Nine years ago I started this blog as a way of helping me to focus on the project I was working on, thanks to a grant from the Leverhulme Foundation. Nine years later - and lets take a moment to ponder the fact that that the free world took less time than that to win the Second World War - I finally have a plan for the book of that project that I am happy with. It has gone through many, many iterations (including a 2-volume version and even a trilogy!) but in the end, having initially been dead set against writing 'another big brick of a book', I have decided to write a (probably even bigger) brick of a book. If, you are interested (or indeed care at all), this is what I think it will look like. I dare say there'll be changes in detail but I think I can run with this.
The Transformations of the Year 600: Western Europe c.565-650
Chapter 1: History without ‘events’
Chapter 2: Narrative Orientation
Part 1 The Material: The End of the Late Antique State
Chapter 3: Introduction: The Theory of the State
Chapter 4: Government
Kings and Officers, Taxation, Warfare and the
Army, the law
Chapter 5: The Church
Church structure. Bishops, rural church. Holy men. Monasticism;
description of doctrinal differences; non-Christian areas: paganism and Judaism
Chapter 6: The Settlement Pattern (1): The Arena
The fate of the villas; new
settlements; caves; beyond the villa zone; hilltop sites; other elite sites;
towns; Roman cities; emporia; possibly urban sites beyond the old frontier
Chapter 7: The Settlement Pattern (2): Dynamics
Roman-post-Roman continuity; Settlement
patterns and economies; settlement organisation; settlement units; communities;
land-ownership; law and inheritance; relationships between towns; between towns
and lesser settlements.
Chapter 8: The Settlement Pattern (3): The Religious
Landscape
Bishoprics; urban churches;
urban monasteries; rural churches and monasteries; change through time; pagan
religious landscapes; bog deposits; temples
Chapter 9: Trade, exchange and the economy
Local levels: ‘Gift-exchange’;
barter. Intermediate: control of local exchange; monetisation. Inter-regional
exchange: routes and zones; mechanisms. ?Slave trade; Change through time.
Chapter 10: Death and Burial
Burial rituals; Descriptive
account of archaeological data; Interpretations; written sources’ accounts;
role in society and economy (linking cc9 & 11)
Chapter 11: Social Structure
Hierarchy: Aristocrats; free peasants;
half-free and slaves; social mobility. Community: family and kindred; gender; age;
ethnicity
Chapter 12: A provisional materialist explanation
Struggle of kings and aristocrats for control of surplus; war; plague;
climate change; regional explanations: Merovingian minorities; Augustinian
mission and conversion; dynastic instability; Lombard conquest. Attempt to unify these.
Part 2 The Ideal: The End of the Roman World
Chapter 13: Introduction: The subject and the world
Chapter 14: Rulership and authority
Ideology;
kingship; aristocracy; masculinity; the family; ?abbacy/ministry
Chapter 15: Political Identity and community
The political subject;
ethnicity and politics; politics and the political; public space; spaces of the
political; the making of community, local and ‘national’
Chapter 16: Religion
Monasticism; the ‘ascetic
invasion’; conversion; typology; the miraculous; uniformity over orthodoxy;
ministry?; apocalypticism
Chapter 17: Belief
Time; gender; the body; the
wild and the cultured; sickness and disease; ?the miraculous; nature; responses
to plague and weather
Chapter 20: Conclusion
A world after
Rome