Transformacions i resiliències en el poblament de Catalunya a l’edat mitjana

  1. Bolòs, Jordi 1
  1. 1 Universitat de Lleida
    info

    Universitat de Lleida

    Lleida, España

    ROR https://ror.org/050c3cw24

Journal:
Estudis d'història agrària

ISSN: 0210-4830 2385-359X

Year of publication: 2023

Issue: 35

Pages: 13-49

Type: Article

More publications in: Estudis d'història agrària

Abstract

The ten centuries of the Middle Ages, in Catalonia, bore witness to many changes in its set-tlements. Significant breaks in continuity occurred, although at the same time there were a few noteworthy continuations. The Early Middle Ages saw the creation of a network of hamlets in tandem with the abandonment of the Roman villae (although the memory of the fundi lingered on). These habitats had to adapt to new political and economic reali-ties, after the conquests of the Arabs and Berbers (713-721), and Carolingian Franks (759-801). During the High Middle Ages, there were remarkable transformations both in soci-ety and in settlements with the construction of ecclesiastical villages, castral villages, and planned new towns. At the same time, in some regions, the number of scattered farm-steads increased dramatically. Also, hamlets continued to exist in the Pyrenean lands, and some settlements (e.g., villas and hamlets) from the rest of Catalonia became villages and farmsteads.