Introduction: a distinction without a difference
It is broadly accepted that two competing visions of peasant society dominated Spanish historiography in the twentieth century. Until the 1970s, the most familiar feature of the historiographical landscape was the free peasant proprietor – the small-scale cultivator of his own patch of hard-won terrain, hardened by the seasons, a life of toil, and the demands of the frontier.Footnote 1 For Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, the free peasant proprietor embodied something of the spirit of homo hispanus: independent-minded, pioneering, a proto-typical conquistador, tasked above all else with the need to win back his homeland from the Arab-Berber conquerors who had taken control of much of the peninsula in 711.Footnote 2 Such conditions called for hardy frontiersmen, not serfs confined to the classic great estate of the manorial paradigm. It followed, for Sánchez-Albornoz, that Spain could not have incubated the violent hierarchies of the feudal social order: peasants might be poor, but they were largely free, and they would see their freedoms confirmed in the charters of franchise known as fueros, which proliferated from the eleventh century. In contradistinction to this view, which has now been largely abandoned in academic circles, was the counterblast offered by Abilio Barbero and Marcelo Vigil in the 1970s.Footnote 3 These authors contended that the Cantabrian Mountains, instead of sheltering the remnants of the Romano-Visigothic aristocratic class that would later coordinate the repopulation of the Duero basin, were peopled by quasi-tribal societies that had escaped the imprint of Romanitas. What is more, the indigenous peoples of the northern fringe would follow their own path to feudalism, the result of the slow creep of private property relations and the social inequalities that followed in their train; against this background, the free peasant proprietor would face no choice but to alienate his land and enter into dependency.
These apparently very different characterisations of early medieval Iberian society were in one crucial respect more alike than many have assumed. Both celebrate the significance of the peasantry while simultaneously failing to afford sufficient agency to peasants themselves. Both, in fact, reflect ‘an intrinsic pessimism’, in which the passivity of the peasantry in the face of greater forces is its most notable quality.Footnote 4 This is all the more unfortunate when one considers that the details of peasants’ lives can be tracked quite closely in the thousands of charters of sale or donation that survive from the tenth century, as Wendy Davies has shown.Footnote 5 And while much remains unknown, it is no longer tenable to see the early medieval peasantry as the heroic colonisers of the Albornocian canon, or the defenceless victims of lordly predation, persons of interest only insofar as we can trace their putative subjection. Neither of these depictions does justice to the complexity of peasant society as it has been revealed to us in archaeological excavations of recent years. This article intends to offer a brief investigation of the historiographical treatment of the Iberian peasantry in the early Middle Ages, before underlining the significance of archaeology in broadening our horizons, especially when it comes to understanding the socio-economic dimension of peasant existence.
Laying the ground
Exaggeratedly primitivist depictions of early medieval peasant societies, particularly with regard to their economic development, are not restricted to Spanish historiographical contexts, but we can adduce three principal reasons why such views held sway in Spain for so long. The first of these we can diagnose easily enough: as the leading practitioners of a now-flourishing field testify, Spanish archaeology was underdeveloped until the 1990s.Footnote 6 Such interventions as did take place were infrequently focused on or indeed interested in early medieval contexts. Second, before the last third of the twentieth century, Spanish historians working on the early medieval peasantry focused on trying to understand its juridical status, in particular insofar as it could be linked to late Roman, or – even better – Visigothic, legal categories.Footnote 7 For if normative legal provisions warning of the obligations (and potential dangers) of rustici could be said to find parallels in documents of practice – charters, say, in which ‘persons of inferior rank’ are seen committing infractions against private property before succumbing to the long arm of the law – then the peasantry could be classified and categorised accordingly.Footnote 8 Inheritance practices, loan instruments, debt repayments and the like were treated in the same way: if they appeared in written law and also cropped up in outwardly similar form in the charters, then these latter were to be understood as ‘fuentes de aplicación de derecho’.Footnote 9 This somewhat circular view was challenged, and rightly so, in a series of landmark studies of monastic lordship that began to see the light of day around 1970, almost all of them based upon a return to the charters and shaped by the notable influence of French historical writing.Footnote 10 Marc Bloch’s extraordinary La société féodale (1939–40) was clearly of fundamental import for many, but so too were Georges Duby’s inherently more pessimistic readings of rural economy.Footnote 11 It is perhaps for this reason that in Spain the socio-political construction of lordly power was privileged over its strictly economic dimension; there was, quite simply, little room for the humdrum business interests of the peasantry in Duby’s analyses of rural society, nor would there be much room for them in his later attempts to define the medieval imaginaire.Footnote 12 To some extent, this is not surprising: expansive, diachronic retellings of the peasantry’s past, centred on the enduring rhythms of the seasons and the fixity of geographical setting, could not but emphasise the constraints that framed peasant life at the expense of variety, dynamism and agency. Change, when it came, would be dramatic and top-down, and it would only come, in France, when Duby’s castellans began to subvert public courts and despoil the lands of peasants around the year 1000.Footnote 13 The disintegrative effects of feudal revolution would usher in a new ruling class, but the day-to-day life of the peasantry, we are left to intuit, remained a predictably stolid affair.
The third reason why detailed studies of the dynamism of peasant society and economy emerged late, and then only fitfully, in Spain, concerns the concept of feudalism, which underwent rehabilitation in Spain at precisely the moment that (for better or worse) it was being jettisoned by scholars elsewhere, particularly in the United States.Footnote 14 The timing was crucial here.Footnote 15 The decade from 1975–85 saw many Spanish historians, brought up on a steady diet of Annaliste and radical history writing and now relishing the scholarly freedoms previously denied them by Franco’s regime, embrace an understanding of feudalism inspired by Marxist notions of class struggle.Footnote 16 British academics devoted to a historical materialist analysis of social conditions before the late medieval triumph of agrarian capitalism also found an audience in the Spanish universities in the 1970s and 1980s.Footnote 17 Those embracing these varied and intellectually potent influences deliberately (indeed self-consciously) drew from insights derived from across Europe, and this broadening of horizons was wholly positive. Scholars at the vanguard in Spain at this time offered a necessary corrective, in methodology as well as in some of the conclusions they reached, to the declamatory tales of Castilian exceptionalism rehearsed by Claudio Sánchez-Albornoz, for whom the invasion of 711 had curtailed the proto-feudalism of the late Visigothic kingdom, precluding the possibility of a mature, European, feudalism taking root in the tenth century.Footnote 18
Floreat feudalism
On the home front, Spaniards turned to the work of Abilio Barbero and Marcelo Vigil, whose La formación del feudalismo en la península ibérica, which appeared in 1978, inspired and guided a whole cadre of younger historians, some of them very formidable indeed.Footnote 19 In its methodology, overtly Marxist framework, and rejection of institutionalist paradigms, not to mention its conclusions, their work could not have offered a more iconoclastic retelling of the Spanish early Middle Ages. It attempted to dismantle Sánchez-Albornoz’s thesis wholesale, conjuring a hitherto unthinkable vision of a society that followed a path to feudalism that would begin in the mountainous north of ‘Green Spain’ among kin-based (gentilicio) peoples, bypassing the Latin-Christian inheritance almost entirely.Footnote 20 The work of Barbero and Vigil soon became the new orthodoxy in university History departments (a sure sign that change was needed), and it would not be controversial to say that studies of the processes by which regional societies underwent feudalización have shaped the dominant conceptual framework of early medieval Spanish history for the last forty years or so.Footnote 21 Yet rather than attempt to chronicle abrupt changes – the favoured Francophone approach to explaining the onset of feudal social relations and institutions – Spanish historians, from about 1980, became increasingly interested in ‘transition’; from rural settlements composed of peoples of relatively uniform, quasi-tribal socio-economic status, to comunidades de aldea (village communities), characterised, by the tenth century, by ‘the extension of individual ownership and internal social differentiation’.Footnote 22 Both Marx and the Annalistes were influential in the shaping of this new research agenda, whereas institutionalist analyses of feudo-vassalic bonds fell precipitously out of fashion in Spain in the last quarter of the twentieth century, having only ever really interested a handful of Sánchez-Albornoz’s (extremely learned) acolytes.Footnote 23 We might surmise that ties between lord and vassal seemed redolent of the starchy, narrowly juridical studies that many historians now wanted to leave behind; Blochian visions, on the other hand, of an entire social order, a feudal society composed of intricate connections between all of its interlocking parts, held a much broader appeal in what was, after all, a newly democratised country.Footnote 24
Taking inspiration from Bloch, Spanish historians would return to the charters to uncover social change in feudal Iberia. The patchy and uneven (though rich) collections of records from across Spain made gauging the profundity and scansion of change difficult, but no matter, for an explanation was at hand: feudalización operated with different intensity across the northern half of the peninsula in the ninth to eleventh centuries, but – reassuringly – always resulted in the same outcome. As society was feudalised at different speeds in different places lords acquired and consolidated a bundle of seigneurial rights at the expense of peasant society, overseeing a top-down reorganisation of agricultural labour, structured to their own advantage.Footnote 25 Lords, it turned out, were the prime mover of causation, for it was their demand that would stimulate changes, including a more stringent and exploitative agricultural regime, which, in turn, would drive economic growth. Tellingly, there was not a Spanish Feudal Revolution or Crisis of the Year 1000 in sight (west of Catalonia, at least). What this appeared to show was that French historiographical influence in Spain was profound but not total: revolutionary change à la française gave way to slow-burning transformations in non-Catalan Iberian contexts, and kings retained more than a semblance of genuine power there whereas royal authority had reached its nadir in late tenth-century France. But even these realisations were beside the point: the direction of travel was the same everywhere in northern Christian Spain, from Castile to Galicia, and León to Navarre.
The approaches sketched in outline above are intellectually stimulating in all sorts of ways, but they share a recurrent characteristic: they ask us to content ourselves with a series of answers fixated on processes at the expense of people. Where once ideas of depopulation and Reconquista, Sánchez-Albornoz’s leitmotif ruled the roost, in the brave new world of the 1970s it would be feudalism that would carry all before it. A little later, in the 1990s, a revived Convivencia, the putative harmonious living together of Iberia’s Christians, Muslims and Jews, would attempt to displace the by-then moribund notion of Reconquest as an all-encompassing expository framework.Footnote 26 Proponents of feudalism or Convivencia (scholars rarely worked on both) offered competing visions of medieval Iberian society but they were inspired by a shared imperative: Spain was no longer to be Europe’s odd man out, nor to have its liminality confirmed by Sánchez-Albornoz’s quasi-mystical description of his homeland as an enigma histórico, the roots of which – he had opined – were buried equally deeply in the soil of Castile and the psychology of its people. But where did all the peasants go? If not toiling and spoiling on the frontier, where were peasants to be found and what were they found to be doing? Most agricultural cultivators in early medieval Spain, as elsewhere, dedicated a relatively small fraction of their time (and some, of course, dedicated none whatsoever) to the farming of their lord’s estates: what were their lives like when they were not doing their lord’s bidding?Footnote 27
A peasantry without peasants
An apparent paradox, or at least a deep irony, presents itself at this juncture. With the rise to paramountcy of Barbero and Vigil’s strikingly revisionist interpretation of the Spanish early Middle Ages, historians may well have expected to see peasants move front and centre in the late twentieth century.Footnote 28 But they did not. Instead, the free and hardy frontiersmen who once roamed this historiographical landscape, so vividly brought to life by Sánchez-Albornoz, were suddenly denuded of their vital spark and rendered immobile; the trouble is, when robbed of their pioneering spirit and told to stay put, peasants were often depicted as having lost any claim to agency at all.
Peasants themselves, that is, the thousands of examples of named individuals of relatively humble status and means whom we see in the charters, were reduced to a sociological category. Yet the binary distinction between the peasantry and the lordly class (‘two pre-constituted social groups with contradictory interests’), a notion critiqued in Anglophone scholarship since at least the heyday of the Toronto School (and indeed accepted as too simplistic a reading by leading Marxist historians of the peasantry such as Rodney Hilton), offered an explanatory framework of surprising durability in Spanish historiography, for reasons explored by Peter Linehan among others, and explained in part above.Footnote 29
Dissenting voices existed but tended to be conciliatory in tone, shifting the emphasis rather than the debate. García de Cortázar, for instance, offered a welcome corrective to zero-sum power games by stressing that landscape, season, and climate shaped the contours of peasant lives quite as much as seigneurial demands.Footnote 30 But in the hands of some of his disciples even studies of this kind lost their way somewhat, and taxonomic and classificatory approaches came to pay more attention to the settings in which peasant lives played out than they did to the details of peasant lives themselves (insofar as we can know these details). This is not to deny the significance of geography; after all, what one could grow, what animals one could raise, and the viability of access to resources, including commons, shaped the possibilities of farming everywhere; one bad harvest could ruin a family (and perhaps one particularly good one could make one). Landscape, in this sense, was indeed important, if not determinative. Nonetheless, work and family, the principal contextual factors framing peasant lives, slipped down the historiographical agenda, unless they could provide a scenic backdrop for anecdotes telling of lordly injustice; peasants not actively involved in ‘resistance’ paid the price for their patent indifference to radicalism.Footnote 31 Against this backdrop the early medieval northern Iberian peasant economy would have to wait until the (admittedly late) introduction of (non-Andalusi) coinage in the eleventh century before it could stake a claim for itself as a matter of interest and significance in its own right.Footnote 32 Feudalism ‘happened’, it was just a case of finding it. And so it is, therefore, that whether we imagine ourselves marooned on the Meseta or sheltering from showers on the Atlantic coast, the vista that opened up before us until very recently was one of a large region carved up into areas of directly controlled dominio monástico on the one hand, and sparsely populated hamlets on the other. Free peasants clung to their landholdings; whatever their status, villagers faced no possibility of improving their lot; and rampant seigneurialism was in train.
But this is far from the whole story, and peasant society deserves to be sketched with much more attention to detail. In very recent times, the work of a handful of Spanish scholars has emerged at the forefront of a new wave of important contributions to debates about the peasantry. These contributions show that peasant lives were fundamentally grounded in everyday routines; but they were not, for all that, fixed and unchanging.Footnote 33 By the same token, peasants were of course connected to, sometimes indeed clearly beholden to, supralocal persons and structures; yet these were not the only forces that shaped their lives. Overlapping and intersecting scales of social and political activity brought peasants into contact with neighbours, neighbouring villagers, as well as elites and their agents. Only in the last decade have the dense, multidirectional series of connections that enmeshed peasant activity (and indeed sociability) been developed at the conceptual level, and promising steps forward have been taken, most notably by Julio Escalona and his team at the CSIC, and Juan Antonio Quirós Castillo, at the Universidad del País Vasco.Footnote 34
Complex gradations of social difference, often very fine, are now the object of study; attempts are made to explain them, rather than explain them away. For instance, alongside the dependent peasants who worked some of these lands were small proprietors eking out a living, as well as what Richard Fletcher called a ‘rural middle class’ of farmers.Footnote 35 In other words, as Wendy Davies has demonstrated, legal, social and economic status varied from person to person and from family to family; a single village could comprise the destitute, the poor and the middling sort.Footnote 36 Looking to the work of Davies and Laurent Feller, others have argued that small but dynamic markets emerged in the tenth century, allowing villagers to seek preferment or advancement by means of the kinds of dealings in private property for too long considered solely the preserve of aristocrats.Footnote 37 Peasant recourse to the market is a given in accounts of other parts of early medieval Europe – consider Wendy Davies’ studies on Brittany, the work of Laurent Feller et al. on the Abruzzo, the landmark studies of Pierre Bonnassie and Lluís To on Catalonia, and the more theoretical investigations of Garry Runciman on Anglo-Saxon England – but has not attracted much attention from experts on the northern Christian Iberian kingdoms until very recently.Footnote 38
The ‘archaeological turn’ for historians
Archaeologists, on the other hand, have bucked this trend somewhat, and in recent years they have shown that it is their discipline that will furnish most of the evidence that will help us to revise our picture. By obliging historians to ponder the material remains of living conditions, fragments of the objects of daily life (coarse wares), and diverse human interventions in the landscape (storage pits, terraces), archaeologists have foregrounded a series of fundamental questions. What size was this community? How did it feed itself? What might the physical layout of the settlement and its food production and preservation strategies say about social hierarchies? Charters, for all their evident value, can only provide relatively few clues on these particulars. Yet some archaeological studies have taken us further, without falling into the old interpretative traps, by hypothetically reconstructing village settlements peopled by individuals, some perhaps a step or two ahead of peers and willing to coordinate ‘infrastructure projects’, such as the construction of large storage pits or terraces. How such projects were mediated and carried out, given that the investment in time and labour that they supposed was unlikely to be shared equally among the community, especially if elements of that community were producing more than they needed to sustain themselves in the medium term, are also questions worth posing. One thinks of the example of the village of Gasteiz in Álava, in which an 18 m x 8 m longhouse, inhabited from the mid-ninth century to the early eleventh, has been associated with no less than five ‘aligned and synchronous’ silos, positioned adjacently.Footnote 39 Did these silos belong to a family of superior status to its neighbours? Was the nature of this social superiority fundamentally economic, such families being able to minimise their own risk by storing significant quantities of cereals, thereby consolidating or even gaining leverage over neighbours who were not so fortunate? If we turn the question on its head, further questions emerge. For instance, if silos of unusually high storage capacity were located beside domestic buildings that do not stand out in size or quality of construction from other such buildings, does this indicate that these silos were used by more than a single family, and might we then posit community-level involvement in their construction?Footnote 40
Definitive answers to the questions framed above cannot be given, but a positive consequence of excavations such as those led by Quirós Castillo and Alfonso Vigil-Escalera is that such ‘infrastructure projects’ are no longer seen as a sure sign of exogenous lordly intrusion; this is as true of Quirós Castillo’s excavations in the Basque Country, which suggest that the ninth and tenth centuries saw a reorganisation of villages and productive spaces, as it is of Vigil-Escalera’s pioneering work in the Madrid region, which posits, remarkably, fifth- to eighth-century chronologies for the development of stable village communities, at least some of which were involved in exchange economies of some degree of sophistication.Footnote 41
The ability of peasants to shape the internal development of the settlements in which they lived is attested farther west too. Excavations have shown that the village of Villanueva de Santo Adriano, some twenty kilometres from Oviedo (the capital of the leading Christian kingdom in Spain from the second half of the eighth century to the beginning of the tenth), experienced intense settlement nucleation in the ninth and tenth centuries, as well as the reorganisation of agricultural spaces: the presence on the site of ‘significant quantities of pottery from Oviedo’ indicate that the village was almost certainly producing for exchange.Footnote 42 Moving farther west still, large-scale terrace construction has been identified on the edge of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, occurring in successive waves in the fifth to seventh centuries, and the ninth to tenth centuries; clearly, active intervention in the landscape to improve its productive capacity was a concern of some Iberian peasants throughout the early Middle Ages.Footnote 43 For some scholars, the material culture and the architectonic features of related domestic units found at these sites suggest a dramatic break redolent of extraneous elite imposition: but social elites such as there did exist in these contexts were just as likely to have been leading villagers assuming roles of leadership in collective projects. In other words, ‘small terraced strips on hillsides with broad sixth- to ninth-century dates could be the result of direct local agency.’Footnote 44
Documents cannot really help us to solve this puzzle definitively because the written record is patchy, uneven in its geographical spread, and rather meagre until after about 900. Admittedly, before this date rent collection and estate management were sometimes recorded in rudimentary scribblings, even in areas as remote as the northwestern corner of the Meseta, as a series of 160 or so slate tablets of sixth- to eighth-century date attests. But to assume that the slates, and the very workaday literacy that they evidence, were created at the behest of lords overseeing local production at village level, is to assume that literacy was only found in elite contexts, an argument that recent studies have called into question.Footnote 45 Beyond the Leonese Mountains, in Galicia, charters from the late ninth-century onwards reveal a world in which transacting in land took place between peasants with great regularity, its normality encoded in the formulaic conventions that appear time and again in the corpus.Footnote 46 These transactions were nonetheless anchored in a stable social landscape: privately held holdings, owned by peasant families, were well established, villagers routinely reminding us of the ancient status of their properties, which were delineated by ‘terminos antiquos’.Footnote 47 A handful of other excavated sites in Galicia also suggests the stable and long-term occupation of village settlements; furthermore, the continued use in Galicia throughout the early Middle Ages of mixed building techniques, in stone and wood, perhaps points to sharper social hierarchies in Galician villages than we see elsewhere, a view that would fit with the highly articulated nature of social structures in the region that have been said to stand out in tenth-century documents.Footnote 48
To explain regional difference is perhaps one of the challenges facing scholars over the coming years. It is beyond question though, that archaeology is helping us revise our understanding of the protagonism of peasants in their own lives; neither elite pressure ab extra nor climate catastrophism need be considered the only possible catalysts of change within peasant communities. Many scholars would now concede that decisions regarding where, when, and how to construct, say, a large silo or an olive press, were taken by peasants, perhaps after consultation with some or all of the members of the settlement (which should not lead us to assume that all parties involved in the decision making process exerted the same level of influence or expected to benefit from the decision equally).Footnote 49 Still, these changes must have been felt on the ground. One possibility is that ‘infrastructure projects’ provide a possible context for the development of sharpened social hierarchies within villages, facilitating or even materialising social mobility in a more concrete and indeed visible way. Compelling readings of the archaeological corpus made by scholars in northern Europe have argued to this effect, reminding us that ‘potential diversity in the material reflections of different ranks within the peasantry may have been hugely underestimated.’Footnote 50 In his comparative study of a variety of sites from across northern Europe in the early Middle Ages, Christopher Loveluck has called for further investigation of the ‘middling ranks’ of society in tenth- and eleventh-century contexts, ‘local notables and wealthy peasant families, whose existence has already been observed in the archaeological and textual sources of the seventh to ninth centuries’.Footnote 51 Here we see peasant agency foregrounded such that we need not classify archaeological markers of difference in wealth, or access to more complex exchange systems, as necessarily indicating elite coordination of such systems.
An interesting consequence of debate on these themes has taken the form of a renewed commitment to scrutinising the theoretical frameworks we take for granted. Top of the list has to be another misleading binary, cooperation and conflict, competing dynamics thought to be constitutive of the social logic of the peasant world. Here we might posit that neither functionalist anthropology nor intrinsically opposed class interest offer a complex enough view of peasant social relations. Where there was cooperation, it was not the natural consequence of a social system innately configured to promote stability; where there was conflict, it was not because members of local society were inevitably predisposed nor psychologically hardwired to object to individuals or groups within the community who were in some way differentiated from others because of economic or political status.Footnote 52 On the contrary, cooperation was built by means of the complex intermeshing of varied and overlapping individual and group interests; it was because of its inherent complexity, shaped by the contingent interests of every set of actors in every given circumstance, that it was liable to fracture.
The word ‘community’, omnipresent though it be in the literature since the time of Barbero and Vigil, indeed presents historians with a considerable problem. Community and collective action were, for some historians, the most effective shields deployed by rural cultivators against lords, but how the sociological construct of the ‘natural community’, whose members simply resided in proximity to one another, metabolised into the comunidad de aldea, characterised by social stratification and inequality, is far from straightforward.Footnote 53 What we might call the ‘feudalising tendency’ has been most often posited by way of explanation, but it is debatable whether this term fits the bill if the change can be said to emerge, sui generis, from the heart of the village, the result of the aggregate effect of peasants trying to coordinate their own lives, sometimes in unison with neighbours, sometimes at the level of the family or individual. This does not contradict the possibility of collective action at the community level and I do not wish to argue that such action did not take place. Collective action at the scale of terracing, for example, is certainly impressive. But it is not by definition cooperative, and we should not reject the possibility that it required coordination or coercion, at least in its initial stages, and that this was provided by leading peasants.Footnote 54 To admit as much would not undermine the concept of the peasant community, but simply highlight its complexity: after all, collective interests do not necessarily produce collective action.
New contexts: social complexity, commerce and comparison
Peasant agency in early medieval northern Spain was not confined to the shaping of settlements and productive spaces. Commercial activity also played a part. Agustín Azkarate and José Luis Solaun have shown that low-value pottery, sometimes supplied by ‘itinerant’ vendors and often produced locally, circulated in the Basque Country in the ninth and tenth centuries.Footnote 55 Even a cautious reading of their study must conclude that there was clearly non-elite demand for inexpensive pottery (alongside demand for finer wares) that made use of and fostered market mechanisms to meet that need; excavations in village sites have revealed significant enough quantities of a range of inexpensive coarse wares so as to demonstrate that peasants knew how to access the market in order to obtain the particular ceramic ware that they wanted. Indeed, Azkarate and Solaun have suggested that production was relatively complex by the ninth century, household production existing alongside ‘individual workshop’ production, both supplemented by an ‘itinerant’ element perhaps motivated by supply-side factors, its producers keen to muscle in on rivals.Footnote 56 Itinerant craftsmen of this type, working across the region between Madrid and Toledo in the early Middle Ages, perhaps even ‘responded to seasonal cycles of demand’.Footnote 57
Elsewhere in the Christian territories of northern Iberia, several different highly localised forms of coarse ware have emerged from excavations across and within regions, from Portugal to Álava.Footnote 58 Localisation has been found to characterise the ever-growing pottery assemblage of the Iberian village world and this pattern holds true wherever excavation has taken place; in other words, there are reasons to suspect that the circulation of low value objects was common enough in many parts of medieval Iberia, and that there was some kind of specialised production in operation aimed overwhelmingly at non-elite transactors. Who made these ceramics? And with what medium of exchange did anyone pay for them? After all, if specialisation becomes more normal once payment in coin itself becomes more normal (people choosing to buy artisanal goods rather than make them), how do we explain the pattern of increasing and increasingly diverse ceramic production emerging from excavations undertaken in a world putatively without coin? One answer might be to think about the productive capacity of peasants to produce ceramics which in range, design, and quality (if not scale), bear the hallmarks of what we more readily call ‘specialisation’ in monetary contexts.Footnote 59 Alfonso Vigil-Escalera has broadened our horizons still further in his study of ‘things that travel’, bringing to our attention the role that rotary querns, tiles, and textiles played in peasant exchange networks in the Madrid region. As he states, ‘the mere fact that goods travelled indicates that production exceeded local needs.’Footnote 60 The upshot of such investigations is that archaeologists might hope, soon, to persuade historians of feudal society that production for exchange – indeed, economic strategies beyond subsistence – characterised at least some pockets of peasant society in the early Middle Ages.
Peasant artisans commercially integrated in local networks have been postulated in late and post-Carolingian contexts, including in the Low Countries, where ‘industries often had clear regional concentrations, and were almost all located in the countryside’.Footnote 61 But such is the abundance of ceramics (now beginning to see the light of day in meaningful quantities) and other low-value goods (documented in hundreds of Iberian charters), that we need to think harder about their presence in Iberian contexts too.Footnote 62 We might also extend our comparative analysis to England, and indeed shift our focus from ceramics to other types of low-level goods, to see further examples of the economic dynamism of the early medieval peasantry. In an article focused on middle and late Anglo-Saxon England, Rosamond Faith has reminded us that ‘the extent to which pottery and high-level crafts dominate the archaeological record has tended to obscure the importance of everyday goods in the rural economy and hence the contribution that peasant surplus may have made to exchange.’Footnote 63 Due weight has long been afforded to the role of peasants as innovators and entrepreneurs in English historiography. Although much of this work has concentrated on the centuries after 1200, some historians have examined the earlier period with illuminating results; Richard Britnell, for example, has proposed that the institutional domination of the market by landlords may well have acted as a brake on late Anglo-Saxon commercialisation, rather than a stimulus.Footnote 64 In a similar vein, Chris Dyer has proposed that peasant producers were better able to spot ripe conditions for investment and opportunities to increase production than was the lordly class.Footnote 65
These comparanda need not map onto Spanish conditions perfectly – indeed, it would take some explaining if they did. But they do provide food for thought; they remind us that peasant protagonism is the place to start when attempting to understand the fundamental dynamics of the peasantry, production and market mechanisms. They also offer a salutary reminder to historians that this protagonism can only be uncovered if archaeology continues to shape our current and future research agendas, for not only does it provide us with an ever-expanding base of empirical data, it also prompts us to ask new, more penetrating questions of historiographical paradigms in dire need of revision and regeneration.
Acknowledgements
Many people have helped me to refine the ideas presented in this article and I am grateful to them all. Wendy Davies, Edward White and Chris Wickham deserve particular thanks for their insightful comments on an early draft. Conversations with Julio Escalona have had a formative influence on my understanding of the themes treated herein. I also wish to record my gratitude to Peter Sarris for his support of the research that led to the writing of this article.