Synopses & Reviews
Relying heavily on primary literary sources and archaeological scholarship, this study sheds new light on the development of towns in early England from late Roman to late Anglo-Saxon times. After a discussion of the problems of urban definition and typology, Russo examines the background of Romano-British urbanism in its prime and in its late Roman transformations. He demonstrates that late Roman towns were virtually abandoned before the Anglo-Saxon invasions. The emporia—new types of Anglo-Saxon towns—are analyzed on the basis of written and archaeological evidence and are compared with continental emporia. Finally, the origin and growth of the Anglo-Saxon burgh is considered from its eighth-century Mercian beginnings to the better known cases of King Alfred and his successors.
Synopsis
Based heavily on primary literary sources and archaeological scholarship, this study sheds new light on the development of towns in early England from late Roman to late Anglo-Saxon times.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Romano-British Towns (c.43-500 A.D.)
Romano-British Towns: Case Studies
Early Anglo-Saxon Towns: Continuity or Rebirth? (c.400-650 A.D.)
The Age of Anglo-Saxon Emporia (c.600-850 A.D.)
Continental Emporia and Their English Connections (c.600-900 A.D.)
Anglo-Saxon Burghs: Mercia and Wessex (c.750-950 A.D.)
Conclusion
Selected Bibliography
Maps and Figures
Index