Synopses & Reviews
This book deals with the early history of agriculture in a defined part of Western Europe: the loess belt west of the river Rhine. It is a well-illustrated book that integrates existing and new information starting with the first farmers and ending when food production was no longer the chief source of livelihood for the entire population.
The long period, 5300 BC a AD 1000, is divided into six stages. Each stage has its own chapter with subchapters devoted to crops, crop cultivation, livestock and livestock handling, the farm and its yard, and the farm in connection with other farms and the outside world. Every chapter starts with a short outline of the cultural context. The crop plants and animals are described, together with their origin. The subchapters on crop cultivation deal with the operational chain from staking out fields to storage. The introduction of tools such as the plough, the wheel and wagon, and the scythe is discussed. Farm buildings, or at least their groundplans, are presented. The clustering of farms into hamlets or the absence of such aggregations is described.
Two chapters deal with the impact of farming on the landscape. The eight chapters on farming and landscape are preceded by an introduction and a chapter on the sources of information. The book ends with a chapter a summarizing six millennia of agriculturea (TM), a list of glossary terms and an index.
Synopsis
This book deals with the early history of agriculture in a defined part of Western Europe: the loess belt west of the river Rhine. It is a well-illustrated book that integrates existing and new information, starting with the first farmers and ending when food production was no longer the chief source of livelihood for the entire population. The loess belt was chosen because it is a region with only one type of soil and climate as these are all-important factors where farming is concerned. Subjects covered are crops, crop cultivation, livestock and livestock handling, the farm and its yard, and the farm in connection with other farms. Crop plants and animals are described, together with their origin. New tools such as the plough, wheen, wagon and scythe are introduced. Groundplans of farm buildings, the history of the outhouse and the presence or absence of hamlets are presented as well, and the impact of farming on the landscape is not forgotten. The loess belt was not an island and the world beyond its boundaries was important for new ideas, new materials and new people. Summarising six millennia of agriculture, the thinking in terms of the Western European loess belt as one agricultural-cultural unit seems justified. Audience: This book will be of interest to researchers in archaeology, history and agriculture, and to landscape engineers.
Table of Contents
Preface 1 The loess covered region west of the river Rhine. 5300 BC - AD 1000 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Loess 1.3 The loess region 1.4 The choice of the period, 5300 BC - AD 1000 1.5 The framework of this book 2 Sources 2.1 Information on a distant past 2.2 Plants 2.3 Animals 2.4 Tools 2.5 Buildings and other structures 2.6 Land and countryside 2.7 Written sources 3 The beginning 5300 BC-4900 BC 3.1 The first farmers 3.2 Crops 3.3 Crop cultivation 3.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 3.5 Farm buildings and yards 3.6 The farm in its setting 4 Heirs to the first farmers 4900-4300 BC 4.1 The successors of the Linearbandkeramik culture 4.2 Crops 4.3 Crop cultivation 4.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 4.5 Farm buildings and yards 4.6 The farm in its setting 5 Innovation and expansion 4300-2650 BC 5.1 A new age 5.2 Crops 5.3 Crop cultivation 5.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 5.5 Farm buildings and yards 5.6 The farm in its setting 6 The first millennia of agricultural landscape 6.1 The original vegetation 6.2 The impact of the farming communities on the vegetation 6.3 Erosion 7 Towards a more complex society 2650 - 50 BC 7.1 The so-called Metal Ages 7.2 Crops 7.3 Crop cultivation 7.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 7.5 Farm buildings and yards 7.6 The farm in its setting 8 Part of the Roman Empire 50 BC - AD 407 8.1 Roman rule 8.2 Crops 8.3 Crop cultivation 8.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 8.5 Farm buildings and yards 8.6 The farm in its setting 9 The Early Middle Ages D 407 - AD 1000 9.1 The end of Roman rule and thereafter 9.2 Crops 9.3 Crop cultivation 9.4 Livestock and animal husbandry 9.5 Farm buildings and yards 9.6 The farm in its setting 10 The birth of the rural landscape 10.1 The vanishing of the forest as the main vegetation type 10.2 Erosion 11 Summing up six millennia of agriculture Glossary Select bibliography Source of figures and tables Index