Abstract
James L. Boone and F. Scott Worman
Rural Settlement and Soil Erosion from the Late Roman Period through the
Medieval Islamic Period in the Lower Alentejo of Portugal
Journal of Field Archaeology 32 (2007) 115--132
This article presents the results of a site survey of Late Roman period
and Medieval Islamic period rural settlements in the Lower Alentejo of
southern Portugal, and of geoarchaeological investigations that evaluate
the role of human activity and environmental change in the pattern of
settlement growth, decline, and abandonment documented by the survey.
The survey revealed that some time after the dissolution of Roman
control of Iberia in the 5th century A.D., small hamlets and villages
began to appear in the study area. Over the next 500 years, and
particularly following the Muslim invasion of A.D. 711, settlement
density increased sixfold over what it had been during the Roman period.
The most salient transformations in settlement patterning and material
culture that occurred during this period, however, coincided with the
consolidation of the Umayyad Caliphate in Córdoba in the mid-10th
century, rather than the Arab and Berber invasion of A.D. 711.
Subsequently, during the mid-12th century, the majority of rural
villages were abandoned, nearly a century before the Christian
Reconquista in A.D. 1238. The region remained largely depopulated until
the mid–late 1400s, and settlement density in the region was never again
as high as it was during the later Medieval Islamic period.
Geoarchaeological evidence of widespread erosion and soil loss suggests
that overuse of the land may have been a factor in the abandonment.
Volume 32 Number 2 (Summer 2007)
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