2020
DOI: 10.1484/m.hama-eb.5.118449
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Social Complexity in Local Communities During the Tenth Century in Central-Northern Portugal: Negotiation and Opposition

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Even though the archaeological data suggest that the people from SB and the other sites in the region contacted with both sides, it is difficult to understand their involvement in those dynamics. In fact, the panorama observed in central Portugal points to some level of local engagement, where past communities could have shaped their surroundings and freely chosen the crops to sow [2,6].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Even though the archaeological data suggest that the people from SB and the other sites in the region contacted with both sides, it is difficult to understand their involvement in those dynamics. In fact, the panorama observed in central Portugal points to some level of local engagement, where past communities could have shaped their surroundings and freely chosen the crops to sow [2,6].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This warring period and the inherent political instability permeated throughout this area and its communities. However, such conditions allowed them to shape and define their own territories, configuring a fragmented and unstructured landscape, as they could freely explore local resources and establish their own internal and external relations [5,6]. During these turbulent times, rural communities kept the daily and seasonal activities which their survival depended on, where the exploitation of natural resources assumed a great relevance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Cantabrian Mountains, husbandry regimes echoing prehistoric grazing practices intensified in the early medieval period as new settlement patterns and economic orientations developed (Fernández Mier 2016). On both sides of the modern Spanish-Portuguese border, archaeological studies have unveiled the existence at different times throughout the period of local communities integrated into small-scale socioeconomic and political networks (Martín Viso et al 2017;Tente 2020). Similarly, in Álava, extensification and diversification of farming practice in the context of a major restructuration of settlement patterns is apparent from the sixth century onwards, probably revealing the farming strategies of local, relatively self-sufficient peasant communities (Quirós Castillo 2020).…”
Section: Early Medieval Nw Iberia In Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%