James Graham-Campbell with Magdalena Valor (ed.). The archaeology of medieval Europe, volume 1: eighth to twelfth centuries AD.
Burnouf, Joelle
JAMES GRAHAM-CAMPBELL with MAGDALENA VALOR (ed.). The archaeology
of medieval Europe, volume 1: eighth to twelfth centuries AD (Acta
Jutlandica LXXXIII:1, Humanities Series 79). 479 pages, numerous b&w
& colour illustrations. 2007. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press;
978-87-7934-288-0 hardback 50 [pounds sterling], 75 [euro] & $90;
978-87-7934-290-3 paperback 35 [pounds sterling], 51.50 [euro] &
$60.
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In 1999, at an international conference of the European Symposium
of Teachers of Medieval Archaeology (ESTMA) in Seville, Else Roesdahl
proposed to produce a work which would allow European students to
appreciate and comprehend medieval archaeology in Europe, a discipline
which has expanded immensely over the last 50 years. Here, eight years
after the idea was first mooted, we review Volume 1 of this two-volume
project: it covers the high Middle Ages (eighth-twelfth centuries AD).
No fewer than eight separate institutions have supported this
project: the Augustinus Foundation, the Universities of Prague (Charles
University, Faculty of Philosophy and Arts), Galway, Ghent (Department
of Archaeology), Lund (Faculty of Humanity and Theology), Seville
(HUM-712), Aarhus (Department of Medieval and Renaissance Archaeology),
and the Aarhus University Research Foundation.
The authors assembled do not entirely cover the whole of Europe:
rather they represent networks of academic medievalists. Of the 41
contributors, 7 are Danish, 7 British, 5 German, 5 Spanish, 3 Polish;
Italians, Norwegians, Czechs and Irish field two authors each, while
single authors carry the torch for Sweden, Belgium, Austria, France,
Finland and Iceland. For those who follow medieval archaeology, this
panel differs in composition from other such panels, for example that of
the European Association of Archaeologists. It may well be worth
reflecting in future on the path medieval archaeology has followed, not
only from a scientific point of view, but also in terms of the
professional and research fields opened in the last decade.
The volume aims to show how the discipline has renewed itself.
Several meetings took place between 2001 and 2004 in a number of
European cities where it was agreed that two authors would take charge
of each of the 15 chapters and that 'boxes' would COhen more
precise indications on sites of themes only touched on in the main text.
Else Roesdahl's preface sets out the genesis of the work since
1999 and the philosophy behind the undertaking, while
Graham-Campbell's introduction (pp. 13-18) serves as a user's
guide explaining the geographical and chronological frameworks and the
theoretical bases which underpin the chapters; these are constructed
from many recent studies--taken as works of reference--which have sprung
from collective research projects such as the European Transitions from
the Roman World (TRW) programme (the latter unfortunately contained
little archaeology and hardly any interdisciplinary dialogue).
Graham-Campbell also clarifies the chronological synchronisation of the
medieval period in the various countries of Europe.
The layout follows a classic thematic scheme with 15 chapters of
roughly equal length supplemented by boxes, illustrations and a short
bibliography. The book ends with three indices: of authors, people and
places, and a general index.
This work sums up the beginnings of medieval archaeology in Europe
but it cannot encompass (except in a few chapters) the huge wealth of
information gained by new research undertaken in the last twenty years or so, reported in a plethora of university dissertations and
excavations reports brought about by the formidable increase in
development in Europe. It may be that other ways of structuring the
volume, through presentation and discussion of results, could have
better demonstrated how medieval archaeology can write 'another
history of the Middle Ages'. Thus, in the chapter on elites, a
regrouping of references to the various markers of power in Europe
(spread over chapters 5, 11 and 12 for civilian elites, and chapters 13,
14, and 15 if we add the ecclesiastical elites) could have led to a
reflexion on manifestations of power, as much in their standard form as
in their 'regional' variations. Similarly, when considering
the relationship between societies and their environment--leaving aside
the fact that over the 'longue duree' of the medieval
millennium there is no attempt to consider the 'legacies' of
earlier periods (one of the strong points of current
research)--interdisciplinary research has demonstrated that all that
pertains to the exploitation of animal and plant resources, i.e.
agriculture but also industry, is relevant to a fundamental reflexion on
global environmental matters; this could have been highlighted by
regrouping data, for example those in chapters 1, 6 and 7. Indeed the
Middle Ages are particularly suited to such studies since the period
experienced three climatic downturns, in the sixth century, at the
beginning of the ninth century and at the onset of the Little Ice Age in
the fourteenth century.
This volume will undoubtedly prove useful to students and may
entice them to consult the primary literature, dissertations and
specialist works; it may also inspire them to work on one or other
research topic at a Europe-wide scale.
JOELLE BURNOUF
Universite de Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne, UMR
7041 ArScAn "Archeologies Environnementales",
Paris, France (Email: joelleburnouf@orange.fr)
(Translated from the original French by Reviews Editor)