Using archaeological, archaeobotanical, and written evidence, this book explores what gardens meant in northern Spain and northern Portugal in the early middle ages - a question asked here for the first time.
Dealing with a vast area of the Iberian peninsula that lay beyond Muslim al-Andalus, with great geographical diversity and wide variation in climate, this books spans the sixth to tenth centuries, showing that gardens might lie beside houses or scattered among arable fields or grouped together in garden zones. Gardens are difficult to recognize archaeologically but excavation suggests that many were terraces, as it also suggests that indicators of intensive use - through fertilization or irrigation or characteristic weed species - may be more useful for identifying garden activity than looking for a distinctive shape. The strongest indications of garden produce are that fruit was always important and so were legumes; and some gardens, especially those owned by monasteries, may have grown herbs.
The most striking trend across the tenth century is that peasants sold gardens to monasteries, although there are regional differences, Catalonia having a more diverse land market. Peasants sold in order to get food and monasteries bought partly to provide garden produce, including herbs, for expanding communities but partly to use and increase garden space for textile plants--flax, hemp, and dye plants--for commercial reasons, especially urban supply. Gardens were vital for the supply of clothes.
By scrutinising the logistics of small- and medium-scale ownership, the relations of owners with large-scale land-holders, especially institutions, and the ins-and-outs of those economic and social interactions, this wide-ranging book adds a new dimension to the environmental history of western Europe, in addition to contributing to an understanding of the social, economic, and cultural history of the period more generally.
Les mer
The book will offer a wide-ranging study of the design, use, and management of the gardens of Northern Iberia in the early medieval period, bringing the evidence of texts and illustrations together with that of archaeology and archaeological science, and in particular with the rapidly developing field of archaeobotany.
Les mer
1: The problematic
2: The challenges of evidence
3: Locations: The perspective from parchment
4: The archaeology of gardens
5: What were they growing?
6: Proprietors
7: Production, supply, and distribution
8: Questions remaining
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Wendy Davies is an emeritus professor of history at University College London and an associate member of the History Faculty, University of Oxford. She retired in 2007, until when she taught medieval European history and held administrative posts such as Head of the History Department, Deans of Arts and of Social and Historical Sciences, and Pro-Provost (Europe). For research she has worked successively on early medieval Wales, Brittany, and Iberia, often working
across disciplines and collaborating with other scholars. She has run several interdisciplinary projects which explore the interaction between text and field evidence. In the last twenty years her focus
has been on northern Iberia.
Les mer
Explores what gardens meant in northern Spain and northern Portugal in the early middle ages
Integrates archaeological, archaeobotanical, and written evidence
Provides details of significance of gardens for clothing supply with the production of flax, hemp, and dye plants
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780198895848
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
548 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
20 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
240
Forfatter