Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2023
For more than a century, historians and archaeologists have explained the emergence in the Anglo-Saxon period of open and common fields and nucleated settlement as the contemporary products of a new, co-ordinated approach by Germanic migrants and/or their descendants to improving the efficiency of agricultural production. Protagonists have argued about whether the social relationships underpinning this change were proto-manorial or an expression of community decision-making, but have not disagreed that these features were linked or that they emerged in the post-Roman period.
‘Nucleated’ settlement is concentrated in just one place in a township, rather than dispersed in scattered farms and hamlets. Such settlements might originate in a single place, or be polyfocal; and they might contain planned elements or have informal origins and additions, or a combination of both. By the Middle Ages, nucleations tended to be concentrated in the ‘central province’, a distribution lying across England roughly along a line from the Isle of Wight in the south-west to Northumberland in the north-east (Fig. 6.1). ‘Open fields’ – that is, sub-divided fields whose internal divisions were not sufficient to hamper access across them – were found throughout medieval England (Fig. 6.2). Across central southern England, however, a specialised subset of open fields, often characterised as ‘common’ or ‘Midland’, had developed by about 1300, identified by a rigorous regularity of layout, tenure, and cropping (Fig. 6.3).
While there have been attempts over the past forty years to narrow down the period in which both nucleation and field systems were introduced, what has not been at issue has been the conviction that both shared a common origin. This paper explores the contribution to this latter thesis of a growing body of archaeological evidence.
Historiography
The earliest known observations of differences between the ‘planned’ landscape of predominantly nucleated villages and regular common-field systems in ‘Midland’ England, and the ‘ancient’ landscapes of dispersed settlement and irregular open-field systems, were recorded in the sixteenth century.
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