Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Conventions for the Representation of Names
- 1 Frisians of the Early Middle Ages: An Archaeoethnological Perspective
- 2 For Daily Use and Special Moments: Material Culture in Frisia, AD 400–1000
- 3 The Frisians and their Pottery: Social Relations before and after the Fourth Century AD
- 4 Landscape, Trade and Power in Early-Medieval Frisia
- 5 Law and Political Organization of the Early Medieval Frisians (c. AD 600–800)
- 6 Recent Developments in Early-Medieval Settlement Archaeology: The North Frisian Point of View
- 7 Franks and Frisians
- 8 Mirror Histories: Frisians and Saxons from the First to the Ninth Century AD
- 9 Structured by the Sea: Rethinking Maritime Connectivity of the Early-Medieval Frisians
- 10 Art, Symbolism and the Expression of Group Identities in Early-Medieval Frisia
- 11 Religion and Conversion amongst the Frisians
- 12 Traces of a North Sea Germanic Idiom in the Fifth–Seventh Centuries AD
- 13 Runic Literacy in North-West Europe, with a Focus on Frisia
- Final Discussion
- List of Contributors
- Index
3 - The Frisians and their Pottery: Social Relations before and after the Fourth Century AD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 June 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Conventions for the Representation of Names
- 1 Frisians of the Early Middle Ages: An Archaeoethnological Perspective
- 2 For Daily Use and Special Moments: Material Culture in Frisia, AD 400–1000
- 3 The Frisians and their Pottery: Social Relations before and after the Fourth Century AD
- 4 Landscape, Trade and Power in Early-Medieval Frisia
- 5 Law and Political Organization of the Early Medieval Frisians (c. AD 600–800)
- 6 Recent Developments in Early-Medieval Settlement Archaeology: The North Frisian Point of View
- 7 Franks and Frisians
- 8 Mirror Histories: Frisians and Saxons from the First to the Ninth Century AD
- 9 Structured by the Sea: Rethinking Maritime Connectivity of the Early-Medieval Frisians
- 10 Art, Symbolism and the Expression of Group Identities in Early-Medieval Frisia
- 11 Religion and Conversion amongst the Frisians
- 12 Traces of a North Sea Germanic Idiom in the Fifth–Seventh Centuries AD
- 13 Runic Literacy in North-West Europe, with a Focus on Frisia
- Final Discussion
- List of Contributors
- Index
Summary
Discontinuity and connections
THE BEGINNING of the present-day Frisians lies in the fifth century, when new inhabitants, conventionally called ‘Anglo-Saxons’, arrived in the virtually abandoned terp region of the northern Netherlands. The Frisians that are mentioned by Roman authors such as Tacitus (Germania, 34–5) and Pliny (Naturalis Historia, 16.2), and who inhabited the coastal areas of the present provinces North-Holland, Friesland and Groningen, had largely abandoned the area in the third century, moving probably to the south, where they may have joined Frankish groups (Taayke 2000).
In areas bordering the coastal salt-marsh area, in particular in Pleistocene northern Drenthe, inhabitation was continuous in this period, although maybe diminished (Nicolay and Den Hengst 2008, 584; Nieuwhof 2008b, 291–2). The correlation between continuity or not and these different landscapes is suggestive of the causes of the abandonment of the coastal region: changes in the landscape, especially increasing problems with drainage, may have been the stimulus. The salt marshes had developed over the centuries under the influence of the relative sea-level rise that the coastal areas from northern Germany to Flanders experienced from the beginning of the Holocene (Kiden et al. 2002; Vos and Knol 2015). The younger, northern parts were therefore much higher in elevation than the older salt marshes bordering the inland peat bogs. That caused increasing drainage problems in these older areas during the second and third centuries AD. While the terp settlements were well adapted to marine inundations that went as quickly as they came, long-term drainage problems were much harder to live with; they may have been the primary push-factor. The collapse of the Roman Empire was probably a pull-factor; it did not cause abandonment (in that case, inland areas would also have been abandoned), but it did provide new opportunities for the terp dwellers whose homelands had become too wet. Once the older and lower areas were abandoned, the well-drained parts of the salt marsh in the north also became less attractive because communities there lost a large part of their social network, and the social fabric disintegrated (Nieuwhof 2011). The remaining inhabitants, with some exceptions, left the area no later than AD 325 (e.g. at Wijnaldum: Gerrets and De Koning 1999, 99–106).
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- Frisians of the Early Middle Ages , pp. 45 - 78Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021