From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100

This article explores a range of archaeological approaches to the social analysis of rural settlements in northern Europe, dating predominantly from the first millennium AD, through the intensive use of superimposed archaeological survey and targeted excavation strategies. The overall aim is to show...

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Main Authors: Loveluck, Chistopher, Strutt, Kristian, Clogg, Philip
Other Authors: Stidsing, Ernst
Format: Book Section
Published: Aarhus University Press 2014
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35357/
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author Loveluck, Chistopher
Strutt, Kristian
Clogg, Philip
author2 Stidsing, Ernst
author_facet Stidsing, Ernst
Loveluck, Chistopher
Strutt, Kristian
Clogg, Philip
author_sort Loveluck, Chistopher
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This article explores a range of archaeological approaches to the social analysis of rural settlements in northern Europe, dating predominantly from the first millennium AD, through the intensive use of superimposed archaeological survey and targeted excavation strategies. The overall aim is to show how superimposed survey techniques (geophysical, geochemical and surface collection) can be applied to landscapes to define the character of different land use zones within and beyond settlements. These, in turn, allow the targeting of specific areas for excavation and post-excavation analysis and ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey, for purposes of confirming the character of remains, chronology of occupation, and deposit modelling. The collective data from the survey, excavation and post-excavation phases of research can then be combined within a contextualised interpretation of settlement morphology, discard strategies and preservation conditions to produce holistic social analyses of lifestyles and settlement biographies through time.
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:26:03Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Aarhus University Press
recordtype eprints
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spelling nottingham-353572020-05-04T16:56:35Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35357/ From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100 Loveluck, Chistopher Strutt, Kristian Clogg, Philip This article explores a range of archaeological approaches to the social analysis of rural settlements in northern Europe, dating predominantly from the first millennium AD, through the intensive use of superimposed archaeological survey and targeted excavation strategies. The overall aim is to show how superimposed survey techniques (geophysical, geochemical and surface collection) can be applied to landscapes to define the character of different land use zones within and beyond settlements. These, in turn, allow the targeting of specific areas for excavation and post-excavation analysis and ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey, for purposes of confirming the character of remains, chronology of occupation, and deposit modelling. The collective data from the survey, excavation and post-excavation phases of research can then be combined within a contextualised interpretation of settlement morphology, discard strategies and preservation conditions to produce holistic social analyses of lifestyles and settlement biographies through time. Aarhus University Press Stidsing, Ernst Nielsen, Karen H. Fiedel, Reno 2014-12-01 Book Section PeerReviewed Loveluck, Chistopher, Strutt, Kristian and Clogg, Philip (2014) From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100. In: Wealth and complexity: economically specialised sites in Late Iron Age Denmark. East Jutland Museum Publications (1). Aarhus University Press, Aarhus, pp. 213-251. ISBN 978-8-77124-324-6
spellingShingle Loveluck, Chistopher
Strutt, Kristian
Clogg, Philip
From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title_full From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title_fullStr From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title_full_unstemmed From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title_short From hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern Europe, c. AD 400-1100
title_sort from hamlets to central places: integrated survey and excavation strategies for the social analysis of settlements in northern europe, c. ad 400-1100
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/35357/