2024
DOI: 10.5617/acta.11139
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Changes in Town and Country in Late Antiquity and into the Early Medieval Period in Greece and the Aegean Islands

John Bintliff

Abstract: The Greek Aegean in the Late Roman era (5th-mid-7th centuries AD) offers a degree of uniformity, developing further the novel urban and rural patterns that mark the previous Imperial centuries. Characteristically, small towns with fortifications and lavish Christian monuments are surrounded by commercial villa estates, while populations shrink drastically from the mid-6th century. In the 7th-8th centuries fundamental regional divergences appear. Most of mainland Greece is lost to the Eastern Roman (aka Early B… Show more

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