent reposer sur un module de 56 ares (23% que l'aristocratie veut conserver. Seule Plagne, basti- des unites retenues) et sur ses multiples (de 1 a 4). Le de de colonisation au milieu d'un massif forestier nombre et 1'ubiquite de ces modules parcellaires en pre-pyreneen, pouvait faire exception. font evidemment le fondement des divers parcelle- L'autre observation porte sur les villages obtenant ments agraires de la bastide. les franchises. Ils presentent une grande hetero- Les exemples de traitement numerique des photo- geneite quant a leur origine. Des bastides appelees graphies aeriennes viennent de demontrer, me semble- ainsi dans les textes, correspondant a une agglome- t-it, les vastes perspectives proposees a !'etude des ration tout a fait nouvelle, sont presentes. C' est le cas paysages ruraux des villeneuves. Cette etude est par des fondations cisterciennes, de Plagne, de Barran et ailleurs complexe, comme l'examen des chartes et du de Bassoues, mais aussi de Saint-Denis et de Barce- plan cadastral de Buzet l'ont fait comprendre. Que lonne-du-Gers. Souvent, ces fondations tardives (pas faut-il en retenir ? Les actes de fondation et de coutu- avant le demier tiers du XIIIe siecle) debouchent sur mes contenant des mesures de surface, parfois de de profondes reorganisations du parcellaire rural. longueur, relatives aux terres du finage sont minori- D'autres habitats sont designes dans les chartes par le taires. Ces mentions ont une finalite certaine: preciser terme de castrom, comme Buzet, Castelnau-de-Levis, des redevances dont la nature et le montant doivent Omezan ou Puybegon. L' ampleur du remembrement etre attractifs. Le choix des mesures est plus equi- est plus faible dans ces villages, voire absent. Enfin, voque. Il est bien sur destine afa ire sa voir la superficie il faut re lever la presence du village abbatial de Saint- de la parcelle sur laquelle doit peser le cens. Est-il Papoul. Les benedictins concedent des droits identi- aussi le signed 'une division des terroirs en lots egaux ques aux bastides et sur des superficies plus grandes. afin de faciliter 1'assignation et la gestion des terres et Cette diversite semble indiquer que l'interet pour la de leurs revenus? La reponse est loin d'etre univoque. valorisation des terres ne conceme pas que les has- Dans certains cas, le parcellaire des fondations ne pre- tides stricto sensu mais aus si 1'ensemble des localites sente pas de regularite averee. La reference a l'arpent, favorisees par 1'essor economique et demographique. a la seteree, a 1'emine, est alors a comprendre uni- Les bastides ne constituent que la face la plus spec- quement comme celle d'une surface a mesurer pour taculaire, la plus emblematique d'un mouvement de determiner les parcelles beneficiant de la redevance fond qui innerve !'ensemble du Sud-Ouest. fixee par la charte. Mais le parcellaire n'est pas trans- Les progres dans I' etude des paysages ruraux lies forme. Cette situation parait prevaloir pendant la pre- a une fondation passe par consequent par la con- miere moitie du XIIIe siecle. jonction des sources ecrites et planimetriques. Les 318 Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques chartes servent ajuger I' interet porte aux ressources these de l'Ecole des Chartes, 1941, CRDP, Tou- des terroirs agraires et par consequent a deceler une louse, 1985, 131-137. eventuelle volonte de modeler ces terroirs. Les unites Castelnau-de-Levis (81): C. COMPAYRE, Etudes his- et les mesures sont aprendre en compte lorsque sont toriques et documents inedits sur I 'Albigeois, le examines les documents planimetriques afin de de- Castrais et !'ancien diocese de Lavaur, Albi, teeter les modalites de I' assignation des parcelles. 1841,313-320. Cela dit, beaucoup de chartes n'evoquent pas les Gargas (31): J. LESTRADE, La coutume de Gargas, terres, et parfois elles ont disparu. I! fa ut alors utiliser Revue historique de Toulouse X, n° 1, 1923, 297. les sources economiques et fiscales ulterieures. De Gimont (32): J. J. MONLEZUN, op. cit., 201-205 (charte toute fayon, les plans et les photographies represen- de fondation) et A. THOMAS, Charte de coutumes tent le plus sou vent I' element essentiel car etant les de Gimont, Annates du Midi VIII, 1896, 5-14. seuls a restituer la realite, meme a plusieurs siecles Grenade-sur-Garonne (31): R. RUMEAU, Monogra- d'ecart. La genese des paysages agraires des bastides, phie de la vi!le de Grenade-sur-Garonne, Tou- le lien avec les autres modes de fondation, le com- louse, 1879, 64. portement des seigneurs face a !'evolution econo- Monsegur (33): F. MICHEL, L 'Esclapot ou Cartulaire mique: autant de domaines aapprofondir en donnant de Monsegur, Bordeaux, 1963 (les mesures ont toute leur place ades sources complementaires 28 , ete relevees clans J. HUGUENEY & P. LAVEDAN, L 'urban is me au Moyen Age, Droz, Geneve, 197 4, 73-74). Sources Montastruc (31): C. DE Vrc & J. VAISSETE, Histoire generate de Languedoc, t. VIII, Privat, Toulouse, Sont indiquees ici les sources utilisees pour les 1876-1892, col. 1081-1084. chartes de fondation et de franchises des localites du Omezan (32): E. DE VACQUIE, Coutumes d'Orbessan tableau de la fig. 1. et d'Omezan, 1320, 1322, Memoires de la Societe Archeologique du Midi de la France IV, 1840- Aignes (31): J. RAMIERE DE FORTANIER, Charles de 1841' 329-342. franchises du Lauragais, these de Doctorat, Plagne (31): A.D. Haute-Garonne, H Malte, Mont- Universite de Toulouse, Toul, 1939, 120-121. saunes, liasse 15, piece 1 et C. HIGOUNET, Une Barran (32): J.J. MONLEZUN, Histoire de la Gasco- bastide de colonisation des Templiers clans les gne depuis les temps les plus recules jusqu 'a nos pre-Pyrenees: Plagne, Paysages et villages neufs }ours , Auch, 1849, t. VI, 110-116. du Moyen Age, Federation historique du Sud- Bassoues (32): Idem (en fait celle de Barran, les Ouest, Bordeaux, 1975, 293-303. textes sont identiques ). Puybegon (81 ): E. CABlE & L. MAZENS, Un car- Beaumont-de-Lomagne (82): C. BABINET DE REN- tulaire et divers actes des Alaman, des de Lautrec COGNE, Le livre juratoire de Beaumont-de- et des de Levis, XI!Ie et XIVe siecles, Toulouse, Lomagne, Montauban, 1888, 257. 1882, 67. Bouloc (31): A. TEULET, Layettes du Tresor des Sainte-Gemme (33): J. J. MONLEZUN, op. cit., 269- Charles, II, Paris, 1866,474-475. 284. Buzet-sur-Tam (31): 0. DE SAINT-BLANQUAT, La Saint-Papoul (11): J. RAMIERE DE FORTANIER, op. Jondation des bastides royales dans la sene- cit., 661-666. chaussee de Toulouse aux XII!e et XIVe siecles, (A.D. =Archives Departementales). 28 C. Higounet a parfaitement per9u les enjeux des fondations (sauvetes, castelnaux, bastides): "les grandes I ignes du paysage agraire et de I 'habitat de la region ont ete mises en place par ces grandes entreprises des hommes des trois siecles medievaux. J.-L. Abbe Mais un tel phenomene n 'a pas ete particulier aI' Aquitaine, et nous savons qu'il a ete, a diverses variantes pres, a l'echelle Universite Paul Valery, Montpellier III europeenne" (Pour l'histoire de !'occupation du sol et du 19A, rue du Bois-Rolland peuplement de la France du Sud-Ouest, du Xle au X!Ve siecle, 11 100 Narbonne op. cif. n. 2, 1975, 397). France 319 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 Dirk Meier Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung von der romischen Kaiserzeit bis in das Mittelalter im Dithmarscher Kiistengebiet (Deutschland) 1 Einleitung "Landschaftsgeschichte und zu den Siedlungsmus- tem von der romischen Kaiserzeit bis in das Mittel- Seit priihistorischer Zeit sind in den festliindischen alter in Norderdithmarschen", die in Jahren 1993 bis Nordseemarschen die Genese der Landschaft und ihrer 1995 durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Besiedlung eng miteinander verbunden. Im Bereich finanziert wurden (Meier 1995; Meier u.a. 1997). der schleswig-holsteinischen Nordseeki.iste untersucht Die Auswahl der einzelnen Grabungsorte erfolgt die Arbeitsgruppe Kustenarchiiologie am Forschungs- auf der Basis einer Kartierung der historischen Kultur- und Technologiezentrum Westkuste (FTZ) der Chri- landschaft des Eiderstedter und Dithmarscher Ki.is- stian-Albrechts-Universitiit Kiel die Besiedlungsge- tengebietes mit ihren Warften (Wurten), Deichen, schichte wie die Lebensbedingungen der Menschen wasserbautechnischen Einrichtungen, archiiologischen an der Ki.iste unter dem Einflu/3 einer sich stetig wan- Fundstellen und a! ten Meereseinbruchen, in die altere delnden Umwelt, die damit eng verbundene Land- Vorarbeiten einbezogen sind (Abb. 1). Durch ihre inter- schaftsgeschichte mit der Veriinderung von Ki.isten- diszipliniiren Untersuchungen triigt die historische linien sowie den Verlaufund die Auswirkungen nach- Ki.isten- und Umweltforschung auch zum Verstiindnis eiszeitlicher Meeresspiegelschwankungen. Nach der der heutigen okologischen Problematik der Nordsee- Betrachtung des mittelalterlichen Landesausaus und ki.iste bei, einem Raum, in dem Landschaftsentwick- der fiiihen Bedeichung in Eiderstedt (u.a. Meier u.a. lung und Siedlungsgeschichte eng miteinander ver- 1989; Meier 1992) erfolgten Untersuchungen zur zahnt sind und sich gegenseitig tiefbeeinflu/3t haben. Abb. 1. - Lage des Untersuchungsge- bietes an der Nord- seekuste Schleswig- Holsteins mit Wur- tengrabungen (Alt- NoJ:dfT!es!dho untersuchungen und DFG Projekt Dith- marschen). I. Tofting; 2. Elisenhof; 3. Tiebensee; 4. Haferwisch; 5. Jarrenwisch; 6. Wellinghusen; 7. Hassenbattel; 8. Busum; 9. Nord erbusen- ml Geest wurth; D Marsch I 0. S ii d e r b u s e n - wurth; Ill Dune Ne 11. Fahrstedt. 0 km 321 D. Meier 2 Naturraumliche Verhaltnisse und Siedlungs- marscher Nordermarsch ergaben (Meier u.a. 1997). muster in der romischen Kaiserzeit Reste humoser Lagen traten vor allem dort auf, wo sich Priele in die Marschoberflachen eingeschnitten Von der Elbe im Siiden bis zur Eider im Norden hatten, deren Rinnen spater zuschlickten und deren erstreckt sich an der Nordseekiiste Schleswig-Hol- Fiillung nachsackte. In spaterer Zeit wurde die dicht steins die Landschaft Dithmarschen, einer der drei unter der heutigen Oberflache liegende kaiserzeit- nordalbingischen Sachsengaue, der seine Grenzen vom liche Marsch nur noch in geringem Maf3e von Sedi- friihen Mittelalter bis zum heutigen Kreis fast un- menten iiberdeckt. Die intensive landwirtschaftliche verandert bewahrt hat (Abb. 1). Das Landesinnere Bearbeitung und die dicht unter oder im Bereich der nehmen hOhere, in der Saale-Kaltzeit geformte Geest- heutigen Oberflache liegenden Boden der romischen keme ein, die mehrere, ehemals vermoorte Taler insel- Kaiserzeit erschweren die Rekonstruktion des Natur- artig zergliedern. Westlich des teilweise kliffartig raums der ersten nachchristlichen Jahrhunderte. Doch abfallenden Geestrandes erstrecken sich stabile See- darfals gesichert gelten, daf3 im siidlichen schleswig- marschen, die in ein kiistennah hoch aufgelandeten holsteinischen Nordseekiistengebiet erstrnals urn Chr. Marschstreifen und ein tieferes Sietland gegliedert Geburt gute Voraussetzungen fUr die Anlage bauer- sind. Das Kiistenvorfeld bestimmt das Wattenmeer licher Siedlungen in den Seemarschen vorhanden mit mehreren Vorsanden und Gezeitenstromen. waren. Dabei begiinstige eine im Nordseekiistenge- Im Verlauf des nacheiszeitlichen Meeresspiegel- biet weit verbreitete Meeresregression eine flachen- anstiegs hatte die Nordsee vor etwa 6500 Jahren BP hafte Landnahme der Seemarsch. den Dithmarscher Geestrand erreicht (Menke 1988). Geht man von der Verteilung der archaologisch Dabei erfolgte die Uberflutung der im Kiistenbereich bekannten Siedlungen (Bantelmann 1949; Bokelmann bis NN -20 m abfallenden holozanen Oberflache so 1988) aus, erstreckte sich entlang des Dithmarscher rasch, das es nicht wie in anderen Bereichen des Geestrandes ein wohl maximal bis 5000 m breiter Nordseekiistengebietes zur Ausbildung von Torfen Marschstreifen, den die Meldorfer Bucht in die kam, die als datierbare Fixpunkte des nacheiszeitli- Norder- und Siidermarsch trennte (Abb. 1: 2). In der chen Meeresspiegelanstiegs herangezogen werden Siidermarsch lagen einzelne kaiserzeitliche Siedlun- konnen (Meier u.a. 1997; Behre 1987). Lediglich gen nahe der Kiiste westlich eines vermoorten palynologisch datierte Aufschliisse (Menke 1988, Sietlandes wie kaiserzeitliche Funde aus Krumwehl 21) a us den vermoorten Niederungen zwischen den und der Dorfwurt Siiderbusenwurth (Bantelmann inselartigen Geestkernen vermitteln in Dithmarschen 1949) andeuten. Weitere kaiserzeitliche Siedlungen ein Bild des alteren und jiingeren Transgressions- bestanden nach Aussage archaologischer Funde auf abschnittes. der Nehrung des Elpersbiitteler Donns (Buchholz Die Ablagerung der sandigen und schluffigen Se- 1963 ), am Gee strand bei Hemmingstedt und Heide dimente im Kiistenraum ebenso wie die Erosion der und in der Randlage zur Marsch bei Eddelack. Auf vorspringenden Geestkerne durch das Meer fuhrte im den bewaldeten, von vermoorten Talern getrennten Dithmarscher Kiistengebiet vor etwa 3800 Jahren BP Geestinseln sind zudem zahlreiche Graberfelder be- zur Entstehung von Nehrungen, auf denen Diinen legt (Hingst 1983). Beide Siedlungsgebiete der romi- aufwuchsen (Ab b. 1: 5). Diese schlossen sich in nord- schen Kaiserzeit, die der Seemarsch und der Geest- siidlicher Richtung an die Geestkeme an, so daf3 eine kammem trennte ein tei1weise vermoortes Sietland Ausgleichskiiste entstand. Da sich ab dem Ubergang voneinander. Reste von bislang nicht datierten Tor- zum jiingeren Holozan durch verstarkte Sedimentati- fen traten im Sietland bei Baustellenbeobachtungen on die Wassertiefen verringerten bildete sich ein aus- unter einer mittelalterlichen Hofwurt in Barlt zutage, gedehntes Wattenmeer mit Gezeitenrinnen und einer reihenformigen Marschenhufensiedlung des Sandplaten. In einem langen Zeitraum hatte das Meer hohen bis spaten Mittelalters. dann soviel Material herangefuhrt, daf3 ab der Mitte Etwas anders waren die Verhaltnisse in der Nord- des letzten vorchristlichen Jahrtausends vor der Aus- ermarsch zwischen der Meldorfer Bucht im Siiden gleichskiiste ein schmaler Marschstreifen aufgelan- und der Eider im Norden (Abb. 2). Archaologische det war. Urn Chr. Geburt erstreckte sich entlang des Sammelfunde (Bokelmann 1988) und Grabungen auf Geestrandes die "alte Marsch", deren Landnahme im den Wurten Wennemannswisch (Bantelmann 1949), friihen 1. Jahrhundert n.Chr. einsetzte. Tiebensee und Haferwisch (Meier 1994; Meier u.a. Eine grof3flachige Bodenbildung, auf der die kai- 1997) vermitteln dort das B ild zweier langgestreck- serzeitlichen Wohnplatze in der Marsch lagen, istje- ter Siedlungsreihen kleiner bis mittelgrof3er, auf doch heute kaum mehr nachweisbar, wie Beobach- Viehhaltung ausgerichteter Gruppensiedlungen meh- tungen entlang von Rohrleitungsgraben einer Leitung rerer bauerlicher Betriebe. Moglicherweise sind die- des Wasserbeschaffungsverbandes durch die Dith- se linienformigen Siedlungsmuster vermutlich ein 322 Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung im Dithmarscher Ktistengebiet Abb. 2. - Paliiographi- sche Karte des Eider- stedter und Dithmar- scher Kustengebietes in der romischen Kaiser- zeit. EIDERSTEDT -ffi~ Dorfwurt/Siedlung L3:> Hortfund @ Graberfeld tl Marsch der ram. Kalserzelt Moor DITHMARSC D Geest Ill! SandWall 0 Abbild der kaiserzeitlichen Topographie, die sich archaologischen Untersuchungen ergaben, bot si eh in aber infolge ji.ingerer, allerdigns nur geringmachtiger Tiebensee ein trockenes zwischen NN +1,00 und NN Sedimentablagerungen und jahrhundertelanger land- + 1,30 m hohes Area! zur Anlage einer von Hofstellen wirtschaftlicher Bearbeitung heute nicht mehr deut- zur ebenen Erde an. Nach der Auswertung palao- lich erkennen la/3t. Moglicherweise lagen zwar ein- botanischer Proben aus einem Brunnen des 1./2. Jahr- zelne Wohnplatze auf geringftigig hOher aufsedimen- hunderts zu schlie/3en, Jag die Siedlung selbst recht tierten Marschri.icken, fUr einen Teil gilt dies jedoch hoch und trocken, da si.i/3wassergepragte Arten i.iber- nicht. Zwar deuten bodenkundliche Karten an, da/3 wogen 1. Reste der Krotenbinse (Juncus bufonius ), bei der Anlage der Siedlungen teilweise etwas sandi- des Wei/3en Gansefu/3es (Chenepodium album) oder gere Boden bevorzugt wurden, doch konnten dies der kleinen Brennessel ( Urtica urensis) deuten auf geologische Untersuchungen nicht belegen. Ackerbau hin, wenn auch keine Kulturpflanzenreste Wahrend der gesamten romischen Kaiserzeit blie- nachgewiesen werden konnten. ben die auf Viehhaltung ausgerichteten Siedlungen Die archaologischen Grabungen legten einen jedoch von der naturraumlichen Entwicklung abhan- W ohnplatz der vermutlich a us vier bis sechs Wirt- gig, wie die unterschiedliche lange Nutzungszeit der schaftsbetrieben bestehenden Flachsiedlung frei. Nach . Wohnplatze verdeutlicht. So entstanden nach Aussa- dem Abbruch des auf dem Wohnplatz I einmal emeu- ge verdickt facettierter eisenzeitlicher Keramik die erten Gebaudes erfolgte im 2. Jahrhundert eine ge- Siedlungen der geestnahen Reihe von Tiebensee, ringfi.igige Erhohung des Siedlungsareals von NN bverwisch und Wennemannswisch (Bantelmann + 1,50 auf i.iber NN +2,00 m bevor die Siedlung am 1949) im fri.ihen I. Jahrhundert n.Chr., wahrend in der westlicheren Reihe in Haferwisch mit dem Bau von Wurten nicht vor der Mitte des 2. Jahrhunderts Die botanischen Untersuchungen fOhrten H. Kroll und S. begonnen wurde (Abb. 1; 2). Wie die auf einer im Medovic, lnstitut fOr Ur- und Friihgeschichte der Universitat Durchmesser etwa lOO m gro/3en, bis NN +3,00 m Kiel, durch. lhnen sei fOr die Oberlassung erster Ergebnisse hohen Wurt der geestnahen Reihe durchgeftihrten herzlich gedankt. 323 D. Meier Obergang zur jilngeren romischen Kaiserzeit verlas- ben anzeigt, ist zwar der Anbau von Vierzeil-Spelz- sen wurde. gerste (Hordeuum vulgare vulgare), Hafer (Avena) Die Aufgabe der Siedlung war vermutlich ebenso und Leinen (Limon usitassimum) wahrscheinlich, wie die weiterer eine Folge des Landschaftswandels, jedoch wurden Rispenhirse (Panicum miliaceum) da moglicherweise der seit der Mitte des ersten und Roggen (Secale cera/e) vermutlich von der Geest nachchristlichen Jahrtausends nachgewiesenen Ver- her importiert, da diese Kulturpflanzen nicht zeit- moorung der geestnahen Marsch (Wiermann 1962) typisch filr die Marsch sind, in Haferwisch aber aus Stauniissebildungen vorausgingen, die zu einer Ein- kaiserzeitlichen Fundzusammenhiingen stammen. engung der kaiserzeitlichen Wirtschaftstliichen filhr- Durch den Ausbau der Kernwurten im 3. Jahrhun- ten. Weiter nordlich dehnten sich in dieser Zeit be- dert wurde das Ackerfeld ebenso wie die iiltesten reits Moore aus, wie Radiokarbondaten eines Torf- Wasserstellen von Kleiauftriigen i.iberdeckt. Im 4. horizontes unter einer Hofwurt in Hemme andeuten, Jahrhundert war schliel3lich eine nicht nur grol3ere, der ein Alter urn 1790 BP aufwies, was einem Kalen- sondern auch hohere Gesamtwurt entstanden, deren deralter 40-380 AD entspricht (Hoffmann 1986, Siedelniveau hOher als NN +2,00 m lag. Die einzel- 255). Die weitere Vermoorung der kilstenfernen nen Ausbaustadien der bereits stark planierten Marsch wurde durch die Auflandungjunger Marsch- Gesamtwurt zeichneten sich dabei deutlicher im tliichen im Westen noch begilnstigt, so dal3 im fri.ihen Randbereich als im Kern ab. Mittelalter bereits weite Teile der noch in der romi- Nach Aussage der archiiologischen Sammelfunde schen Kaiserzeit dicht besiedelten alten Marsch ver- i.iberdauerten die meisten der in der Dithmarscher moort waren. Nordermarsch angelegten Siedlungen das 3. bis 4. Si eh wandelnde Umweltbedingungen mit der Ein- Jahrhundert nicht. Viele der Wohnpliitze bestanden schriinkung von Wirtschaftsfliichen dilrften aber nur i.iber einen Zeitraum von ein bis zwei Jahrhunder- schon in der romischen Kaiserzeit Ursache fUr die ten und wuchsen nicht zu Dorfwurten heran, wie dies Verlagerung von Siedlungen gewesen sein. Dabei vor allem entlang des iiul3eren Milndungsgebietes der wurden auch niedrig aufgelandete Marschflachen in Eider der Fall war. Dort ermoglichten hOher auf- den Siedelraum miteinbezogen, die bis dahin noch gelandete Uferwiille eine platzkonstant~ Besiedlung gemieden warden waren. So waren auf den hiiufiger i.iber mehrere Jahrhunderte, wie die Grabungen von von Salzwasser erfal3ten niedrigen Marschfliichen bei Bantelmann (1955) auf der Dorfwurt Tofting ergaben Haferwisch die Neusiedler anders als in Tiebensee (Abb. 1: 2). Nach den paliiobotanischen Untersuchun- vermutlich von Anfang an zum Bau absichtlich auf- gen (Behre 1976) war dort wiihrend der Flachsied- gehohter Wurten gezwungen, wie archaologische und lungsperiode im 2. Jahrhundert der Meereseinf1ul3 paliiobotanische Untersuchungen erkennen lassen noch gering, doch ilberschwemmten bald hiiufiger (Abb. 2; 5). Sturmfluten die Salzmarschen und zwangen die Be- Nach den hohen Werten der Salzbinse (Juncus wohner zur Aufhohung ihrer WohnpHitze. gerardi) und anderer salzliebender Pflanzen kann die Haufigere Sturmflutperioden mogen se it dem 3 .I nur NN +0,50 m hohe Marsch nicht einmal von som- 4. Jahrhundert im Nordseekilstenraum ortlich zum merlichen Sturmfluten verschont geblieben sein. Die Verlassen der Siedlungsgebiete gefilhrt haben, deren Datierung einer der auf dieser Obertliiche errichteten Auswirkungen waren jedoch lokal verschieden. Wurten ergab sich aus einer Reihe, beim weiteren Wiihrend beispielsweise im Dithmarscher Kilstenge- Wurtenausbau mit Klei ilberdeckter Eichenspaltboh- biet nur geringe Sedimentrnengen die alte Marsch len, deren dendrochronologisch ermittelte Fiilldaten bedeckten, zerstorten Sturmfluten sildlich der Elbe, in die Zeit "urn oder nach 140" und "urn oder nach im Land Wursten, nordlich der Wurtenkette der 168" wiesen 2• V on der Obertliiche der Marsch aus in Feddersen Wierde (Haarnagel 1979; Schmid 1988; den Untergrund eingelassene Brunnen und andere 1991; 1995), Wirtschaftsflachen. Die Reduzierung Formen einfacher Wasserstellen deuten ebenso wie der Nutzflachen entzog den Wurtbewohnern schliel3- Pflugspuren beetartiger, von Griiben eingefa13ter lich die Erniiherungsgrundlage und zwang sie im 5. Ackerparzellen aber noch auf kurzzeitige, i.iberflu- Jahrhundert zur Aufgabe der Dorfwurten. tungsfreie Perioden wiihrend des Siedlungsbeginns hin. Wie eine Auswertung der paliiobotanischen Pro- 3 Naturraumliche Verhaltnisse und Siedlungs- muster im friihen Mittelalter Die dendrochronologischen Altersbestimmungen filhrte dankenswerterweise Dipi.-Holzwirten S. Wrobel, Ordinaria! fiir Haufige Sturmflutperioden in dem Zeitraum zwi- Holzbiologie der Universitat Hamburg, durch. Die Radio- karbondatierungen ermittelte Dr. H. Erlenkeuser, Institut fUr schen der jilngeren romischen Kaiserzeit und dem Kernphysik der Universitat Kiel. frilhen Mittelalter hatten teilweise erhebliche Aus- 324 Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung im Dithmarscher Ktistengebiet Abb. 3. - Paliiographi- sche Karte des Eider- stedter und Dithmar- scher Kiistengebietes im friihen Mittelalter. ffi ~ Wurt/Siedlung L3> Hortfund © Graberfeld tl Marsch Moor und Moormarsch D Geest 0• Sandwall wirkungen auf das Ki.istengebiet der festlandischen chungen fehlen, sind wir i.iber den Verlauf der fri.ih- Nordseemarschen. Sie fi.ihrten zum Einbruch wie zur mittelalterlichen Landnahme in der Nordermarsch Verlandung alter Meereseinbruche, zu Landverlusten durch die Untersuchungen der Arbeitsgruppe Ki.isten- und zum Aufwuchs jungen Marschlandes entlang der archao1ogie besser unterrichtet (Abb. 1: Nr. 3-8). Im Ki.iste. So hatte sich mit dem Nachlassen der fri.ihen Mittelalter wies dort die Marsch noch starker Sturmflutaktivitaten in einzelnen Regionen zwischen als in der romischen Kaiserzeit die typische Gliede- Weser und Elbe die Ki.istenlinie seewarts verlagert. rung einer ki.istennahen hoch aufgelandeten Marsch- Auch fi.ir die Dithmarscher Nordermarsch mag man streifens und eines binnenwartigen, niedrigeren, durch dies annehmen, wenn man wiederum die Verteilung Stauwasserprobleme gekennzeichneten Sietlandes der der archaologisch untersuchten W ohnplatze zugrun- alten kaiserzeitlichen Marsch auf, in dem sich teil- delegt. Dort erfaJ3te die fri.ihmittelalterliche Land- weise Moore erstreckten (Abb. 3). Reste eines nahme die auJ3ere Seemarsch jenseits des kaiserzeit- Schilftorfes wurden unter in den im hohen Mittelalter lichen Altsiedellandes, wahrend in der Si.idermarsch angelegten Hofwurten im Sietland bei Jarrenwisch von der Elbemi.indungung bis zur Meldorfer Bucht in urn 1020±50 BP (KI-3797) datiert (Abb. 3: Nr. 5). Ki.istennahe noch hohe, schon in den ersten nach- Gi.instige Siedel- und Wirtschaftsflachen erstreckten christlichen Jahrhunderten bewohnte Flachen zur sich somit im fruhen Mittelalter nur westlich dieses Verfi.igung standen, WO die Kolonisation moglicher- Sietlandes nahe der Ki.iste. weise zunachst Wurten der romischen Kaiserzeit, wie In der Dithmarscher Nordermarsch, wo der Ki.is- Norder- und Si.idbusenwurth (Bantelmann 1949), er- tenverlauf zwischen der Meldorfer Bucht im Si.iden neut besiedel te, bevor auch dort Neugrtindungen, wie und der Eider im Norden weiter nach Westen reichte, das 1883 erkundete Fahrstedt (Hartmann 1883), ent- erstreckten sich mit Wohrden, Wellinghusen, Has- standen. senbi.ittel und Wesselburen eine innere sowie mit Wahrend in der Si.idermarsch mit Ausnahme einer GroJ3bi.ittel, Wesselburener Deichhausen, Westerbi.it- Notgrabung 1996 durch die Arbeitsgruppe Ki.isten- tel und moglicherweise Si.iderdeich eine auJ3ere Reihe archaologie in Norderbusenwurth neuere Untersu- groJ3er Wurtendorfer westlich der alten, wahrend der 325 D. Meier 30 m Ausweis der paHiobotanischen Untersuchungen nie- -r----------------------------------~- dere Salzmarschen mit Milchlaaut (Glau;r: maritima), Strandsalzschwaden (Puccinella maritima), Salzbin- sen (Juncus geradii), Schuppenmieren (Spergula- rien), Salz Dreizack (Triglochin maritimum) und h6here Salzmarschen mit Seggen (Carex) und Strauf3- gras (Agrostis), Schilfrohr (Phragmites australis), die ISH 4 um 1000 n.Chr. das Weideland der auf Viehhaltung ausgerichteten Marschensiedlung bildeten. Auf den hochstgelege- nen FHichen war ein Anbau von Hafer (Avena), Ger- ste (Hordeum vulgare vulgare), Roggen (Secale cera/e) und Leinen (Linum usitatissimum) moglich. Wo sich der frilhmittelalterliche Kiistenverlauf be- fand, ist nicht genau bekannt, doch diirfte dieser kaum westlicher als der 1500 m entfemte Deich des ISH 2 um 800 n.Chr. Mittelalters gelegen haben. Wie der auf der im Durchmesser bis 250 m gro- Ben und bis NN +6,20 m hohen Dorfwurt angelegte 30 m lange, 12 m breite und 4-5 m tiefe Grabungs- schnitt erkennen Iief3, durchzog das von gr6f3eren Prielen umgebene friihmittelalterliche Siedlungs- areal auf den hochsten Stellen des Uferriickens der Seitenarm eines etwa 6 m brei ten Prieles, an dessem SH 1 um 700 n.Chr. Verlauf die altesten Wohnplatze errichtet wurden. Abb. 4. - Wellinghusen, Dithrnarschen. Archiiologische Soweit anhand der dendrochronologisch ermittelten Fliichenbefunde (schernatisiert). Falldaten nachgewiesen, wurde das auf dem Hof- SH = Siedlungshorizont: SH 1 Flachsiedlung urn 700 platz II errichtete Gebaude der aus mehreren west- n.Chr.; SH 2 Hofwurten urn 800 n.Chr.; SH 4 Dorfwurt um ostlich orientierten Wohnstallhausem bestehenden 1000 n.Chr. Reihensiedlung "urn 691 n.Chr." erbaut. Der Wohn- platz II war ebenso wie ein weiterer, ebenfalls randlich erfaf3ter Hofplatz (I) auf einem 0,20 m hohen romischen Kaiserzeit noch dicht besiedelten alten Sodenpodest iiber der NN +1,80 m hohen Marsch Marsch, in der sich nun ausgedehnte Moore erstreck- errichtet. Da der Hofplatz I einen alteren Graben ten, wie Reste eines Schilftorfes unter der hoch- iiberlagerte, mag man einen alteren Wohnplatz wei- mittelalterlichen Hofwurtenreihe in Jarrenwisch und ter im Westen vermuten. Im Bereich der Kemsied- geologische Beobachtungen entlang der Wasser!ei- lung (Siedlungshorizont 1) fiihrte moglicherweise tungstrasse erkennen lassen (Meier u.a. 1997). eine Brilcke iiber den kleinen Priel, die noch urn 785 Den Verlauf der friihmittelalterlichen Siedlungs- n.Chr. in Benutzung war, einer Zeit, in der die entwicklung lassen die im Rahmen des DFG-Projek- Wohnplatze der Flachsiedlung schon zu einen Meter tes Dithmarschen durchgeftihrten Grabungen aufzwei hohen Hofwurten (Siedlungshorizont 2) aufgehoht Dorfwurten der inneren Siedlungsreihe in der waren (Abb. 4: 5). Dithmarscher Nordermarsch erkennen (Meier 1995; Im Zuge der Ausweitung der Hofwurten wurde Meier u.a. 1997). Danach erschlof3 eine erste Land- der Priel mit Mist verftillt und in das Siedelareal mit- nahme im 7 ./8. Jahrhundert vor all em die entlang von einbezogen. Auf der iiber dem Wohnplatz I a us Mist Prielen besonders hoch aufsedimentierten Marsch- aufgeworfenen Hofwurt lagen zwei kurz nacheinan- riicken. Ein giinstiges Siedelareal mit einem bis NN der errichtete Wohnstallhauser (Siedlungshorizont 2). +1,80 m hoch aufgelandetem, halbinselartig von Die in W est-Ost Richtung erbauten Wohnstallhauser Prielen eingefaf3ten Marschriicken bot sich in Wel- waren stallwarts geneigt, wobei der Wohnteil eine linghusen an (Abb. 3). Hohe von etwa NN +3,00 m, der Stallteil von NN Teile des Marschri.ickens waren mit Phragmites +2,50 m aufwies. Nach den Datierungen zweier bewachsen, der ein Radiokarbonalter (KI 3797) von gleichfalls nur noch in Resten erhaltener Neben- 1440±40 BP aufwies, was einem Kalenderalter 555- bauten zu schlief3en, diirfte das jiingere Wohnstall- 660 AD entspricht (Abb. 4; 5). Im Umland des zur haus "urn oder nach 785" oder/und "820 n.Chr." in Landnahmezeit im 7./8. Jahrhundertnoch weitgehend Benutzung gewesen sein. Demnach erfolgte die Auf- sturmflutfreien Prieluferriickens erstreckten sich nach hohung von Hofplatzen der Flachsiedlung urn etwa 326 Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung im Dithmarscher Klistengebiet NN mNN HassenbOttel Welllnghusen Jarrenwlsch Haferw1sch Tlebensee heutlge H6he +5 +5 N.~--------~~----~~--~----~~~--------~r-----~~--~~--------~ NN Anwachs (UberflutungsSedlrnente) -20 Westen Osten Abb. 5.- Siedlungsabfolge in der Dithmarscher Nordermarsch von der romischen Kaiserzeit bis in dasfriihe Mittelalter anhand geologischer und archiiologischer Untersuchungen. einen Meter friihestens amEnde des 8. Jahrhunderts, nahen Dithmarscher Nordermarsch eine Folge hOher sicherlich aber zu Beginn des 9. Jahrhunderts, wobei auflaufender Sturmfluten war. eine sekundare Verwendung der verbauten Eichen- Vermutlich im 9./10. Jahrhundert erfolgte eine spaltbohlen allerdings nicht ausgeschlossen werden Ausweitung der Besiedlung in der Dithmarscher kann. Im Laufe der Siedlungszeit verschoben si eh die Nordermarsch. Diese beschrankte sichjedoch aufdie grof3en Wirtschaftsbetriebe mit ihren hOheren Wohn- kiistennahe Marsch, da das vermoorte Sietland keine teilen im Westen und niedrigeren Stallteilen mehr- Entfaltungsmoglichkeiten bot. Da nicht mehr in aus- fach in Richtung ihrer Langsachse nach Osten. reichendem Maf3e hoher aufgelandete Prielufer- Weitere Auftrage, nun iiberwiegend aus Klei, rander zur Verfiigung standen, erfolgte die Anlage erfolgten im 9. und 10. Jahrhundert, wobei im Sied- neuer Wohnplatze auch auf den haufiger von Salz- lungshorizont 4 auf einer Hohe von NN +3,80 bis wasser iiberschwemmten, niedrigeren Marsch- etwa +4,00 zwei dicht iibereinander liegende Klein- flachen. Dort waren die Neusiedler, wie eine grof3ere bauten des 10. Jahrhunderts erfaf3t wurden. In dieser Schnittgrabung auf der 2000 m nordlich von Zeit wies die Dorfwurt vermutlich schon ihre heuti- Wellinghusen gelegenen, im Durchmesser 300 m ge Grof3e von etwa 250 m im Durchmesser auf. Die grof3en und bis NN +5 ,20 m hohen Dorfwurt Hassen- friihmittelalterlichen Siedlungsschichten bedeckte biittel andeutet, von Anfang an zum Bau von Wurten ein bis 1,5 m machtiger Kleiauftrag des Hoch- und gezwungen, die im 9./10. Jahrhundert bereits eine Spatmittelalters bis zu einer Hohe von NN +6,20 m Hohe von NN +3,00 m aufwiesen (Abb. 3: 5). (Abb. 5). Offensichtlich im spiHen Mittelalter endete Die alteste Marschoberflache lag dort einen Me- die dichte Bebauung der Dorfwurt, in der friihen ter tiefer als in Wellinghusen auf einem Niveau von Neuzeit verblieben nur noch zwei HOfe auf der Wurt NN +0,80 m. Zwar deutet ein grabenumgebenes Feld (Hausigk 1995, 56 ff.). Anders als auf der nordlich mit Spuren eines Streichbrettpfluges auf iiberflu- der Eider gelegenen Marschensiedlung am Elisenhof tungsfreie Perioden hin, was u.a. den Anbau von (Bantelmann 1975) konnten in Wellinghusen keine Vierzeil-Spelzgerste (Hordeum vulgare vulgare) und dicht iibereinander errichteten Wohnstallhauser nach- Hafer (Avena) erlaubte, doch iiberdeckten bald 0,40 gewiesen werden, sondem die Bauten der verschie- m machtige Sedimente das Ackerland (Abb. 5). Auf denen Siedlungsphasen waren stets durch deutliche, diesem Anwachs wurden die altesten, im Grabungs- etwa einen Meter hohe Auftrage getrennt, ein deutli- schnitt erfaf3ten Wurten errichtet. Das Siedlungsni- ches Indiz dafiir, daf3 der Wurtenbau in der kiisten- veau einer der nur randlich erfaf3ten, aus Klei auf- 327 D. Meier geworfenen und randlich mit Sodenwiillen gesicherten kiistengebietes (Schmid 1988; Schmid 1991) ein mit Primarwurten (Siedlungshorizont 1) lag mindestens der Bedeichung einhergehender Landesausbau, der bei NN +2,00 m. Stellenweise uber dieser erfolgte im neben der Seemarsch vor allem das bis dahin nicht 9./10. Jahrhundert die Errichtung einer bis NN +3,00 nutzbare Sietland erfaf3te. Diese wasserreichen Siet- m hohen Hofwurt (Siedlungshorizont 2), deren Auf- land- und Moorgebiete boten im Mittelalter nur trag im unteren Teil aus Mist bestand, den mehrere schwer zu kultivierende, aber notwendige FHichen Kleisodenlagen bedeckten. Die Wurt bot Platz fur ein fur die Landnutzung und Ansiedlung einer zuneh- grof3es Wohnstallhaus, dessen nach Westen abfallen- menden Bevolkerung (Nitz 1994, 248 ff.). Der aus der Stallteil angeschnitten wurde. Nordlich dieser den bereits vorhandenen Siedlungsraumen in den See- Wurt erstreckte sich eine weitere, ebenfalls aus Mist marschen heraus erweiterte Landesausbau bildet eine und Klei aufgehohte Hofwurt, die ebenfalls eine Ho he Binnenkolonisation kolonisierter Naturraume am von etwa 2 m iiber der Marsch aufwies und in einem Rande oder zwischen alteren Siedlungen und ihren Arbeitsgang errichtet wurde. Unmittelbar uber den Kulturflachen. In diesen Gebieten kam es zur Ausfor- friihmittelalterlichen Wohnschichten lagen Auftrage mung bestimmter Siedlungsstrukturen in Form von des Hoch- und Spatrnittelalters bis zur heutigen Hohe Marschenhufensiedlungen. Die Anlage dieser Sied- der teilweise noch bebauten grof3en Dorfwurt. lungen ist eine unmittelbare Folge des genossenwirt- Zwar uberwog auf beiden Dorfwurten die agra- schaftlichen Kolonisationsvorganges mehrerer Fami- ,risch ausgerichtete Wirtschaftsform, doch deuten ge- lien- oder Personalverbande. gen landwirtschaftliche Produkte eingetauschte Im- In Dithmarschen waren sozial und wirtschaftlich porte wie Wetzsteine aus norwegischen Tonschiefer, fuhrende Schichten auf den altbesiedelten Dorfwur- Dreilagenkamme, Mahlsteine aus dem Rheinland ten entstanden, die zu Tragem des Landesausbaus und Fibeln aus dem karolingisch-ottonischen Reich wurden. So bildete ne ben W esselburen vor all em auf eine partielle Teilnahme am Nah- und Fernhandel Wohrden mit urkundlich im Jahre 1281 uberlieferter hin (Meier u.a. 1997). So fallt die Landnahme wie die Kirche, Markt und Hafen ein wichtiges regionales Siedlungsverdichtung in den Dithmarscher und Zentrum, das im spa ten Mittelalter sogar Handelsver- Eiderstedter Kustengebieten in eine Zeit des Auf- bindungen mit Lubeck besaf3 (Abb. 6). Wahrend bluhens des Frankisch-Friesischen Handels. Anders Wohrden und Wesselburen seit dem hohen Mittelal- als entlang der niedersachsischen und niederland- ter noch an Bedeutung gewannen, fielen andere lischen Kuste entstanden jedoch keine Langwurten Wurtendorfer teilweise oder ganz wtist. Dort wo als Zentren des Nah- und Femhandels wie des Ge- Dorfwurten wie Wesselburen moglicherweise ihren werbes. Speziell auf den Handel ausgerichtete Sied- Wasseranschluf3 verloren entstanden an der Kuste lungen gab es im fruhen Mittelalter weder in den mit Norddeich und Reinsbuttel Langwurten, von de- Marschgebieten Eiderstedts noch Dithmarschens. ren Kleinhiifen aus eine Verteilung der Waren erfolg- Die Bevolkerung auf den Wurten bewahrte im te. Ebenso wie diese Wurten wurden mit Schiilp und fruhen Mittelalter in Dithmarschen weitgehend ihre Busumer Deichhausen langrechteckige Wurten mit Unabhangigkeit von jeglicher auswartiger Oberho- umlaufender Ringstraf3e und schachbrettformiger heit. Dabei sicherten die Stellerburg und die Bokeln- Parzellenstruktur erst seit dem 12. Jahrhundert (Mei- burg in Dithmarschen als Ringwalle den sachsischen er 1995, 102 ff.) errichtet. Seit dieser Zeit schutzte Gau vor Angriffen von auf3en. Ob und in welchem ein kustenparalleler Dei eh die Dithmarscher Norder- Maf3e sich die Machtverhaltnisse nach der karolingi- marsch, der im Westen die Insel Busum vorgelagert schen Eroberung des nordalbingischen Sachsens an- war, deren Reste seit der zweiten Halfte des 16. Jahr- derten, bleibt unklar. Lediglich einer Auf3erung Hel- hunderts an das Festland angedeicht wurden. mold von Bosaus laf3t sich entnehmen, daf3 in Dith- Der mit der Bedeichung der Seemarsch einherge- marschen vor der Stader Herrschaft eigene Grafen hende hoch- und spatmittelalterliche Landesausbau regierten, deren gesellschaftlicher Status aber unbe- erfaf3te jedoch vor all em das his dahin nicht nutzbare kannt bleibt. Grof3 dilrfte ihr Einf1uf3 in den Kusten- durch Moore und Stauwasserprobleme gekennzeich- gebieten nicht gewesen sein, da die dicht besiedelte nete Sietland, wo reihenf6rmige, von Geschlechtem Zone der Seemarschen durch weite, vermoorte Siet- als Siedlungsgenossenschaften angelegte Marsch- lander von der Geest her nahezu unzuganglich war. hufensiedlungen en~standen (Stoob 1951; 1953). Wie archaologische Grabungen auf einer Hofwurt in Jarrenwisch zeigten, wurden im hohen Mittelalter die 4 Hohes und spates Mittelalter ersten Hofwurten in der westlichsten der drei Sied- lungsreihen noch auf dem nicht oder nur teilweise Seit dem hohen Mittelalter erfolgte in Dithmar- abgetorften Moor angelegt, das ahnlich wie in Zen- schen ebenso wie in anderen Bereichen des Nordsee- tralholland durch Oxidation und Entwasserung ver- 328 Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung im Dithmarscher Ki.istengebiet schwand und deren Relikte nur unter einzelnen Hofwurten ("Restheem") erhalten blieben (Borger I984). Die Kolonisation des Sietlandes schuf die V oraus- setzung fUr den Aufstieg der Geschlechter als Perso- nalverbande, die bis I300 den Adel aus dem Lande drangten (Stoob 195I; 1953). Ihre Macht dokumen- tierte sich am auffalligsten in der Griindung eigener Kirchen wie Neuenkirchen (1323) in der Norder- marsch und Barlt (I428) in der Si.idermarsch. Zur 1323 urkundlich erwiihnten Kirche in Neuenkirchen gehorte ein umfangreicher Landbesitz, der im I8. Jahrhundert etwa 54 ha betrug (Hausigk I995, 85). Reste des an das Kirchspiel angrenzenden W eif3en Moo res wurden bis I5 80 unter den Kirchspielen Hemme, Weddingstedt und Neuenkirchen aufgetei1t. Im Unterschied zu den Reihensiedlungen mit ihren vielen Hofstellen konzentrierte sich in dem zentral /~l zwischen den Marschenhufensiedlungen ge1egenen \,J.- BOS!Jm I ' I Kirchort die Verwaltung wie das Gewerbe und Hand- werk. 0 2 km 0 Geest a Dorfwurt M Markt AmEnde des 13. Jahrhunderts entwickelten sich • Moor A• Hotwurt die 15 Kirchspiele in Dithmarschen zu den eigentli- 0 Marsch R Klrche ~ Hafen """-' Delch chen Tragern der politischen Gewalt (Stoob 1953). In ihnen bildeten seit der zweiten Halfte des I2. Abb. 6. - Hoch- und spatmittelalterlicher Landesausbau, J ahrhunderts die fi.ihrenden Grof3bauern der Per- fruhe Bedeichung und Kirchengriindungen in der Dithmarscher Nordermarsch. sonalverbande als "clavigeri" und "iurati" Kolle- gien, die den Ratskollegien von Stiidten vergieich- bar waren. Diese Kollegien steuerten Deich-, Ent- BOKELMANN K. I988: Warften und Flachsiedlungen wiisserungs- sowie Wegeanlegenheiten und sprachen der romischen Kaiserzeit. Ergebnisse einer Pro- Recht. Im spaten Mittelalter galt der "Norderstrand" spektion in Norderdithmarschen und Eiderstedt. als der reichste Teil des gesamten Dithmarscher In: MOLLER-WILLE M. u.a., Norderhever-Projekt. Landes. 1 Landschaftsentwic!dung und Siedlungsgeschi- chte im Einzugsgebiet der Norderhever (Nord- friesland), Offa-Bi.icher 66 (=Stud. Ki.istenarch. Literatur Schleswig-Holstein, Ser. C, I Norderhever-Pro- jekt), Neumi.inster, I49-I62. 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Ki.isten- HARTMANN R. 1883: Die a/ten Dithmarscher Wurten arch. Schleswig-Holstein, Ser. A, Elisenhof 2, und ihr Packwerkbau, Marne. Bern-Frankfurt. HAUSIGK O.F. 1995: lvfittelalterlicher und friih- BEHRE K.E. I987: Meeresspiegelschwankungen und neuzeitlicher Landesausbau in Norderdithmar- Siedlungsgeschichte in den Nordseemarschen, schen am Beispiel zweier Siedlungen in der Vortrage Oldenburgische Landschaft I7, Olden- Marsch. Historisch-geographische Untersuchun- burg. gen, Ungedr. Diplom-Arbeit, Kiel. 329 D. Meier HINGST H. 1983: Die vorromische Eisenzeit West- MENKE B. 1988: Die holozane Nordseeki.istentrans- ha/steins, Offa-Bi.icher 49 (UmenfriedhOfe gression im Kiistenbereich der si.idostlichen Deut- Schleswig-Holsteins 8), Neumi.inster. schen Bucht. In: MOLLER-WILLE M. u.a., Norder- HOFFMANN D. 1986: Beobachtungen und Daten zur hever-Projekt 1. 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Bijdra- Holstein 63, 117-144. gen aan het gelijknamige symposium, Groningen, ME !ER D. 1995: Die Neubesiedlung der Dithmar- 133-164. scher Seemarsch und der Wandel der Kulturland- SCHMID P. 1991: Mittelalterliche Besiedlung, Deich- schaft. In: RADTKE U. (Hrsg.), Vom Sudatlantik und Landesausbau im niedersachsischen Ki.isten- bis zur Ostsee- neue Ergebnisse der Meeres- und gebiet. In: B6HME H. (Hrsg.), Siedlungen und Kustenforschung. Beitrage des 13. Jahrestagung Landesausbau zur Salierzeit. 1 In den nordlichen der Arbeitskreis Geographie der Meere und Ku- Landschafien des Reiches, Sigmaringen, 9-36. sten, Kolner Geographische Arbeiten 66, 1995, ScHMID P. 1995: Archaologische Ergebnisse zur 97-108. Wirtschaftsweise in der Marsch. In: H.-E. DAN- MEIER D., HOFFMANN D. & MOLLER-WILLE M. NENBERG & J.-H. SCHULZE, Geschichte des Lan- 1989: Zum mittelalterlichen Landesausbau Eider- des zwischen Elbe und Weser. Bd. l Vor- und stedts. Ein Forschungsprojekt der Arbeitsgruppe Friihgeschichte, Stade, 221-250. Ki.istenarchaologie am Forschungs- und Techno- STOOB H. 1951: Die dithmarsischen Geschlechter- logiezentrum Bi.isum, Offa 46, 285-300. verbande. Grnndfragen der Siedlungs- und Rechts- MEIER D., HOFFMANN D. & MOLLER-WILLE M. geschichte in den Nordseemarschen, Heide. 1997: Geologische und archaologische Untersu- STOOB H. 1953: Dithmarschens Kirchspiele im Mit- chungen zur Landschafts- und Siedlungsgeschi- telalter, Zeitschr. d. Ges.f Schlesw. Hoist. Gesch. chte der Dithmarscher Nordermarsch, Germania, 77, 97-140. im Druck. WIERMANN R. 1962: Botanisch-moorkundliche Un- tersuchungen in Nordfriesland. Ein Beitrag zur Frage nach dem zeitlichen Ablauf der Meeresspie- gelschwankungen, Meyniana 12, 1962, 97-146. Dr. Dirk Meier Forschungs- und Technologiezentrum Westktiste Zentrale Einrichtung der Christian-Albrechts-Universitat Kiel, Arbeitsgruppe Ktistenarchaologie Hafentom 25761 Btisum Deutschland 330 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 DellaHooke The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales Abstract upland areas, however, also offered valuable re- sources: the earliest documentary evidence suggests After the conquest of Wales by Edward I in 1284 that the marginal uplands served as areas of seasonal native farming was to be completely reorganised un- grazing, their resources complementing those of the der the influence of settlers from the English burhs. more intensively developed lowlands. The changes which occurred are reflected in the Unfortunately, the earliest Welsh documentation present-day landscape: the resulting palimpsest is dates in its present form from no earlier than the later investigated in a region of the Conwy valley of North twelfth century; this includes the law books such as Wales. The evidence of landscape archaeology is set Liber Landavensis, etc. Although these sources con- alongside other sources of evidence. tain much that is of genuinely early medieval deriva- tion, this is difficult to disentangle from the surviv- ing texts (Jones 1972, 284-287). The most useful Introduction detail for the reconstruction of local communities is found in the medieval extents, compiled after the The landscape of upland North Wales has been as English conquest. Nevertheless, just as Domesday affected by the intervention of man as any lowland Book, compiled soon after William's victory at Hast- landscape. Prehistoric occupation reached relatively ings, portrays the situation prevailing in late Anglo- high levels on the slopes of the mountain ranges and Saxon England, so the medieval extents reveal the into the most remote valleys of Snowdonia. It is con- agrarian communities and systems of the native sidered that the removal of tree cover in such mar- Welsh. It remains true, however, that 'the contempor- ginal areas of low fertility and high rainfall contrib- ary archaeological evidence remains our surest guide uted towards the soil deterioration which produced since it enables us not only to test the written evid- the impoverished soils found today and to the forma- ence but also to view it clearly in its territorial setting. tion of the barren peat-covered moorlands which are More of the history of Wales lies in the earth than is so characteristic of parts of the region (Walker & recorded in our libraries ... ' (ibid., 286). To this might Taylor 1976). Similar landscapes can be found be added the evidence on the earth, for landscape throughout western Britain, from the Western Isles archaeology has shown that much field evidence sur- off the Scottish coast to the peat moors of Connemara vives, especially in marginal zones. Ideally, invest- in western Ireland. igation adopts an inter-disciplinary approach review- By the first millennium AD, however, the focus of ing the evidence from all available sources including, settlement had become firmly established in the main in addition to the documentary and cartographic valley regions. Even in prehistoric times the greatest sources, that of place-names (Hooke forthcoming) concentration of settlement has been observed in and literature, and among the wide range of archaeo- such regions and in the Roman period improved logical techniques, air photography (Musson n.d.; access may have been a contributory factor (RCH Aris 1996) and field survey, complemented where MW 1964; Casey 1969). Jones (1972, 295) has noted possible by judicious excavation and environmental how the distribution of sculptured stone monuments analysis. of the Early Christian period reinforces the sugges- tion that economic activity was focused on the low- lands in the fifth and sixth centuries. In Gwynedd, the Medieval communities uplands of Snowdonia were primarily a place of ref- uge, offering security and a place to regroup when The medieval extents reveal valley-based com- outside threat became too dangerous. These and other munities utilising the hill pastures, probably initially 331 D. Hooke upon a seasonal basis. Thus the extent of 1284 (Ex- parish of Caerhun. This parish lies on the west bank tent of Merioneth 1284) names the king's pastures of the River Conwy on the eastern side of the Car- and vaccaries of Ardudwy, a division ofthe cantrefof neddau range, also within the kingdom of Gwynedd. Dunoding in Gwynedd, as the pastures ofBryn Coch, The locations ofCastell and its appendant hamlets of Y Feidiog and Prysor, lying to the east of the Rhino- Penfro, Bodidda, Cymryd and Merchlyn can be rough- gau range; these could have sustained over 200 stock ly identified, spread across the present-day parishes had they then not been devastated by war (Fig. 1). In ofGyffin, Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin. Castelllay the Record of Caernarvon (1420 for Merioneth; Ellis in the commote of Arllechwedd Isaph but the site of 1838), these havotref!rith provided pasture (herbag the maerdrefhas not been identified. A likely loca- f!oreste) for the stallions of Uwch Artro. The royal tion is close to the matte ofBryncastell in the hamlet vill or maerdrefofthe commote of Ardudwy Is Artro of Gronant, close to an important crossing point of lay at Ystumgwem, upon the shores of the Cardigan the Conwy, rather than at the Roman fort of Kano- Bay, and its bondmen held appurtenant pastures in vium in Caerhun (Gresham 1979) (Fig. 1). Inland, in the rocky valley ofCwm Nantcol between the Rhino- the parish of Llangelynnin, the place-name 'Ffridd- gau and the sea (Extent of Merioneth 1284). Studies lys' may indicate the summer pastures of the llys by Jones and Gresham have shown how in the most (court) or maerdref By c. 1350, however, a further servile tenure of the maerdref a regular system of bond gafael in the remote inland valley of Cwm land allotment ensured that the community was re- Eigiau may represent other pastures which had origi- sponsible as a whole for provisioning the royal vill nally belonged to Castell (Ellis 1838, Record of and both here and on the holdings of free tribesmen Caernarvon). It is not clear whether these were occu- the arable strips formed intermingled holdings of the pied throughout the year. A period of more clement type reconstructed for Castell (below). Outside the climatic conditions in the late medieval period appar- maerdref, rights to land usually operated through kin ently permitted intermittent cultivation to take place groups, with systems in place for the reallocation of at relatively high altitudes (Jones 1964, 24-26). The land to prevent excessive morcellation of holdings land in Cwm Eigiau may represent an assart on the once boundaries had become fixed. However, the mountain land and, unlike many other native gafae- process of territorial fragmentation was at work here lion, it was demarcated by precise metes and bounds, in Wales before the Edwardian conquest. As in Eng- recorded in the sixteenth century (Univ Wales Ban- land, tribal society was becoming increasingly land- gor, Baron Hill 2453), but was escheat (taken from oriented as the boundaries of both township and nati- native tenure to the king) by 1352. ve land units (the gafael and the gwely, which might It is the period of the demise of the native hold- be scattered through several townships) were laid ings which provides the closest insight into their down, possibly in the twelfth century (Gresham structure. Some were entirely denuded of their occu- 1987, 137-138). The township was closely related to pants: Glyn and Gronant in Castell, together with the the ecclesiastical parish, an area served by a church, Cwm Eigiau gafael, were emptied at this time. Be- which was a system of organisation already long used fore any holdings subject to the particularly restric- by the church throughout England. By 1326 it was a tive tenure of tir cyfrif('reckoned land'- usually as- clansman of the township of Llanaber, rather than sociated with the maerdref or royal demesne), could those of any other land unit, who was 'fined for keep- be taken over by the emerging landholding classes ing his animals "in the common pastures of the old after the Edwardian conquest the land had to be freed settlement'' (in communi pastura del hendreve) after from this associated restrictive bond tenure and other the community of the township (communitas villate) bond lands would similarly be avoided by prospec- had moved, early in May of that year, with its ani- tive tenants so long as freehold tenements were avail- mals to the mountains' (Jones 1972, 298). In the fif- able (Jones Pierce 1972, 47-48). The lands of the teenth-century extent, the bond and free holdings of bondsmen ofYstumgwem in Ardudwy is Artro were tribal Wales are grouped into such townships but it given to villein families displaced by the building of may have been a genuine fact that the boundaries of Edward I's borough at Harlech (Gresham 1988). eight native bond gweliau in Llanaber, Llanddwywe Twenty-two free clans were recorded in Castell in and Llanenddwyn were unknown. Their lands were 1352, occupying that number of gafaelion (Ellis probably intermingled, making use of the narrow 1838, Record of Caernarvon). Their lands had been coastal strip which lies here between the Rhinogau fragmented but with recognisable focal areas: 'none and the sea (Hooke 1975) (Fig. 2). of the gafaelion of Castell can be regarded as a dis- Jones Pierce (1939, 1972) has shown how the tinct territorial unit demarcated from its neighbours holdings of the native Welsh were similarly inter- by definite metes and bounds like the nearby bond mingled in the township of Castell, now part of the gafael ofCwm Eigiau, unless an organisation of that 332 The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales 10 miles 10 20 km . '' Upland range • Royal vill V Ystumgwern + Early religious centre 0 Borough IE!iiJiiliSEIIIi!!lllll!illl 1 NAME 1 Cantref boundary ~---- ~ .................... i Name ..................... i Commote boundary Transhumance Link ~------, 1 l ______ 1 I Area of figures 2 & 3 Fig. 1. -Administration units in North Wales. kind be conceded to the eight gafaelion limited to were named after the ancestors of the tribal groups Castell proper. The remainder must have been div- holding them in the fifteenth century and some can be ided into at least two, and in some cases into as many traced through into later documents as their lands as five, divisions' (Jones Pierce 1972, 201 ). Most passed to new owners (Gresham 1965, 33). These 333 D. Hooke help to cast light upon the pattern of native landhold- Since cultivation continued over most of the low- ing and also show how the early systems was to be lands in the same places throughout the centuries, the almost entirely eradicated, giving rise to new settle- archaeological field evidence of medieval fields and ment and field patterns. settlements is generally very poor. Only on the bor- First, to look backwards to what can be deducted ders of marginal zones have field relics relating to the about the native patterns of land tenure: Castell is ebb and flow of settlement survived to any appreci- unusual in the amount of documentation that has able extent. These are usually located on the margins survived, for a fifteenth-century rental (Univ Wales of the upland and only rarely have any relict systems Bangor, Baron Hill1939; Gresham 1965) shows how been identified in the main areas of settlement below; one Bartholomew Bolde, a descendent of a Lanca- occasional patches of poor terrain at low levels which shire family who had presumably moved into North have subsequently been ignored by development are Wales as settlers in the English plantation boroughs unfortunately unrepresentative of the areas usually after the Edwardian conquest, was acquiring the sought out by medieval cultivators. Sometimes the lands of Welsh peasant farmers piecemeal in order field remains are sufficiently clear for detailed survey to build up his estates. The rental identifies many of but less obvious remains are now also becoming ap- the former native holdings: some sixty cottages, 600 parent on air photographs. Rarely has any of this evi- acres of arable, 200 acres of meadow and 1000 acres dence been dated by excavation or environmental of pasture and permits their scattered locations to be analysis. Most prolific are the remains of long huts of identified. Subsequent deeds illustrate their subse- various sizes, often surviving above the present level quent amalgamation into farming units. Jones of cultivation. They either stand alone or are related Pierce was able to reconstruct the layout of the ar- to simple paddocks and irregular field systems; only able and meadow of the eight Castell gafaelion occasionally are there signs of arable cultivation which lay on the valley land above the marsh and (RCHMW 1956). These are usually unrelated to the the river: 'On the site occupied a hundred years ago later farm complexes and are likely to pre-date them by nine holdings there stood at one stage in the past in use. Some huts may represent continually occup- holdings belonging to as many as sixty-nine ten- ied settlements, either representing a period of land ants', their tyddynnod (homesteads) situated just pressure or the period of climatic optimum noted within the boundaries of the inner hamlet ofLlwyd- above, but many others are at heights which suggest faen or between the arable and the lower lying mea- they were associated with the seasonal pasturing of dowland of Morfa Llwydfaen. Jones Pierce pictures the upland commons. It is rare for them to link with the scene which would have met a traveller landing any surviving field name and although a long hut at Cafn Gronant and making his way towards Bwlch stands in a hafod-named field in Llanaber the bound- y Deufaen: aries of the field itself clearly cut through other adja- he would see the tyddynnod, erwau, and drylliau cent long huts (this may represent two periods of use). of the vill of Gronant, once cultivated by the Field systems have also been identified on air prince's bondmen and now held in villeinage by photographs. Jones (1972, 344-345, fig. 45, pi. Ill) free tenants ofCastell, covering the rises on either showed how strip systems photographed by the Air hand and merging imperceptibly, unbroken by Force Department in Llanynys, Denbighshire, ap- wall or hedgerow, into the fields of Llwydfaen ... peared to represent a survival of nucleal land (tir (ibid., 209). corddlan) and hereditary land (tir gwelyog) associ- Elsewhere he describes 'a patchwork of quilleted ated with an early clas (clerical community). On the fields' and notes that the holdings purchased by Great Orme, near Llandudno, overlying systems of Bolde were dispersed in scattered and widely separ- cultivation have recently been identified, arising ated parcels- a holding of 309 acres might be held in from two distinct periods of cultivation (Aris 1996). as many a ten parcels. This fragmentation he inter- Linear systems of ridge and furrow may overlie .an preted as arising from the subdivision of former clan earlier complex of regular rectangular fields which holdings, subdivided by the later Welsh law offam- give rise to pronounced regularly spaced lynchets in- ily inheritance. The average holding of a native tribes- fluencing the size of the ridges themselves. Although man may have been as little as eight or ten acres by no dates for either of these systems have been estab- the beginning of the fifteenth century, widely scat- lished they lie close to the township foci of the medi- tered throughout the township and its hamlets and eval extents. Similar strip field complexes identified with parcels of arable and meadow thoroughly inter- on Ffridd Cam en along the western edge of the Ber- mingled with each other and separated by the strips wyn in Clwyd at heights of between 335 and 395 belonging to others - even the lands of individual metres O.D. have tentatively been interpreted as me- gafaelion were intermingled (Gresham 1965). dieval in date, associated with a long hut which may 334 The effect of English settlement.in medieval North Wales • Harlech LLANDDWYWE Upland range 305m (1 OOOft) contour Area of Long hut clusters \ (Ardudwy Is Artro only; individual sites not shown) Commote division boundary Land of Ystumgwern maerdref + Gwern y cape! Trackway 0 Free land of bond gafael >< Bond holding Field-names indicative of arable strips (Lianaber only) Commons enclosed C1 9 Fig. 2. · Medieval/and holdings in Ardudwy Is Artro. have been a permanently occupied farmstead. Smal- These recently recognised systems of regular strip ler huts in the vicinity may have been ?earlier hafod fields are not unlike those found at higher levels on settlements (Silvester 1991). Bodmin Moor (Johnson & Rose 1994,97, 107-115). 335 D. Hooke At 274-305 metres O.D. on Brown Willy a cluster of which lay intermingled through the three coastal medieval long huts were associated with regular townships of Llanaber, Llanddwywe and Llanendd- strip fields; these were later overlain by a later sys- wyn, are found giving their names to the later farm- tem of larger fields which incorporated some of the steads or hamlets of Golodd, Llanyfachwenisaf, earlier boundary walls. It is thought that, on Bodmin Llecheiddior, Bennar, Llanddwywe and Bron y foe!; Moor, cultivation of the linear strips may have be- Ythaildreffis remembered in the modem farm-name gun in the late fourteenth century after earlier ex- Faildref but was not in the same location; the bond perimental sowings had been tried and presumably land of Keirtrejj' is remembered in a house name out- found successful. At Roughtor South, between 289 side Barmouth. Only one of the names on the coastal and 305 metres O.D., irregular ridges within the side of the Rhinogau range referred to a holding fields may have been produced by either ploughing above 150 metres (500 ft) (Thomas 1970) and only or spade cultivation (ibid., 67) but at numerous sites Golodd lay beyond the coast range, the later farm more regular broader ridging appeared to be of post- occupying a site at the head of Cwm Sylfaen at a medieval origin. The linear strips were thought to height of245 metres (800ft) just over a col, Bwlch y represent a system of subdivided arable within an Rhiwgyr, which leads up from the coast and the val- in-field, out-field context. Snatch crops could be ley of the Y sgethin. taken from the upland commons, if necessary, in The demesne holdings of the royal vill of most farming systems of upland Britain and such Ystumgwern are represented in the Edwardian ex- fields have been identified by aerial photography on tents by bond gafaelion, some of which have been some of the other Cornish moors. This would also identified. One of the bond gafaelion (a non-heredit- be applicable to what is known for Wales but the ary holding), y Migliwe, of Llanenddwyn reappears strip fields of the Great Orme and the Berwyn seem as a farm Migliw on the banks of the Artro, others lay to be far too pronounced to represent temporary cul- in the valley of the Afon y Gornant, including Ygor- tivation. nant, represented today by a farm-name Gornant. Even when medieval field systems have been Other bond holdings identified include Llwyngwian, eradicated by later cultivation, as seems to be the case andy Lloynon (LLwyn-yn), all situated on the coastal in the Conwy valley area of Caerhun, the area of me- lowland strip. By 1420, seven of the twenty bond dieval arable can often be identified from field- gafaelion of Llanenddwyn had been converted into names recorded in post-medieval documents. Terms fir mal, or holdings which were available for renting such as dry!!, 'a strip or ridge', talar, 'a headland', out to freemen. Gresham (1988) traces these holdings lleiniau, 'quillets' and erw and cyfar, measures of back to an extent of 1284 and by identifying these he land, seem to refer to the sub-divided arable strips of has been able to locate the site of the maerdrefland. the medieval fields (Hooke 1975; Thomas 1980, Four of the gafaelion noted as 'the prince's land' in 1992). In Llanaber these were strongly concentrated 1420 were called Y Faerdref(cf maerdref) in 1284, along a narrow band on the coastal strip below the individually named perhaps after the men who 'may 152-metre contour (Fig. 2) but in Caerhun, despite a well have been the heads of the displaced families predominantly lowland location, they also spread settled there': Gwyn y moch, Ieuan ap Grono y lloc, along access routes (a Roman road) onto the lower his brother Einion, and Cocholyn. In the sixteenth slopes of the hills (Hooke 1997 forthcoming) (Fig. 3). century, eight cottages on 109\/z acres of these four In the coastal area of Ardudwy is Artro, the names gafaelion were listed in a lease of crown land but a of some of the native holdings became attached to the further sixteen acres were unaccounted for. At some farms which replaced them (Thomas 1970; Davies time a chapel had been built upon this land (possibly 1988; Gresham 1988) (Fig. 2). A parcel of free land associated with the original prince's hall, which had called Egrin became a substantial holding (Egryn) by been moved to the castle at Harlech after the con- the fifteenth century, supporting a noble open-hearth quest), and it was the official search for this site that hall-house (Smith 1975, 114, fig. 53), and other free had led to the documentation which pin-pointed the parcels identified include Taltrefthyn (Taltreuddyn) land of the gafaelion. The chapel, Cappell Teulwyd, and Taluru (Talwem). Taltreuddyn was, however, still was found to be then in existence but unused, its land a hamlet of thirteen households in an extent of 1293 encroached illegally !:Jy Griffith ap John ap Ieuan ap (PRO, E 179/242/53; Thomas 1970, 130, n. 5) and Einion. Allocated with sixteen acres to a nearby es- only later was it to be replaced by a consolidated tate, some of this land bears the present-day field- holding with a substantial ?post-Tudor house. The name Gwern y Cape!, immediately to the west of the gwelyau (hereditary land) of Goleedd, Llanvechwy, modern farm of Faildref between it and Morfa Llecheithior, y Ben Erwe, Llanddwywe, and Bryn y Meirion. The modern farm ofYstumgwem lies adja- voel (often mis-spelt by the English commissioners), cent on the southern side. 336 The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales 305m Contour (1000 ft) Upland Fringe Parish boundary MB Maen-y-bardd v.::::·tl Commons enclosed C19 G Garth-mor Early arable names TA Tyddynrobin Other early arable names TE Tyddyneithiniog not precisely located R Rowlyn Roman road ICl Roman fort s Soglog Valley Farms Upland Farms LL Llwydlaen M Maenelra MC Maesycastell HG Halodygarreg 1 km F Farchwel T Tal-llyn Eigiau G Garthmor D Area of Figure 4 Fig. 3.- Farm holdings in Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin. Close to Ystumgwem, a small area of relict fields ofland at heights of 180 and 214 metres seem mostly associated with a possible long hut survives in a par- to have served as seasonal settlements, although a ticularly rocky location beside the Barmouth-Harlech small number oflower buildings are more substantial road. This may merely represent late encrqachrnent and associated with ancillary buildings, suggesting onto an area left as common grazing but there is a that they became at some stage permanent farm- hint of linear strips some fifteen to twenty metres in steads. This area has recently been rephotographed width associated with clearance mounds indicating a from the air and fresh computer-drawn surveys pro- first stage in land clearance (Hooke 1983, 251-252, duced, resulting in the recognition of additional sites fig. 3). It is doubtful whether this land would have (RCHMW, SMR). These clusters are clearly earlier been cleared to this extent unless it was going to be than the largeffriddoedd enclosures which cut across used for cultivation, even ploughing. In general, well- and through them and a number lie above the moun- preserved long hut groups and associated irregular tain wall. Most lie on the seaward side of the coastal paddocks are best preserved along this coastal strip range but a previously unrecorded site has now been on the hill slopes above the coastal arable (Hooke located above Golodd (the one named gafael which 1975, 1983) (Fig. 2). Clusters of long huts on benches lay beyond the coastal ridge). A scatter of ill-pre- 337 D. Hooke served long huts, including a platform house cut into tern fell apart after the Edwardian conquest in the late the slope, lie at a height of275-306 metres (900-1000 thirteenth century. Some areas of native farming be- ft) beside the lower part of the trackway which came abandoned but the more promising areas were crosses the range by the Bwlch y Rhiwgyr. acquired by both English and Welsh owners. These In Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin long hut groups holdings were at first widely scattered as the more are more widely dispersed across the upper moor- enterprising, such as Bartholomew Bolde, purchased lands but with the main clusters lying along the mar- any land that became available, eventually holding gin of the hill commons, some on land known to have sufficient to reorganise their estates. Not all the land been enclosed only in the sixteenth century (Hooke became part of such estates but several families in 1997 forthcoming a). A group lie within the bounds Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin acquired enough to of the Cwm Eigiau gafael, located between 3 97 and dominate the landholding pattern in these parishes. 428 metres on land sloping down to the upper waters Even when such large estate owners were not present, of the Afon Eigiau, but are in a poorly preserved scattered native holdings gave way to individual state. There is considerable variation in the size of farms by the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, their individual huts in both Llanaber parish and the par- lands increasingly amalgamated into composite hold- ishes of Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin, although in ings. both areas they are generally rectangular shape and set at right angles to the slope. Some are slightly set into the slope, giving a curving hood around a level- The establishment of post-medieval farms led platform, the lower part of which stands on an 'apron' of earth: all the Cwm Eigiau huts were of this Beyond the survival of names, there is little docu- type. In Llanaber, many long huts were clearly div- mentation in Llanaber to link the native holdings with ided into two compartments by an internal dividing subsequent farms but in the Conwy valley the rich wall. Size varies: on the holding of Llwynwcws in documentation of several estate groupings allows a Llanaber the best-preserved long huts vary from 7.9 clearer picture to be built up. Many names can be rec- m to 9.8m in length, with widths of between 4.9 m ognised in documents like the Bolde rental of c. 1450 and 5.5 m. In Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin size is (UWB, Bangor 1939): the native holdings ofL!wyd- more variable with some huts over 13 m in length and faen appear regularly and Bryn y Castell in Gronant with widths of up to 5.5 m, although some are also is named. There are several entries to names which much smaller, no longer than 6.1 m and only 2.4 m are later known to be farms such as 'a place called in width. It is unusual for anything other than foun- Mayn y barth' (Maen-y-bardd), 'a place called Garth- dation walls to survive and sods may have been used more'. Although this seems to imply the existence of for upper courses on many occasions, with straw or a dwelling it is rarely possible to confirm this: an heather thatch used for roofing. The classification by actual house at Maen-y-bardd is only referred to in size currently being carried out by Cadw: Welsh His- 1546 (UWB, Bangor 1920), its ruins still standing toric Monuments may well provide a clearer under- among today's farm buildings (RCHMW 1956, 26, standing of the nature of these dwellings. In the inter- Site No 96). Bronygadair is recorded in 1448/9 but im, it may be suggested that the rectangular long hut only referred to as a tyddyn in 1600 (UWB, Baron was the normal form of medieval native dwelling Hill 2324, 2535). Surprisingly one intake in the up- throughout upland North Wales, this form being used per part of the Afon Dulyn valley at 367 metres is for both permanently occupied tyddynnod and season- also recorded at about this time: Maeneira, which al hafodydd, although few of the former have sur- was clearly a tenement in 1468 (UWB, Baron Hill vived. 2654). Summer dwellings with hafod or llety names The evidence points to an early pattern of clust- also begin to be recorded at this date such as the six ered but by no means nucleated settlements, with acres of land called Kay llette Tudor noted in the simple tyddynnod scattered between or around the Bolde rental and later said to lie in Bryn Gwenith arable strips of the more intensively cultivated pat- (UWB, Baron Hill 2683), hill pastures in the south of ches of infield. The dwellings were probably similar Caerhun parish. It was suggested in my 197 5 paper to surviving long huts. Beyond, isolated or clustered that many of the cae names may have originated in long hut groups represented either permanent (in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as new farms some cases) or seasonal settlement, with most of the were being established and Caeithel in Llanbedry- upland common being used as stock pasture although cennin is recorded as early as 1438 (UWB, Baron parts could be treated as outfield with intermittent Hill 2290) when it was already divided into two ten- cropping should the need arise or should economic or ements. Cae-y-pin appears in the records in 1451 climatic factors encourage such ventures. This sys- with a new house built in 1555 (UWB, Baron Hill 338 The effect of English settlementin medieval North Wales Commons enclosed C19 LB Llanbedrycennin village Hafodydd Enclosed ffriddoedd BGd Bronygadair Hg Hafod-y-gwyn Tr Tyddynrobin HyC Hafod-y-clawdd Hafod holdings Bg Bwlch-y-gaer He Hafod-y-cae Limits of C16 enclosure Te Tyddyneithiniog H Hafod ~ Field boundaries C 19 Ci Caeithel Hgw Hafodygorswen Tb Tan-y-bwlch Underlying walls s Soglog 2/3 Wall types Approximate boundary between Fb Ffridd-y-bont stone walling and hedges R Rowlynuchaf ~ Former mill Pandyuchaf Lo Llwyn-on 11111 Occupied settlement Cl Cae'r·llin [J Abandoned settlement • Long hut site Fig. 4. - Field patterns in Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin. 339 D. Hooke 2335, 2423) and Caemalach in 1464 (UWB, Baron (UWB, Baron Hill 2413, 2953), and other seasonal Hill2358). There are many named tyddynnod which upland holdings include Lletty yr Ddeufaen recorded might be further located by detailed local study but in 1598 (UWB, Baron Hill 2530). Llettytudor re- most have not become modem farms. corded c. 1450 (noted above) was not certainly en- It is easier to locate those documented from the closed from the commons until after 1574/5 (UWB, sixteenth century, although they may well have exist- Baron Hill 2685). To the north-east of Tyddyneith- ed earlier: Tyddynrobinisafis referred to as 'a place' iniog an area of enclosed but steeply sloping rocky in 1501 (UWB, Baron Hill 2262), probably again land still bore a hafod name in the eighteenth century implying the existence of a house or tyddyn. This lies (GA, Caerhun MS XM437 3) but was farmed from on the upper edge of the valley land where the land is Cae'r llin, a holding beside the Afon Dulyn, itself not rising steeply to the upland plateau. On the plateau recorded before 1612 (UWB, Baron Hill 2556). edge, Tyddyneithiniog occupies a heart-shaped shelf Some of the hafodyddbecame permanently occupied ofland below the hillfort of Pen y gaer in an area pre- at this time: farms were established, for instance, in viously occupied by clusters of long huts. The long the remote valley of Cwm Eigaiu. Tal-llyn Eigiau, huts seem to represent an under-layer of settlement along with other cottages close by, had originally abandoned before the establishment of individual been built as a dairy-house (a summer hafod) in the farms. The name ofTyddyneithiniog, recorded by the earlier part of the sixteenth century (UWB, Baron sixteenth-century, means 'house in the gorse', sug- Hill2718; Davies 1979, 31), the land used for graz- gestive of such abandoned land. It appears in the ing stock which were brought down to the farms of documents in 1549 (UWB, Baron Hill 2417) and a Dolymarchog and Gronant in winter (UCW, Baron ruined house site on the eastern edge of the holding Hill 2637). may date from this period; it was to be replaced by Enclosures made around the margins of the up- another dwelling at a slightly higher level by the land commons from the sixteenth century onwards eighteenth century (Fig. 4). There are other refer- began to undermine the native tradition of the com- ences to farmsteads which lie at the outer edge of the munity use of upland pasture. Several hafod sites also cultivated land and which incorporated new intakes date from this period but by this date are closely as- along the moorland fringe, representing this further sociated with specific lowland farms. Interestingly, wave of settlement encroachment onto the upland fine specimans of sycamore, a tree widely introduced commons. A place called Tyddynrowlyn referred to into Britain in the sixteenth century, and often plant- one of the Rowlyn farms, located again on the upper ed to provide shelter, are found close beside several edge of cultivation in the Dulyn valley, and was in of these hafodydd. The associated paddocks often existence by 1501 (UWB, Baron Hill 2662; Emery form islands within the commons (Fig. 4). In Caerhun 1967) (Fig. 4). Higher up the Dulyn valley there were encroachment was also beginning to take place on the intakes in Gwern Jays y glog recorded c. 1600, which lowland common of Allt Wyllt (Hooke, in prepara- were to give rise to the farm ofSoglog (Hughes 1940, tion a) although most of the cottages which were built 3; mapped in Emery 1967, 148-8, fig. 7; see too on this rocky cliff are likely to be much later in date. Withers 1995, fig. 2; UWB, Baron Hill 2953). In This tiny common supported a substantial commu- Llanaber expansion onto the upland grazings was nity oflandless labourers and miners at the end of the also occurring in this period; it is possible to identify nineteenth century but is now practically deserted. several intakes, usually added to pre-existing farms, The tradition of constructing what were known as ty which it was claimed in 1575 had been illegal en- unnos houses persisted long in upland Wales al- croachments from the 'Forest of Snowdon' (Hooke though it had no recognised legal basis. It was thought 1975). that if a cabin could be erected on the waste during In Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin several intakes the night, with smoke issuing from its chimney by formed islands within the upland commons as these dawn, then its owner might legitimately claim the site hitherto common pastures were gradually eroded at as his own (RCL WM 1896, 576, No. 490). this time. Deeds show estate owners buying, leasing By this time, some substantial farms had devel- and enclosing sections of the mountain pastures, usu- oped in the valley itself: Farchwel is documented ally referred to as the ffriddoedd: Fridd-ddu is docu- from the early sixteenth century and some of the fab- mented in 1564 (UWB, Baron Hill 2683), taking in ric of the present house dates from the middle of that rocky land on the banks of the Afon Porthllwyd. century; the present house of Maesycastell contains Other intakes formed islands in the open upland some material from the original house built in 15 82 grazings near Maeneira but most seem from their and these reflect the growing prosperity of some lo- names to have started as seasonal hafodydd: Hafo- cal estate owners (Captain Edward Williams of dygarreg is mentioned in 1544, its tyddyn in 1572-3 Maesycastell was Sheriff of Caemarfonshire in 1570) 340 The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales (RCHMW 23-4, Nos 92 and 93). A large proportion type of evidence which is being investigated here and of the parish, however, formed part of three large elsewhere is field boundary evidence. Since most of estates: the Baron Hill, Vaynol and Davies-Griffith the present field pattern reflects the changed farming estates. The former belonged to the Bulkeleys, a system which replaced the earlier native pattern this Beaumaris family, originally from Cheshire, who had is of considerable importance if subsequent adapta- their family seat in Lincolnshire but managed their tions are to be understood. A glance at the modem estates in the seventeenth century through a steward map shows how small irregular fields still character- based in Conwy. The core of their lands in the Conwy ise much of the valley land although larger fields are valley had been acquired by the marriage of a son to found on the flood plain itself. Some of these repre- the daughter and heiress of Bartholomew Bolde in sent the amalgamation of older fields, especially 1448; they had added to this into the seventeenth cen- around major farms and estate centres, but much of tury (Williams 1979). Vaynollay near Bangor and the low-lying meadowland was subject to flooding had belonged to the Williams family (originally of and was only drained and enclosed over the last few Cochwillan) but had passed to the Smiths at the end centuries. Along the lower slopes between the 15m of the seventeenth century, Thomas Assheton Smith and 180m contours, where many of the small fif- owning these estates in the mid nineteenth century. teenth and sixteenth-century farms developed, fields The Davies-Griffith family of Caerhun were, how- continue to be irregular and estate surveys show that ever, based locally. The lands of both estates were most of them have remained unchanged in shape and subdivided into numerous small farms and it is the areas since the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries records ofland transfers etc which supply so much of (Fig. 4). the historical detail. Jones Pierce notes how hedging is first mentioned Expansion onto the upland commons continued in the Baron Hill leases of the sixteenth century (Jones and the date at which many farms were established Pierce 1972, 209, n. 29) and living hedges form the remains undocumented. Bwlch-y-gaer in Llanbedry- main type of boundary used on the valley floor. This cennin and Fridd-y-bont in Caerhun, for instance, probably reflects an absence of stone on the flood appear as islands of enclosed land surrounded by land plain but also confirms that the land had been cleared that was open until after 1858. Tan-y-bwlch was only of readily available stone as far as the present margin enclosed after parliamentary enclosure. The enclos- between hedge and wall. Detailed examination of the ure movement swept across England and Wales in area in which both types of boundary overlap might the eighteenth and nineteenth century and in this part cast more light upon their sequence of use because of Wales mainly concerned the upland commons. In ring fences of farms and their internal boundaries can Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin, 6,242 acres (2,526 be ascertained from the surviving cartographic evi- hectares), mostly upland common, was affected by dence. On occasions, undergrowth has grown up this act, in each case over a quarter of the total parish alongside or even over stone walling. Sample hedge area. Such enclosure was fiercely resisted and al- counts carried out in Llanbedrycennin gave a consist- though an Enclosure order was made in 1850, it was ent count of four species being present in most not carried through until 1858. Fences were pulled hedges forming field boundaries. This, if reliable, down as fast as they were erected, ricks were burnt would confirm a sixteenth-century origin (Hooper and extra police had to be brought in but it was ten 1970). years before resentment simmered down (Dodd A close chronological sequence for the stone 1990, 240; Aris 1987). By enclosures on this scale the walling has not yet been satisfactorily established but last vestiges of native farming were thereby eradi- broad chronological trends are clear. The commonest cated; two landowners - those of the estates noted type of stone walling throughout the area of the above: the Bulkeley family of Beaumaris and the farmed zone, and especially around the hedgerow Davies-Griffith family of Caerhun - each obtained border zone, consists of random stone construction over ten per cent of the land enclosed in both parishes using stones of variable size - in other words, walls (Chapman 1992, 42, 45). which were constructed utilising any stone that was readily at hand (Type 2). The walls are often sinuous and look relatively precarious but they have obvi- Field shapes and boundaries ously functioned effectively for a very long time. These may well represent the walls associated with Unfortunately the dates at which names are first the tenanted small farms of the sixteenth and seven- recorded do no not necessarily indicate the date of a teenth centuries, constructed and maintained by the settlement and can only provide a terminus post quem tenants themselves; they are also found around some date in assisting landscape reconstruction. Another upper hafod sites. Another common type of wall 341 D. Hooke (Type 3) represents a further stage in the rebuilding in association with the long huts and can still be of walls to produce a less random style, often with a traced over considerable distances. They form small horizontally laid top layer. Larger through-stones irregular paddocks on the holding of Egryn where have been used to give a firmer construction. These they are associated with the long hut complexes walls probably represent the improved techniques which occur on the hillsides at heights of 180 and 214 being carried out on well-managed estates after the metres. In this parish the sequence of walling is re- seventeenth century. markably similar to that noted in the parishes of Field survey of boundary walling may help to in- Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin despite the different vestigate the complicated pattern of development that types of rocks and stones available (Hooke, in prepa- can be seen on some holdings and thereby help to ration b). identify the trends of settlement and land use change One type of boundary walling can be easily de- across wider areas. Study of walling has so far only tected- that associated with nineteenth-century par- been incidental to wider research in the Conwy study liamentary enclosure (Type 4). Not only are the in- but it is clear that several stages of development may takes on the hills large, straight-sided and geometric be represented on the holding of Tyydyneithiniog in shape but the walling is particularly strong and of (Fig. 4). As noted above, this tenement is first re- a consistent style: through-stones are consistently corded by name in the sixteenth century but its name, used, the walls are high and stable, and frequently 'house amongst the gorse', suggests that it was estab- have a top of vertical or angled stones. In the Conwy lished in an area of previous clearance that had been parishes, a variant utilised short and long stones to at least temporarily abandoned. The long hut sites produce a castellated appearance, a style restricted in may stem from this earlier period of occupation to- Llanaber to a late (nineteenth-century) holding. Ex- gether with, perhaps, some of the remnant walls, but perienced gangs were often employed by large estate a house site near the present !eat probably represents owners at this time, helping to produce consistency the sixteenth-century farm; at least one standing wall across a wide area. Although, on Fig. 4, the farms of (Type 2) appears to date from this period. However, Ffridd-y-bont and Hafodygorswen appear as en- much rebuilding of walls was carried out later in as- closed islands within the commons, Tan-y-bwlch was sociation with a new house erected to the north of the a new farm established after enclosure. old site; both are mapped in eighteenth-century sur- Exceptions to the above styles are always of inter- veys (GA, Vaynol 4056). These reveal a pattern of est, revealing local fashion, idiosyncrasy or adap- medium-large fields separated by straight walls (sev- tation to a special kind of terrain, and several instan- eral Type 3 walls are indicated on Fig. 4), apart from ces of localised styles have been found in the two the small enclosures around the farmstead (most Conwy parishes. Near the village of Llanbedrycen- abandoned by 1832- GA, Vaynol4071). The holding nin, slate, possibly old roof tiles, has been incorpo- formed part of the Davies-Griffith Caerhun estate. rated into the walls (there were slate workings at the Most of the newly-built walls survive but the plund- head of the Dulyn valley in the nineteenth century). ered walls of earlier layouts can still be seen, together An exceptional area in the lower zone is the small with an area of undated ridge and furrow. To the east area of common of Allt Wyllt which is characterised of the hillfort of Pen-y-gaer, Type 3 walls also en- by stone walling: this is the steep rocky cliff which closed the rough land or ffridd of Ochr Gaer and was encroached and settled from the sixteenth cen- separated this from a similar area of land which had tury. become attached to the holding of Cae'r llin in the Dulyn valley. This had earlier been associated with a hafod in the adjacent field, also part of the Caerhun Conclusions estate (1774: GA XM 437 3). On Rowlyn, too, an earlier field layout can be detected in distant views Today, in Caerhun and Llanbedrycennin, all the but the a new farm and field layout was made in the upland farms have been abandoned as self-contained nineteenth century. units and their dwelling houses are falling into ruin. Although any earlier walls would have been read- There is no permanent occupation in the Dulyn val- ily plundered for stone the bottom courses of earlier, ley above Rowlynuchaf and the land is grazed, probably medieval, walls survive (Type 1) in associa- chiefly by sheep, belonging to the valley farms. Once tion with several long hut groups. They are rarely again, the remaining open uplands serve only as pas- now above one course in height- robbed for the con- ture for sheep and cattle, but although the appearance struction of sheep folds as well as walls - but the of much of the higher land may have changed little lower stones were often too large or too buried to be from medieval times, farming systems and economic easily removed. Such walls survive best in Llanaber arrangements are very different. In Llanaber, too, 342 The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales higher farms have in places given way to forestry. DAVIES T. 1988: Ystumgwern yn Ardudwy, Journal The landscape could be on the brink of further change of the Merioneth Historical and Record Society as the lowland villages expand and change the tradi- 10, 205-220. tional pattern of dispersed settlement to one closer to Dooo A.H. 1990: A History of Caernarvonshire the English model. In this case the change is less a 1284-1900, (1968), 2nd edn., Wrexham, 1990. response to methods of land management than to the ELLIS H. 1838: Record of Caernarvon. preferred requirements of planners, administrators, EMERY F. 1967: The farming regions of Wales, in: J. those providing emergency services and, it must be THIRSK (ed.), The Agrarian History of England said, of the people themselves. It is to be hoped that and Wales IV. 1500-1640, Cambridge, 113-160. the essential 'Welshness' of the uplands will not be Extent of Merioneth 1284, Archaeologia Cambren- eroded yet again. sis, 3rd ser. 13, 1867. GRESHAM C.A. 1965: The Bolde rental (Bangor MS. Acknowledgements 1939), Transactions of the Caernarvonshire His- I should like to thank the staff of the Dolgellau and torical Society 26, 31-49. Caernarfon Record Offices, and especially Gareth GRESHAM C.A. 1979: The commotal centre of Haulfryn Williams, for their continued help and sup- Arllechwedd Isaf, Transactions of the Caernar- port over many years; Tomos Roberts for providing vonshire Historical Society 40, 11-16. access to the Bangor archives and to Melville Rich- GRESHAM C.A. 1987: Medieval parish and township ard's invaluable place-name index; Nick Eyles for boundaries in Gwynedd, Bulletin of the Board of his preliminary survey of the field boundary walling Celtic Studies 34, 137-149. in the Conwy valley; and Kathryn Sharp for her car- GRESHAM C.A. 1988: Addendum, 'Vairdre alias tographic assistance. In particular, I should like to Vaildre', Journal of the Merioneth Historical and thank Cheltenham and Gloucester College for the Record Society 10, 221-6. funding that permitted some of this research to by HooKED. 1975: Llanaber; a study in landscape dev- undertaken. elopment, Journal of the Merioneth Historical and Record Society 7, 221-230. HooKED. 1983: The Ardudwy landscape, Journal of Abbreviations the Merioneth Historical and Record Society 9, 245-260. GA Gwynedd Archives, County Record Of- HOOKED. 1997 forthcoming: Place-names and vege- fice, Caernarfon. tation history as a key to understanding settlement PRO Public Record Office, London. in the Conwy valley, in: N. EDWARDS (ed.), Land- RCLWM Royal Commission on Land in Wales and scape and Settlement in Medieval Wales, Oxbow Monmouthshire (see Bibliography). Books, Oxford. RCHMW Royal Commission on Ancient and Histori- HOOKED., in preparation (a): The settlement on Allt cal Monuments in Wales and Monmouth- Wyllt, Caerhun. shire; SMR Sites & Monuments Record. HooKE D. in preparation (b): A chronology of ucw University ofWales, Bangor, Collection of boundary walling. manuscripts. HOOPER M. 1970: Dating hedges, Area 4, 63-65. HUGHES R.E. 1940: Environment and human settle- ment in the commote of Arllechwedd Isaf, Trans- Bibliography actions of the Caernarvonshire Historical Society 2, 1-25. ARIS M. 1987: Crime and Punishment: a Welsh Per- JOHNSON N. & ROSE P. 1994: Bodmin Moor, an Ar- spective, Gwynedd Archives Service, Caernarfon. chaeological Survey, Vol1: The human landscape ARIS M. 1996: Historic Landscapes of the Great to c 1800, English Heritage, London. Orme, Llanrwst. JONES G.R.J. 1964: The distribution of bond settle- CASEY P.J. 1969: Caerhun, in: V.E. NASH-WILLIAMS ments in north-west Wales, Welsh History Review (ed.), The Roman Frontier in Wales, 2nd edn re- 2, 19-36. vised M.G. Jarret, Cardiff, 56-59. JoNES G.R.J. 1972: Post-Roman Wales, in: H.P.R. CHAPMAN J. 1992: A Guide to Parliamentary Enclo- FINBERG (ed.), The Agrarian History of England sures in Wales, Cardiff. and Wales !If. A.D. 43-1042, Cambridge, 283-382. DA VIES E. 1979: Hendred and hafod in Caernarvon- JONES PIERCE T. 1939: Some tendencies in the agrar- shire, Transactions of the Caernarvonshire His- ian history of Caernarvonshire during the later torical Society 40, 17-46. Middle Ages, Transactions of the Caernarvon- 343 D. Hooke shire Historical Society 1, 18-36, repr in: J. BEVER- SMITH P. 1975: Houses of the Welsh Countryside, LEY SMITH (ed.), Medieval Welsh Society, Selected London. Esssays by T Jones Pierce, Cardiff 1972, 39-60. THOMAS C. 1970: Social organisation and rural settle- JONES-PIERCE T. 1942: The gafael in Bangor Manu- ment in medieval North Wales, Journal of the script 1939, Transactions of the Honourable So- Merioneth Historical and Record Society 6, 121- ciety of Cymmrodorium, 158-188, repr. in: J. 131. BEVERLEY SMITH (ed.), Medieval Welsh Society, THOMAS C. 1980: Field-name evidence in the recon- Selected Esssays by T Jones Pierce, Cardiff, 1972, struction of medieval settlement nuclei in North 195-228. Wales, National Library of Wales Journal 21, MussoN C. n.d.: Wales from the Air, Patterns ofPast 340-356. and Present, RCHMW, Aberystwyth. THOMAS C. 1992: A cultural-biological model of RCLWM 1896: Royal Commission on land in Wales agrarian colonisation in upland Wales, Landscape and Monmouthshire, Report, London. History 14, 37-50. RCHMW 1956: Royal Commission on Ancient and WALKER M.F. & Taylor. J.A. 1976: Post-Neolithic Historical Monuments in Wales and Monmouth- vegetation changes in the western Rhinogau, shire, An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, Transactions of the Caernarvonshire, Vol. I: East, the cantref of Institute of British Geographers, new ser 1, 323- Arllechwedd and the commote ofCreuddyn. 345. RCHMW 1964: Royal Commission on Ancient and WILLIAMS G .H. 1979: Estate management in Dyffryn Historical Monuments in Wales and Monmouth- Conwy, c. 1685: the Caerhun, Baron Hill and shire, An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Gwydir estates, Transactions of the Honourable Caernarvonshire, Vol. Ill: West, the cantref of Society ofCymmrodorion, 31-74. Lleyn. WITHERS C.W.J. 1995: Conceptions of cultural land- SILVESTER R. 1991: Medieval farming on the Berwyn, scape change in upland North Wales: a case study North Wales, Medieval Settlement Research of Llanbedr-y-cennin and Caerhun parishes, c. Group Annual Report 6, 12-14. 1560-c.1891, Landscape History 17, 35-47. Dr Della Hooke Dept Geography & Geology Cheltenham & Gloucester College Francis Close Hall Swindon Road Cheltenham GL50 4AZ UK 344 Rural Settlements in Medieval Europe- Papers of the 'Medieval Europe Brugge 1997' Conference- Volume 6 P.J. Dixon Settlement in the the Hunting Forests of Southern Scotland in the Medieval and Later Periods Introduction largely confined to southern Scotland and included both royal demesne, i.e., the forest of Ettrick, and Recent archaeological field survey in the low- forest grants to his Norman barons, such as that of the lands of southern Scotland by the Royal Commission Bruce lordship of Annandale. Indeed, many of the on the Ancient and Historical Monuemnts of Scot- new baronial forests were granted to Norman fol- land (RCAHMS) has identified extensive areas of lowers of King David who had been feudal depend- abandoned medieval and post-medieval settlement. ents of the earldom ofHuntingdon, where they could These settlements are littered across the rough past- not hunt without the permission of King Henry. In ures, taking the form of buildings reduced to grass- contrast with England, this was a beneficial arrange- covered banks, earthen-banked field-systems, and ment, whereby the king instituted his control of hunt- plough-rig. In some areas, the settlement remains are ing reserves by granting a subject the right to create a enclosed within earthen boundary-dykes, which com- private forest. Although this reserved the hunting to prise a bank and an external ditch, known as a "deer- the baron, it did not preclude the king from hunting dyke". Two of the areas surveyed, Southdean and there, for example, Robert II hunted in the Earl of Liddesdale (Fig. 1) lie within the medieval hunting forests of Jedburgh and Liddesdale respectively. Here, this type of head-dyke is attributed to the strictures of Forest Law that were applied in the hunting forests of Scotland from the mid-12th century until the end of the medieval period (c.1600), and should be distin- guished from the earthen head-dykes that surround so many post-medieval rural settlements elsewhere in Scotland. The establishment of Hunting Forests in Scotland: Historical Introduction The concept of the hunting forest was introduced to Scotland by King David during the 1130s, thus SCOTLAND altering and cutting across the traditional view of hunting and access to game. Up till that time the law in Scotland with respect to game depended on the principle of Roman Law known as 'res nullius ', which stated that game belonged to the person who killed it. Whilst this was limited by the rights of the possessor of the lad, the creation of hunting reserves was an outright denial of this traditional prerogative. How- ever, the creation of royal forests was limited to the royal demesne and did not include baronial holdings, as it did in England, so that the rights of the barons as possessors of land were not impugned. In the first instance the new forests created by King David were Fig. 1. - Location Map. 345 P.J. Dixon Mar's forest of Mar in the 14th century (Gilbert 1979). ther fieldwork. What may be said is that the steads Scots forest law was, in general, more humane than were in part a military system in that the holders of the English system, and appears to have been temp- each stead had to provide the royal army in time of ered under the influence of native custom of 'res war with two bows, a spear, a horse and gear, in ad- nullius'. As in England, however, deer hunting, in dition to the usual annual payment of rent in kind. particular, was reserved, and actions which affected The system is most likely to have its origins in the the livelihood of the deer such as woodland clear- later 14th or early 15th centuries as a reaction to the ance, grazing, muir-burn, enclosure and settlement, occupation of southern Scotland by the English, but were not permitted. However, the penalties for poach- it is not clear that it had any effect on the pre-war pat- ing not so harsh, for example, the maximum fines tern of settlement or what form this may have taken. were not usually exacted until the 4th offence, and In the conditions of warfare and pestilence that the mutilation of dogs and the banning of hunting obtained in southern Scotland in the 14th and 15th weapons were not enforced in Scotland. On the other centuries, the crown and other landlords were obliged hand there were fines for anyone travelling through a to find ways of maintaining their tenantry in their forest without permission or deviating from the farms. With a dislocated economy and a declining designated route. population, unfree serfs were replaced by husband- men, demesnes were leased, and rents fell or were held static. There was also a preference for the sub- Hunting Forests and settlement stantial husbandman, who would be better able to support military service. In Ettrick, as elsewhere in Until recently, there has been little archaeological southern Scotland, the tenants of the forest steads, interest in the remains of medieval settlement in the apart from the forest officials, held their lands at the hunting forests of Scotland. The model for settlement will of the lord. Their lease was by a tack of three or in the forest was established by the RCAHMS in their five years, with annual payments of money, cattle work on Selkirkshire (1957). In this Inventory, peel and lambs in the later 15th century with no right to towers were placed in the context of a system of sub-let. James IV converted the tacks to feu-farms in "forest steads", which the Crown inherited from the 1506, giving the tenants permanent tenures and the Douglas lordship of the Forest ofEttrick in 1455. The right to alienate the farm, whilst retaining the feu concentration on the ruins of these defensible struc- payment. Whilst this did little to raise the income of tures to the relative exclusion of the earthworks of the the crown, it provided the stability that enabled some rest of the rural settlement landscape has created a of the tenants to build peel towers. bias in our understanding of the Forest of Ettrick However, this process of alienation of forest lands towards its defensible structures of later 15th and did not apply to forests that were not in royal hands, 16th century date. Thus the parks at Newark Castle indeed the evidence is to the contrary. In the Forest and Aikwood, mapped by Pont (Blaeu 1654), are not of Jedburgh in 1541, although the tenants held their located or recorded, and only a handful of the other steads on an annual basis, they appear to have bene- settlements, such as Douglas Craig or Over Kirk- fited from a "kindly tenure", which allowed the ten- hope, were deemed worthy of record (RCAHMS ant to continue in possession at the end of the year in 1957). The symbiosis of park and hunting-lodge or the interest of stability. This was important if the castle (e.g. Newark Castle) was not examined, yet this steads were to provide military service and may also is a common aspect of the medieval estate-centre, have created the beneficial conditions that led to the since hunting was such an important facet of the life construction of peel houses (RCAHMS 1994). In of the king and his barons. Thus the royal castles of Liddesdale, another Douglas possession, which pas- Stirling had two nearby deer parks by the late 13th sed to a different branch of the family in the 15th century, and Kincardine and Jedburgh one each, century, the farms were held at will in 1376, but the whilst baronial parks proliferated in the 14th and 15th length of tenure of the tenants-at-will was not defin- centuries (Gilbert 1979). ed. However, in 1541 the tenants paid by the year, However, not all steads sported peel towers, which presumably at the will of the lord, but a significant are in any case predominantly 16th century in date. proportion of the steads or holdings were either The antiquity of the system of forest steads in Ettrick vacant or worth nothing (RHM 1853). This suggests Forest and the pattern of settlement indicated by it, is that the landowner was not very effective in main- difficult to establish, either by documentary evid- taining the tenantry in occupation. Whilst there may ence, in the absence of any suitable documentation of have been other factors at play, the small size of the forest for the period of Douglas ownership prior many of the holdings of 1376 may have limited their to 1455, or on archaeological grounds, without fur- viability. 346 Settlement in the the Hunting Forests of Southern Scotland in the Medieval and Later Periods ~ ~ 079 -t +. +. A +. -+.- 075 +. ~ N + ;t, .t. ~._:_ -----·~ ~: : : /' ~ -t ;t, ' .+.. .+.. .+.. +. . ;t, +. 100 --_ 200 · 300m It-'t-1t-1w1w1w'...J1....!1...J'...J'------'-'------'' /l ~- / '/ .+.. + +. +. +. ... .+.. .t. .:t--·----- .+.. ~ft // .+.. NT 652 653 +. 654 • 655 i/ 656 657 658 Fig. 2. -Ass arts at Martinlee Sike, Southdean in the forest of Jedburgh. Ass arts by unfree tenures until the 14th century and thereafter at the will of the lord. The assarts of this type of Settlement within the forest was limited or con- tenant would be recorded not by charter but by a trolled because it was at variance with the mainte- licence recorded in the administrative 'rolls' of the nance of the habitat of the deer. Thus any clearance forest, none of which survive. In England there are of woodland within the forest for farming was only forest rolls with this type of record for the Royal permitted under licence from the forester or the land- Forests ofRockingham and Pamber (Stamper 1983). owner. The clearance of land in this way was called Thus in an estate like Liddesdale, where in 13 76 only an assart (derived from the old French essarter, 'to twelve holdings out of 173 were free tenures or church grub up trees'). In Scotland the majority of assarts are lands, the assarts of any tenants-at-will, who formed recorded in charters of the mid-12th to the early-14th by far the majority, would not be recorded by charter century. Although there are relatively few docu- but in the forest rolls. After the early 14th century mented assarts in Scotland, this does not mean that charters of assarts cease, either because there was no there are few assarts, since most holdings were held pressure on land, which might be true in southern 347 P.J. Dixon Scotland but is demonstrably not the case in other there are extensive settlement landscapes of the me- parts of Scotland, e.g. Perthshire (Gilbert 1979 and dieval and post-medieval periods. Field-analysis of RCAHMS 1990), or because they were administered which has identified a characteristic landscape of in other ways such as purprestures, a less specific assart banks. The assart banks are built of earth and term than assart, used as a method of fining those stone, occasionally with a visible external revetment make unlicenced encroachments in the forest, but in (for example at Greenshiels) and an external ditch. It the absence of forest court rolls they are hardly likely is probable that a hedge surmounted the earthen to be well recorded in Scotland. bank, as referred to in the assart of William de Car- Some idea of the form of an assart may be gained lyle referred to above, but there is no archaeological from late 13th-century charter ofRobert de Brus, lord evidence for this at present. This type of boundary is of Annandale, to William de Carlyle in which the known in Scotland as a deer-dyke, a type of dyke grantee was given the right to increase his lands of which also surrounds parks such as Kincardine, but Kinmount by taking a portion of the adjacent com- with the ditch on the inside instead of on the outside. mon of the tenement ofNewby. The grant specified In other words the greatest barrier is on the side of the that William was empowered to enclose by "hedges ditch where the combined height of ditch and bank and ditches, to cultivate, build, make meadow and form a boundary of sufficient height to deter a leep- arable" (Fraser 1894, I, n°. 11). Unfortunately there ing deer, whilst an approach from the other side are no surviving physical remains of this assart or of presents a relatively easy exit. This type of bank any other documented assart in Scotland. typifies the head-dykes of both Southdean and Lid- The form which the forest clearance or assart desdale, where they enclose blocks of ground of might take on the ground was described in an analy- variable extent, the banks running in a curvilinear sis of the field-walls of a forest edge settlement at fashion from bum to bum. Thus they may define Holne Moor on Dartmoor. It argued that there were roughly D-shaped areas, the chord of the D being particular characteristics associated with the enclo- usually defined by a river, and may build one on sures of this type of settlement. A type of field-wall another as further land is taken in. with an assymetrical profile, known locally as a 'corn-ditch', was identified that comprised an exter- nally-reverted bank and external ditch. Such a field- The Southdean Assarts wall was ideally designed to prevent the ingress, but not egress, of deer. The 'corn-ditch' formed an early Southdean parish lies at the head-waters of the Jed stage in the development of the so-called 'lobes' or Water, the far extremity of the Royal Forest of Jed- enclosures that surrounded the fields of the settle- burgh, and marches with border of England to the ment. This phase was attributed to the period from south. A small strip of ground (c.25 km 2) between the the late 11th century to 123 9 when Dartmoor was Jed Water River and the conifer plantations that part of the English king's Royal Forest (Ralph & Fle- cover much of the parish was surveyed. In this small ming 1982). area six settlements with peel houses or towers were In Scotland assarting has been recorded in recent identified, all of which were occupied in the 16th surveys carried out in three of the forests of southern century, and abandoned by the late 18th century. In Scotland, Annandale, Southdean and Liddesdale, and addition an extensive system of assart-banks was in all three areas the Dartmoor type of boundary-dyke recognised, which encompassed not only the peel has been identified. Of these forest areas, Annandale tower settlements and their cultivated lands, but also has been so heavily improved by modem farming that some undocumented farmsteads. Since no vacant there are few surviving medieval or post-medieval steads are recorded in the forest in the Crown rental settlement landscapes and, apart from one possible of 1541, and Pont (Blaeu 1654) does not depict them, assart at Cowbum on the Corrie Water, there is little it is a reasonable inference that these farmsteads were field evidence left. The Corrie Water example com- abandoned before the forest steads listed in 1541 prises a D-shaped enclosure of about 60ha bounded were established. by an earthen bank with an external ditch for most of The best-preserved of the assarts containing its course with an adjacent intake of 18ha to the farmsteads in Southdean (Martinlee Sike) comprised south. Another example at Carterton, near Cowbum a D-shaped enclosure of about 7ha in its primary which has been much reduced by modem ploughing, form with an extension abutting it to the north-west comprises aD-shaped enclosure of about 52ha with of 14ha, of which only a small part was cultivated the chord of the Don a bum (RCAHMS 1997). (Fig 2). The primary enclosure contains two farm- The main body of data from southern Scotland steads, each comprising a large and a small building comes from Southdean and Liddesdale (Fig. 1). Here, and an enclosure, and an expanse of plough rig In 348 Settlement in the the Hunting Forests of Southern Scotland in the Medieval and Later Periods Fig. 3. - Assarts on Sufficient Hill, Kirk Hill and Park Hill near Newcastleton in the forest ofLiddesdale. 349 P.J. Dixon contrast the assart that contains the peel tower, called The archaeology of medieval settlement in North bank Tower, encompasses some 30ha, much of Liddesdale it covered with rig (RCAHMS 1994). However, there is not enough evidence to make any certain equation In Liddesdale the greater part of the west side of of the size of assart with the type of settlement the valley was surveyed by RCAHMS. Here, there is enclosed. a series of interconnected assarts running over a In addition to the expansion of settlement and distance of some 8 km from Sufficient Hill in the ass arts, there was a phase of contraction. This is part- south to Hartsgarth in the north, with further stretches ly illustrated by the complete abandonement of the visible over a distance of about 5.5 km to the north as assart at Martinlee Sike, but also by the Northbank far as Hermitage Castle, the estate centre, where there assart, which expanded in two stages up the Jordan is a distinctive assemblage of monuments including Sike, each assart containing a farmstead, and enclos- a chapel and a park pale. ing about 8km 2 and 12km2 respectively, but both were A range of settlements that is associated with subsequently abandoned as a new assart-bank was these assarts. Where post-medieval farming has not established just above the original boundary. removed any earlier material, there are townships or fermtouns comprising six to eight buildings, usually on the same alignment, with turf-walls or turf-walls Liddesdale: the documentary history of settle- over stone-footings. Associated yards and gardens are ment rare, which may make it difficult to distinguish farm- steads from shielings. At Greenshiels and Foulshiels Liddesdale lies adjacent to the English border and (Fig. 4) most of the buildings are long byre-houses comprises the valley of the Liddel River. Prior to the with a hollow for the drainage of cow slurry, running Wars of Independence, it was held by the de Soulis out of the lower end of the byre and, presumably, a family and run as a private forest, but after Bannock- domestic upper end. These byre-houses range from bum it was granted by Robert Bruce to the Black about lOm to 20m in length. Scattered amongst the Douglas with forest rights. A rental of 1376 (RHM assarts at Kirk Hill, and indeed elsewhere in Liddes- 1853) indicates that by this date, the greater part of dale, there are smaller building-clusters, the build- the valley had been deforested, since only a limited ings of which are usually smaller than the byre- body ofland is listed under the title "foresta ",much houses. The status of these sites remains obscure. of it disposed on the north and west extremities of the Equally, there is the occasional single building, e.g., valley, and including what must be the grazing of the that near Ettleton Church, which may be a medieval parks of Hermitage and Castletoun. By 1541 when farmstead. Some of these may account for the un- the estate was temporarily in Crown hands, the dis- located farms that are recorded in the 1376 and 1541 tinction between the forest and the rest had been rentals ofLiddesdale. Peel towers are few in number abandoned. Significantly, the value of the estate had in Liddesda1e; only two (Foulshiels and Pudding- declined by nearly two-thirds since 1376, one in four bum) were located in the area of the survey with any farms was vacant and another one in six was of no degree of certainty, and that at Foulshiels had been value (ERS 1897). The reasons for this degree of robbed to its foundations. The sites of two others, deterioration are not immediately evident, since the Redheugh and Copshaw could not be located with war with England did not start until 1542, but it may any confidence. For the size of area there are fewer have been related to James Vs attempt to bring a peels than might be expected, particularly in com- measure of law and order to the valley. Be that as it parison with the numbers in Southdean. may, this trend of a decline in the numbers of farms On Kirk Hill (Fig. 3) there are at least three core appears to have been accepted as reality by the late areas of settlement. These are represented by roughly 17th century when the Hearth Tax returns 1691 indi- D-haped enclosures, defined by deer-dykes, with sev- cate a reduction of more than 50% in the number of eral complex expansion phases that led to the inter- settlements from that of 1376, and, by 1718, when the connection of the assarts at their maximum extent. It estate was surveyed for the Duke ofBuccleuch, only is difficult here to define the full extent of the assarts, fifty farms were mapped, apart from nine freeholds because of the complexity of the system and the (SRO RHP). It is a reasonable inference that there was attrition of modem farming activities on the archaeo- a drastic reorganisation and amalgamation of farms logy on the lower slopes of Kirk Hill. However., the prior to the late 17th century, the most likely moment partly afforested assart on Sufficient Hill encloses being at the union of the crowns (1603) when James about 25ha, comparable with the larger assarts in VI turned out the freebooters ofLiddesdale, destroy- Southdean. As in Southdean, expansion was followed ing their peel towers to bring peace to the border. by a phase of contraction as the assarts on the east 350 Settlement in the the Hunting Forests of Southern Scotland in the Medieval and Later Periods Fig. 4. - Assarts at Foulshiels and Greenshiels in the forest ofLiddesdale. 351 P.J. Dixon flanks of Kirk Hill and Park Hill were abandoned. The estate centre at Hermitage Castle, Liddesdale Although not visible on the plan, a subsequent assart post-dates the abandoned assart on the north-east side Hermitage Castle was occupied from the mid 13th of Park Hill. In 1718 the estate plan (SRO RHP) century to the 17th century. It stands about 300m east shows that the east slopes of Kirk Hill and Park Hill of Hermitage Chapel, itself of 13th century date, on were occupied by the farms of Side, Milneholme and the north side of the Hermitage Water. It is all but Copshawpark. Of these only Side farmstead could be surrounded by boggy ground, providing good defen- located in the survey, since the sites of other two, as sive qualities. Starting as an earthwork castle, all the indicated on plan, lay on the haughland, which has ramparts, apart from that on the west, were levelled subsequently been more heavily improved. The farms in the mid-14th century to build a stone tower-house are depicted as strips of ground running from the which was expanded and remodelled during the later River Liddel up on to the high ground, completely 14th and 15th centuries. As an earthwork castle its superseding the D-shaped enclosures found in the role is difficult to understand in view of the continued pattern ofassarts. The farmstead at Side is surround- occupation ofLiddel Castle, the original estate centre. ed by rectilinear fields, enclosed by earthen-banks However, by 1376, if not before, the greater part of that overlie the arable rig of the assarts. Similar post- the forest lands lay in the north and west parts of the medieval field-systems around the abandoned town- valley, so that it may have been a conscious choice to ship on the east slope of Kirk Hill that also overlie the build a hunting-lodge at this location, close to the old rig-systems. However, in this case, the rectilinear accessible hunting. Whatever the original reason, the fields, it is suggested, were constructed as outfields construction of the stone castle at Hermitage in the for Milnholm Farm. Recent afforestation and the 14th century indicates a preference for this situation construction of a sheepfold have obscured the the over that of Liddel Castle, which was abandoned, character of the farmstead at Side. probably because of its closeness to the border. In the vicinity of Foulshiels (Fig. 4), there are at The castle stands at the centre of two systems of least three assarts. These comprise a core area based deer-dykes. There is an assart that runs off to the east, on Nether Foulshiels Tower, and two main phases of enclosing the haugh lands along the river, another to expansion, Nether Foulshiels and Greenshiels. A small the west that runs up to the homestead enclosure on additional expansion of about 4ha was made to the the west side of the chapel garth, with an extension to Greenshiels assart on either side of the Ryedale Bum, the west. From the north side of this assart, another with a small settlement visible on the east side of the deer-dyke runs in a great arc to the north-west, de- bum. Some of the land within the assart banks of the fining a funnel-shaped area with the ditches on the two Foulshiels has been smoothed by recent agri- inside. This appears to be a deer park, but open to the culture. However, the course of the assart bank en- hill ground on the west, with a narrower end by the closing Greenshiels may still be traced in more or castle, where there is a gully cut by a bum that pro- less its entirety, as it runs from bum to bum, illustrat- vides an excellent killing-ground for the deer that are ing the way in which the topography was used to driven in to the park. This type ofhunting, with a drive enclose an assart. At all three main settlements of conducted by hundreds of men from the estate, was a Greenshiels and the two Foulshiels, there are build- traditional method in Scotland which was still being ings that either post-date the assart banks or are plac- used in the forest of Mar in the early 17th century ed outside, which may imply that forest restrictions (RCAHMS 1995). Few medieval parks have been had been relaxed or were not rigorously applied when recorded in any detail, so that there is too small a they were built. body of data to know if this was a common arrange- The greater part of the system collapsed between ment. Traditionally the park pale enclosed a reserve, the late 16th and the end of the 17th centuries. The but this type of park enclosure suggests that some settlement at Greenshiels, and the two Foulshiels medieval hunting parks may have been designed with settlements of Over and Nether Foulshiels, are evi- an opening. Kincardine Park has an extension to the dent as late as about 1590, when Pont mapped them north that encloses a steep sided valley with an open- (Blaeu 1654), but only Foulshiels appears in the ing to the east, which could have served as a killing Hearth Tax of 1691. This appears to give a span of ground, or as a funnel to drive deer into the main part about 100 years in which Greenshiels and Over Foul- of the park (Guilbert 1979). Be that as it may, Hermi- shiels came to be abandoned. tage Park was not an enclosed space that that could be used as a reserve for deer, or latterly for keeping stock, although it no doubt had grazing value! With the abandonment of the castle in the 17th century, a farmstead was established on the east side, 352 Settlement in the the Hunting Forests of Southern Scotland in the Medieval and Later Periods Fig. 5. -Hermitage Castle with Park Pale and Chapel in the forest of Liddesdale. 353 P.J. Dixon comprising three buildings arranged around a court- traction of settlement in the late medieval period, but yard and an enclosure. The White Dyke and the long also providing the only evidence of an expansion of long straight boundary dyke that forms its west side settlement in the 12th to 14th centuries. Finally the appear to be the boundaries of the post-medieval farm. landscape of the medieval estate centre at Hermitage At its east side the White Dyke post-dates the assart indicates that the medieval park in Scotland may bank near the present Hermitage Farm. Another have had more variation in its design, according to farmstead, which may also belong to this period, is the type ofhunting carried out, than hitherto appreci- the farmstead that stands on the south side of the ated. perhistoric enclosure at Lady's Knowe. There are earthen-banked rectilinear fields in the vicinity of both of them, and there is another larger group of Bibliography these post-medieval fields on Tofts Knowes to the south of the castle, possibly worked from the farm- BLAEU 1654: Atlas Novus, Amsterdam. stead situated on their west side. In turn, all these ERS 1897: The Exchequer Rolls ofScotland, Vol17, settlements were abandoned in turn during the 18th 1897, Edinburgh. century. FLEMING A. & RALPH N. 1982: Medieval Settlement and Land Use on Holne Moor, Dartmoor: The Landscape evidence, Medieval Archaeology 26, Conclusions 101-137. FRASER Sir W. 1894: Annandale family book of the For the first time in Scotland, the archaeological Johnstones, Earls and Marquises of Annandale, remains of medieval assarting, the assart bank, have Edinburgh, 2 vols. been recognised and recorded. To date they appear to GILBERT 1979: Hunting and Hunting Reserves in be a feature of southern Scotland, there being little or Medieval Scotland, Edinburgh. no sign of them in any recent work in the hunting RCAHMS 1957: An Inventory of the Ancient and forests of the Highlands, e.g. the forests of Alyth, Historical Monuments ofSelkirkshire, Edinburgh. Clunie and Mar (e.g. RCAHMS 1990 and 1995). RCAHMS 1994: Southdean, Borders: An Archaeo- However, post-medieval phases of expansion in set- logical Survey, Edinburgh. tlement may have obliterated any traces of them in RCAHMS 1995: Mar Lodge Estate, Grampian: An these areas, or there may be other factors at work. Archaeological Survey, Edinburgh. The currency of the assart bank appears to be firmly RCAHMS 1997 forthcoming: Eastern Dumfries- medieval, but the exact date of its demise may vary shire, Edinburgh. from forest to forest, with the end of the forest ad- RHM 1853: Registrum Honoris de Morton, Ban- ministration in the post medieval period. The assart natyne Club, Edinburgh. banks display a considerable complexity of develop- STAMPER P.A., 1983 The medieval forest ofPamber, ment, that is to say, phases of expansion and con- Hampshire, Landscape History 5, 41-52. traction, as well as complete abandonment, which SRO RHP: The Scottish Record Office, Register compliments the documentary evidence for a con- House Plans. Dr. Piers Dixon Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland John Sinclair House, 16 Bernard Terrace Edinburgh EH8 9NX Scotland, UK 354 Contents Inhoud Table de matiere In halt 06 RURAL SETTLEMENTS - DE LANDELIJKE WERELD - LE MONDE RURAL LANDLICHE SIEDLUNGEN Preface 5-6 Regional settlement studies - Approches regionales - Regionale Siedlungsforschungen Mate) Ruttkay Early medieval settlement structure in Slovakia 7-15 Maria Beres Regionale Beziehungen der Dorfsiedlungen Si.idostungarns vom 10. bis 13. Jahrhundert 17-20 John L. Bintliff The archaeological investigation of deserted medieval and post-medieval villages in Greece 21-34 Giovanni Di Stefano Villagi tardo-bizantini degli Iblei: primo medioevo sicilliano 35-38 Andre Bazzana, John De Meulemeester & Andre Matthys Quelques aspects du peuplement medieval du Valle de Ricote (Murcie, Espagne) 39-54 Christopher Dyer Recent developments and future prospects in research into English medieval rural settlements 55-61 Mark Gardiner Trade, rural industry and the origin of villages: some evidence from South-East England 63-73 Carenza Lewis Medieval Settlement in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight 75-86 Terry Barry Recent research in Irish medieval rural nucleated settlement 87-92 Case studies -Etudes de cas - Einzeluntersuchungen Marco Milanese, Fabrizio Benente & Franco Campus Il progetto Geridu. Indagini archeologiche in un villagio medievale abbandonato della Sardegna 93-110 Maria Angels Ruf, Toni Vi/a, Xavier Sate, Xavier Llovera, Cristina Yafiez & Josep Maria Bosch Le site du Roe d'Enclar (Andorra): evolution des strategies d'occupation et a exploitation d'un territoire du IVeme la fin du VIIIe siecle 111-119 Maruska Federici-Schenardi & Robert Fellner L'habitat rural du Haut Moyen Age de Develier-Courtetelle (Jura, Suisse) 121-130 Armelle Querrien L'exploitation du sol et du sous-sol autour d'un bourg castral du Berry, du Xle au XVe siecle 131-142 Isabelle Catteddu Le site medieval de Saleux "Les Coutures": habitat, necropole, et eglises du haut Moyen Age 143-148 355 Rene Proos Venray-'t Brukske, an early medieval settlement on the sandy soil ofLimburg 149-156 Dries Tys Landscape and settlement: the development of a medieval village along the Flemish coast 157-167 Marnix Pieters Raversijde: a late medieval fishermen's village along the Flemish coast (Belgium, Province ofWest-Flanders, Municipality ofOstend) 169-177 Christopher Loveluck Flixborough- the character and economy of a high status Middle Saxon settlement in northern England 179-194 M.A. Aston The Shapwick Project, Somerset, England 195-210 Neil Price The Gamla Uppsala Project: rescue and research in an early medieval ritual landscape 211-219 Sofia Andersson & Eva Svensson The local and regional arena of a medieval Swedish farm 221-231 Territorial organisation and central places- Organisation territoriale et sites centraux- Gebietsverwaltung und Zentralorte Julian Richards Anglian and Viking settlement in the Yorkshire Wolds 233-242 Kaname Maekawa A deserted medieval village and the formation of a fortified town in Cambridgeshire, England 243-252 UdoRecker The medieval parish ofLohn. Preliminary report on a research project 253-262 Birgitta Berglund Changes in the power structure around AD 1100 on the northern Norwegian coast. The importance of waterways and of the organisation of trade in building and maintenance of power 263-270 Settlement and rural infrastructure- Habitat et infrastructure rurale- Siedlung und liindwirtschaftliche Rustung Julio Antonio Perez Celada Horticultura y molinos de agua en el curso medio del rio Carrion en la edad media 271-282 Antonio Fernandez Ugalde El almacenamiento subterraneo y la conquista feudal en la peninsula iberica: aportaciones de la arqueologia 283-289 Elena Serrano, Antonio Fernandez Ugalde & Leonor Pefia-Chocarro Los silos medievales en el Reino de Toledo 291-296 Settlements and landscapes- Habitats et paysages - Siedlungen und Landschaft Jurg Tauber Landliche Siedlungen in der Nordwestschweiz von der Merowingerzeit bis zum Mittelalter. Archaologische Quellen und historische Interpretation 297-308 356 Jean-Loup Abbe Le parcellaire rural des bastides du sud-ouest de la France: l'apport des sources ecrites et planimetriques 309-319 DirkMeier Der Wandel der Landschaft und Besiedlung von der romischen Kaiserzeit bis in das Mittelalter im Dithmarscher Ktistengebiet (Deutschland) 321-330 De/la Hooke The effect of English settlement in medieval North Wales 331-344 Piers J. Dixon Settlement in the hunting forests of southern Scotland in the medieval and later periods 345-354 357 MEDlEY AL EUROPE BRUGGE 1997 Internationaal congres over Middeleeuwse en Latere Archeologie 1 - 4 Oktober 1997 An International Conference of Medieval and Later Archaeology 1st - 4th October 1997 Patron The Government ofFlanders. werd georganiseerd door I was organised by fut organisee par I wurde veranstaltet von Stad Brugge Instituut voor het Archeologisch Patrimonium Vrije Universiteit Brussel Provinciebestuur van West- Vlaanderen S tad Brugge Instituut voor het Vrije Universiteit Provincie Archeologisch Brussel West- Vlaanderen Patrimonium Stad Brugge Druk: ministerie van de Vlaamse Gemeenschap departement Leefmilieu en Infrastructuur afdeling Logistiek sectie Drukkerij ISBN 90-75230-12-5
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