Title: |
Roman countryside |
Series: |
Duckworth Debates in Archaeology
|
Number of Pages: |
128 |
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: |
Monograph (in Series)
|
Abstract: |
The author describes current research on the Roman countryside within a topological framework, examining the Roman villa, looking at changing interpretations of the villa and the ways they have been shaped both by new information and evolving interpretative models, relating the survey-settlement evidence to larger questions of landscape use and landscape transformation during the Roman period. He discusses what happened in rural areas in the period of transition between the end of Antiquity and the emergence of medieval society, showing that the period of transition was much longer than previously thought and that there was tremendous variation not only between one part of the Empire and another, but between micro-regions within a single province. Mostly overseas data but includes some British material. |
Author: |
Stephen L Dyson
|
Editor: |
Richard Hodges
|
Publisher: |
Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
|
Year of Publication: |
2003
|
ISBN: |
0-7156-3225-6 |
Subjects / Periods: |
ROMAN
(Historic England Periods)
|
|
MEDIEVAL
(Historic England Periods)
|
|
|
Villas
(BIAB)
|
Roman
(BIAB)
|
|
|
Social Transformation
(BIAB)
|
Roman
(BIAB)
|
|
|
Note: |
Is First Occurrence:
1
|
Source: |
BIAB
(The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
|
Created Date: |
05 Jul 2004 |