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The Shapwick Project, Somerset - A Rural Landscape Explored (Paperback)
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The Shapwick Project, Somerset - A Rural Landscape Explored (Paperback)
Series: The Society for Medieval Archaeology Monographs
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The Shapwick Project began in 1989 as a ten-year,
multi-disciplinary landscape investigation of the evolution of
early and late medieval settlement patterns. This volume sets out
the methods used in the exploration of this wetland-edge landscape
and summarises the long term micro-history of a community and its
lands from early prehistory to the present day. Shapwick was
granted to the abbey at Glastonbury in the first half of the 8th
century and, as a consequence, there are numerous later medieval
surveys, demesne accounts and court rolls. Together with an
unusually long sequence of post-medieval and modern maps, these
sources illuminate themes as diverse as building history and
farming practice. At the same time, aerial photography,
fieldwalking, shovel-pitting and topographical survey create a
picture of the distribution and date of archaeological monuments
across the parish while garden bed collections and test pitting are
used to evaluate the archaeology underlying the modern village.
Other innovative techniques described here include large-scale
geophysical survey and the geochemical techniques of heavy metal
analysis together with detailed surveys of historic buildings,
botany and hedgerow invertebrates. The results from these surveys
are at least as important as the excavations undertaken at sites of
prehistoric-to-19th-century date. Stratigraphies, chronologies and
features are all detailed in this volume, with important
collections of objects from prehistory to the end of the 19th
century and accompanying specialist reports which illuminate
environment and diet. Highlights include a combination of pollen
analysis and lithic distributions which add significantly to our
understanding of the context of prehistoric waterlogged trackways
within the peat zone, and striking evidence for the intensification
of settlement and land use in the later pre-Roman Iron Age and
later Roman period. The modern village was in existence by the 10th
century when a dispersed population was apparently re-housed in a
compact, nucleated village with open field systems to east and west
and various models for this process are debated. Among the later
medieval sites excavated are two manorial centres of Glastonbury
Abbey, industrial evidence, and well-preserved palaeoenvironmental
material. In the 18th and 19th centuries outlying farms were built
and the housing stock transformed at the same time as parts of the
village were emparked. This post-medieval and early modern evidence
is given equal weight in the volume.
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