2018
DOI: 10.1484/j.nms.5.116548
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Central Places, Local Elites and International Politics: The Highlands of Granada and Byzantine-Visigothic Conflict, 550–630

Abstract: Recent research has emphasized the importance of different kinds of 'central places' in the articulation of power in the Iberian Peninsula across the late antique and early medieval periods. Such sites were a focus of political, social and economic activity at a local level, also serving to integrate their regions into broader systems such as the emerging Visigothic kingdom and networks of taxation and trade. This article relates central place theory to the study of the highlands of Granada in the sixth centur… Show more

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