The Continental Saxons from the Migration Period to the Tenth Century: An Ethnographic Perspective

Front Cover
Dennis Howard Green, Frank Siegmund
Boydell Press, 2003 - Business & Economics - 393 pages
Following the Carolingian conquest the Saxons made giant strides economically and politically; a range of sources is examined.

The Continental Saxons developed from a subsistence economy, practiced up to the Carolingian conquest in the late eighth century, to become rulers of the Holy Roman Empire a little over a century and a half later. A historian introduces the topic, evaluating the reliability of the sources. Archaeologists then describe the living conditions, especially along the coast where villages have been excavated, and social customs revealed by grave-goods. Legal procedures are inferred from surviving evidence, and the regional economy, based on agriculture and animal husbandry, is reconstructed through the study of vegetable remains and pollen analysis. The birth of urban communities, stimulated by monastic settlements and trade, is followed through archaeological evidence; study of visual art-forms is based on analysis of grave-goods; and in the absence of surviving evidence for poetry, a Carolingian eulogical poem is discussed. Also discussed are Saxon political relations prior to and during the Carolingian conquest; the few signs of traditional religion that can be gleaned from the "Lives" of missionaries; and Christianity and the activityof religious orders, which eventually brought about the conversion of the Saxons and the introduction of written culture.

From inside the book

Contents

H Green
1
THE BEGINNINGS OF URBAN ECONOMIES AMONG THE SAXONS
4
LOCATION IN SPACE AND TIME M Springer
11
SETTLEMENT HISTORY FROM
37
SOCIAL RELATIONS AMONG THE OLD SAXONS F Siegmund
77
JURAL RELATIONS AMONG THE SAXONS BEFORE AND AFTER
113
RURAL ECONOMY OF THE CONTINENTAL SAXONS FROM
133
H Steuer
159
Saxon identity Scandinavian and Frankish traditions Torn between
227
THREE ASPECTS OF THE OLD SAXON BIBLICAL EPIC THE HELIAND
247
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL
271
THE CONVERSION OF THE OLD SAXONS J Hines
299
CURRENT ISSUES AND SUGGESTED FUTURE DIRECTIONS IN
329
INDEX
353
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