“…If, following DeLanda (see also Deleuze and Guattari 1987; Bennett 2010) we reject the idea of essences in order to focus on the emergent properties of assemblages, the very terms of our analysis come to be called into question. Elsewhere (Jervis 2016a, 382–84) I have reflected upon how the category of ‘town’ is used in medieval archaeology, following Fowler (2013, 44–46) in arguing that the term is an analytical ‘black box’ or ‘circulating reference’ (see also Gaydarska 2016 for a recent consideration of the term urban in archaeology and Olsen et al 2012, 166, for a similar consideration of the category ‘tomb’). What this means is that it is a term which has circulated widely, which has developed particular meanings through past action, and which carries with it certain generalized assumptions which our role, as archaeologists, is to unpack and call into question.…”