Available Formats
The Origins of Anglo-Saxon Towns: A Viking Gift
By (Author) Dr Richard Hodges
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
History and Archaeology
Urban communities
Paperback
240
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Through a reconsideration of the debate about the archaeology of Anglo-Saxon towns, Richard Hodges focuses on the origins and history of the four Middle-Saxon emporia London, Ipswich, Southampton and York and the impact of the Viking Conquest in AD 866 on these towns.
To mark the occasion of the centennial of Henri Pirennes celebrated book, Medieval Cities (1925), Hodges reviews the influence of the Scandinavian model on Anglo-Saxon England in line with new archaeological and numismatic evidence, tracing the importance of the Viking conquerors to the formation of urban market-places in England. The crux of this study is to explore the question of when and how English early Medieval settlements gained a distinctive urban identity. And so, the emphasis is not just on markets, but also on civil defence.
Looking beyond England, this book reveals that the Danish urban model influenced the rise of towns in Flanders, setting an economic strategy that played a major part in the creation of what Pirenne described as Medieval Civilization. By asking questions about the political and economic situation of the 7th- to 10th-centuries, archaeology challenges key chapters in the canonical history of not just English urbanism but also the making of the European economy.
This exciting, original study outlines an argument with implications for the course of medieval European history. It weaves together a surprising new argument from an imaginative examination of a wealth of new data from Anglo-Saxon England, Continental Europe and Scandinavia. The result is a thesis as original as the Pirenne paradigm to which it pays homage. -- Sren M. Sindbk, Professor of Medieval Archaeology, Aarhus University, Denmark
Richard Hodges OBE is Emeritus President of The American University of Rome, Italy. He is the editor of the Debates in Archaeology series; and his publications include Dark Age Economics (2012), The Anglo-Saxon Achievement (1989), Towns and Trade in the Age of Charlemagne (2000), Goodbye to the Vikings (2006) and (as co-author) Villa to Village (2003), all published by Bloomsbury Academic. He has previously been Scientific Director of the Butrint Foundation, Albania, and Williams Director of the University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, USA.