Dark Age Economics: The Origins of Towns and Trade A.D. 600-1000Duckworth, 1982 - 230 sider |
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Side 159
... army and a navy . 32 He was therefore to meet further Viking aggression with aggression . And , as Asser tells us , he was also to build new towns , as well as encourage the growth of towns that were already in existence . Archaeology ...
... army and a navy . 32 He was therefore to meet further Viking aggression with aggression . And , as Asser tells us , he was also to build new towns , as well as encourage the growth of towns that were already in existence . Archaeology ...
Side 186
... army ; they need buildings to house them and they need to levy taxation efficiently at first . The result , to quote a recent essay by Gall and Saxe , ' is to increase 97 8 - 10 complexity ... to continue to diversify structurally each ...
... army ; they need buildings to house them and they need to levy taxation efficiently at first . The result , to quote a recent essay by Gall and Saxe , ' is to increase 97 8 - 10 complexity ... to continue to diversify structurally each ...
Side 192
... army that effected the new state . Important too was the innovation of the regional market , reinforced by silver stolen from Germany and England , which activated the ever - increasing rural population at a time of agricultural ...
... army that effected the new state . Important too was the innovation of the regional market , reinforced by silver stolen from Germany and England , which activated the ever - increasing rural population at a time of agricultural ...
Innhold
The Shadow of Pirenne | 6 |
Trading Systems from Theodoric to Charlemagne | 29 |
The Emporia | 47 |
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activity Anglo-Saxon appears archaeology authority boat Carolingian central centres certainly Chapter Charlemagne clearly coinage coins communities concerned contrast course created discussed distribution Dorestad early economic effect eighth emergence empire emporia England English established Europe evidence examine example excavations exchange existence extent Figure finds Frisian further Haithabu Hamwih Hodges illustrates imported indicate industry interesting Ipswich issued Italy king known late later least long-distance trade maintained major Merovingian Metcalf Middle minting Moreover ninth century North origins particular pattern perhaps period phase population possibly pottery probably production recent references regional remains Renfrew result Roman royal Saxon scale seems settlement seventh century ships significant silver social society structures studies suggests tenth territories towns trade urban vessels Viking village ware wealth West