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This is a wide-ranging study of the southern English county of
Wiltshire in the Roman and early medieval periods (c. 100-1100 AD),
focusing on the key themes of landscape, settlement and society and
using a combination of archaeological, topographical and historical
evidence. Particular emphasis is given to place-names, which, it is
argued, can help us to locate Romano-British settlements and inform
us about the British survival in the post-Roman period. Early
chapters tackle the transition between the Roman and Early Saxon
periods, challenging current theories on the decline of Roman
Britain and the Anglo-Saxon adventus. Subsequent chapters examine
the evidence for early medieval territorial and ecclesiastical
structure in Wiltshire, in addition to the Anglo-Saxon farming
landscape. There is also detailed consideration of the origins of
the medieval settlement pattern and a discussion of the
relationship between settlements and the ranks of Anglo-Saxon
society.
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