Changes in Town and Country in Late Antiquity and into the Early Medieval Period in Greece and the Aegean Islands

John Bintliff
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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 Byzantine) Empire based at Constantinople, the largest towns and coastal ports excepted, following waves of Slavic settlement. A second model is found on the Aegean Islands, where reduced populations largely survive Arab raids and alien settlement through settlement displacement and negotiation. A third model is represented by the large island of Crete, free from invasion until Arab conquest in the 9th century, ironically when a revived Eastern Roman (Middle Byzantine) Empire regains control of the mainland and remaining Aegean Islands. This paper will present the evidence from archaeology for these scenarios, varying in time and space.
希腊和爱琴海群岛古代晚期到中世纪早期的城乡变化
罗马时代晚期(公元 5-7 世纪中叶)的希腊爱琴海呈现出一定程度的统一性,进一步发展了之前帝国时期的新颖城市和乡村模式。其特点是,拥有防御工事和奢华基督教纪念碑的小城镇被商业别墅区所包围,而人口则从 6 世纪中期开始急剧减少。7-8 世纪出现了根本性的地区差异。在斯拉夫人的定居浪潮之后,希腊大陆的大部分地区落入了以君士坦丁堡为基地的东罗马帝国(又称早期拜占庭帝国)手中,但最大的城镇和沿海港口除外。第二种模式出现在爱琴海群岛,那里的人口减少,但通过迁移和谈判,在阿拉伯人的袭击和外来定居中基本幸存下来。第三种模式以克里特大岛为代表,该岛在 9 世纪被阿拉伯人征服之前一直没有受到入侵,具有讽刺意味的是,复兴的东罗马帝国(中拜占庭帝国)重新控制了大陆和其余的爱琴群岛。本文将从考古学角度为这些在时间和空间上各不相同的场景提供证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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