River and Society in Northern Italy
Title
River and Society in Northern Italy
Subtitle
The Po Valley, 500-1000 AD
Price
€ 141,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789048558803
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
382
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 140,99
Table of Contents
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Abbreviations
1. Introduction: Studying the Po riverscape in the early Middle Ages
2. The Po River in early medieval mentalities
3. Climate, environments, and resources of the Po Valley
4. Rivers and roads: connectivity in the Po Valley
5. Circuits of goods and people: the socio-economic networks
6. River and settlements in early medieval northern Italy
7. River management, agency, and ‘other’ socio-economic uses
Epilogue
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Secondary Sources

Marco Panato

River and Society in Northern Italy

The Po Valley, 500-1000 AD

This book considers for the first time the relationship between the river environment and the economic and political structures of northern Italy in the post-Roman period. Through the study of the relationship between river and society over time, it shows how the Carolingian conquest and other major political events in northern Italy did not seem to introduce radical changes in the daily life or broad economic systems. In fact, ecological circuits, local networks, family strategies and monastic policies seem to have been equal factors that shaped the relationship between river and society.
This monograph offers an innovative approach to the study of the early Middle Ages, integrating social sciences, historical records, archaeological and geoenvironmental data analyses to overcome the lack of written and material sources. These new integrated perspectives on the post-Roman world shed light on the relationship between humans and their environment and on the social complexity of the riverscape, topics not yet fully investigated in the historiographical debate.
Author

Marco Panato

Marco Panato completed his PhD in History at the University of Nottingham in 2020. After a first post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Tübingen, he returned to Nottingham, where he is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow working on the historical ecology of the early medieval coastal marshes in Italy.