a 2017

Iron Age and Early Medieval Centres - Advantages and Pitfalls of a Comparative Approach

DRESLER, Petr, Alžběta DANIELISOVÁ and Jan MAŘÍK

Basic information

Original name

Iron Age and Early Medieval Centres - Advantages and Pitfalls of a Comparative Approach

Name in Czech

Centra doby železné a raného středověku - Výhody a úskalí komparativního přístupu

Name (in English)

Iron Age and Early Medieval Centres - Advantages and Pitfalls of a Comparative Approach

Authors

DRESLER, Petr, Alžběta DANIELISOVÁ and Jan MAŘÍK

Edition

Building Bridges - Abstract book of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists 2017, 2017

Other information

Language

Czech

Type of outcome

Konferenční abstrakt

Field of Study

Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Organization unit

Faculty of Arts

Keywords (in Czech)

doba železná; latén; raný středověk; centra

Keywords in English

Iron Age; La Téne; Early medieval; centres

Tags

International impact
Změněno: 3/2/2018 21:17, Mgr. Petr Dresler, Ph.D.

Abstract

V originále

In this paper we attempt to explore development, role and function of the central places in the Iron Age and Early Medieval periods approaching this issue from different perspectives in order to test their comparative potential. Earlier approaches to protohistoric and early historic urbanisation phenomena implied distinct criteria to test whether the status of a settlement could be viewed as “urban”. These criteria were either present or absent and within this binary framework the “urbanisation level” of a given site was evaluated. In reaction to these rather static models that neglected the effect of dynamics of urbanisation as well as their “non-urban” counterparts, the research cluster of the DAI developed an urbanisation-model with criteria that included “objectified and quantifiable values” (cf. Wendling 2013) such as: continuity and sustainability of settlement activities; the degree of social interaction and political communication; topographical and structural proximity of the built environment; functional and structural diversity of building structures; and concentration and diversity of crafts, trade, and services. Using DAI concept as a basis, we slightly expanded the criteria and formulated weighted empirical model that was subsequently applied to selected Iron Age and Early Medieval “centres”. With help of several case studies we intend to demonstrate that strength of a comparative approach lies especially in revealing the major development trends or principles of a long-durée nature (such as basic economic systems), while the risks of misinterpretation are associated chiefly with limited knowledge of social hierarchy, political strategies and cultural norms.

In English

In this paper we attempt to explore development, role and function of the central places in the Iron Age and Early Medieval periods approaching this issue from different perspectives in order to test their comparative potential. Earlier approaches to protohistoric and early historic urbanisation phenomena implied distinct criteria to test whether the status of a settlement could be viewed as “urban”. These criteria were either present or absent and within this binary framework the “urbanisation level” of a given site was evaluated. In reaction to these rather static models that neglected the effect of dynamics of urbanisation as well as their “non-urban” counterparts, the research cluster of the DAI developed an urbanisation-model with criteria that included “objectified and quantifiable values” (cf. Wendling 2013) such as: continuity and sustainability of settlement activities; the degree of social interaction and political communication; topographical and structural proximity of the built environment; functional and structural diversity of building structures; and concentration and diversity of crafts, trade, and services. Using DAI concept as a basis, we slightly expanded the criteria and formulated weighted empirical model that was subsequently applied to selected Iron Age and Early Medieval “centres”. With help of several case studies we intend to demonstrate that strength of a comparative approach lies especially in revealing the major development trends or principles of a long-durée nature (such as basic economic systems), while the risks of misinterpretation are associated chiefly with limited knowledge of social hierarchy, political strategies and cultural norms.

Links

GA16-15678S, research and development project
Name: Vývoj interakce přírodního prostředí a subsistenční strategie raně středověké společnosti
Investor: Czech Science Foundation