Austin, D. (2005). Little England Beyond Wales:. Landscapes 6 (2). Vol 6(2), pp. 30-62.

Title
Title
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Title:
Little England Beyond Wales:
Subtitle
Subtitle
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Subtitle:
redefining the myth
Issue
Issue
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Issue:
Landscapes 6 (2)
Series
Series
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Series:
Landscapes
Volume
Volume
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Volume:
6 (2)
Page Start/End
Page Start/End
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Page Start/End:
30 - 62
Biblio Note
Biblio Note
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Biblio Note
Please note that this is a bibliographic record only, as originally entered into the BIAB database. The ADS have no files for download, and unfortunately cannot advise further on where to access hard copy or digital versions.
Publication Type
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Publication Type:
Journal
Abstract
Abstract
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Abstract:
Critique of the assumption that the historic dominance of the English language in the southern part of Pembrokeshire is a product of massive settlement by Norman lords and English peasants. While accepting the argument of linguistic change, it questions the assumptions of process, especially those related to physical change in the landscape. The Carew Castle Archaeological Project is given as a case study for analysing some of the details of landscape morphology and development in the critical period. It concludes that the landscape of South Pembrokeshire, as in North Pembrokeshire, is likely to be founded on a pre-Norman base of dispersed settlement and co-axial field systems, with some nucleation also beginning as a process towards the end of this period. However, the author argues that nucleation was on a relatively small scale and continued throughout the Middle Ages and into the Tudor era; he suggests that the manipulation of the landscape could even have been a deliberate act of Anglicising by an aspirant gentry in the political circumstances of the Tudor policy of amalgamation which culminated in the Acts of Union.
Author
Author
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Author:
David Austin
Year of Publication
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2005
Locations
Locations
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Subjects / Periods:
Middle Ages (Auto Detected Temporal)
SETTLEMENT (Monument Type England)
Coaxial Field Systems (Auto Detected Subject)
Norman (Auto Detected Temporal)
Source
Source
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Source:
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BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Created Date
Created Date
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Created Date:
11 Apr 2006