1990
DOI: 10.1080/01433768.1990.10594428
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The Landscape of Roman Britain: A Review

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Cited by 43 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Equally, those who defend the essential continuity of the Romano-British people and their social landscape (eg. Christie 2004;Dark 1994;Dark 2004;Fulford 1990;Snyder 1998), nonetheless agree that failure within the Roman political and administrative 'system' inevitably impacted on how social and cultural continuity during the late Roman and earliest medieval periods was manifested. Whilst under the traditionalist banner it was difficult to move beyond the conclusion that the end of Roman Britain resulted in systemic failure and the death of Romanitas, within the current theoretical paradigm, the debate over late Roman decline increasingly looks beyond normative and traditional explanations, with even entrenched exponents of catastrophic change modifying their approaches to seek more nuanced interpretation.…”
Section: The Continuity Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equally, those who defend the essential continuity of the Romano-British people and their social landscape (eg. Christie 2004;Dark 1994;Dark 2004;Fulford 1990;Snyder 1998), nonetheless agree that failure within the Roman political and administrative 'system' inevitably impacted on how social and cultural continuity during the late Roman and earliest medieval periods was manifested. Whilst under the traditionalist banner it was difficult to move beyond the conclusion that the end of Roman Britain resulted in systemic failure and the death of Romanitas, within the current theoretical paradigm, the debate over late Roman decline increasingly looks beyond normative and traditional explanations, with even entrenched exponents of catastrophic change modifying their approaches to seek more nuanced interpretation.…”
Section: The Continuity Debatementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dark and Dark 1997;Fulford 1990;Fowler 2002 ;Hingley 1989;Miles 1989). These have comprehensively outlined the spatial organisation and physical character of the Romano-British countryside, and the economic and/or military forces involved.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%