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Homes and Hearths: Everyday Life in the Dark Ages MTA
Material culture, food, family, and domestic spaces from village to town
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Homes and Hearths: Everyday Life in the Dark Ages "Homes and Hearths: Everyday Life in the Dark Ages" offers a comprehensive exploration of domestic life in early medieval Europe, moving beyond traditional historical narratives of kings and battles to focus on the tangible realities of ordinary existence. The book synthesizes archaeological finds, paleoecological data, and legal texts to reconstruct the daily routines, material culture, and social structures within homes from villages to burgeoning towns. It argues that the "Dark Ages" were not a period of obscurity but a time of ingenious adaptation, resilience, and profound human presence, illuminated by the details of daily life.

The book details the intimate relationship between people and their domestic spaces, examining diverse house forms across regions, from sunken-featured buildings and timber halls to longhouses and urban row houses. It explores the labor-intensive processes of building with timber, earth, and stone, emphasizing the communal effort and local resourcefulness involved. Central to every dwelling was the hearth, which served not only as a source of heat and light but also as the engine for daily cooking, craft production, and a focal point for family and faith. The text meticulously describes foodways, from the seasonal cycles of farming and foraging to the preparation of staples like bread, pottage, and ale, alongside the crucial techniques of preservation using salt, smoke, and fermentation.

Beyond physical structures and sustenance, the book delves into the social dimensions of the household. It analyzes the complex web of kinship and marriage, revealing how legal custom and property shaped family units and broader community networks. The chapters explore childhood, from birth and care to play and early integration into labor, and delineate the fluid and often overlapping roles of women, men, and dependents—including servants, tenants, and slaves—in the household economy. The pervasive presence of risk from disease, fire, famine, and war underscores the constant struggle for security, while rituals of faith, hospitality, and communal celebration provided moments of respite and reinforced social bonds.

Finally, the book concludes by reflecting on the methodologies used to reconstruct this past, highlighting the synergistic power of archaeology, ecofact analysis (like charred seeds and animal bones), and the often-overlooked insights gleaned from early medieval law codes. This multidisciplinary approach allows for a nuanced understanding of a world where every object, every meal, and every social interaction was imbued with purpose and meaning. "Homes and Hearths" paints a vivid, sensory picture of daily life, transforming a dimly perceived historical era into a vibrant and intimately understood human experience.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Domestic architecture across regions: Explores varied house forms from sunken-featured buildings to timber halls and longhouses, showing how local materials, climate, and culture shaped living spaces
  • Daily rhythms of household life: Details the unbroken cycle of chores from water collection and fire-tending to food preparation, craft work, and animal care that structured each day
  • Foodways from field to hearth: Traces seasonal farming cycles, foraging practices, food preservation techniques, and the preparation of staples like bread, pottage, and ale
  • Family and kinship structures: Examines marriage customs, inheritance laws, child-rearing practices, and the economic roles of women, men, children, and dependents within the household
  • Material culture and domestic tools: Highlights how pottery, knives, looms, and other household objects reveal technological skill, social status, and the continuous work of making and maintaining a home
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students and scholars of medieval history, archaeology, and anthropology who seek to understand everyday life beyond kings and battles. It will also appeal to general readers interested in social history, material culture, and domestic life in pre-modern societies. Those studying foodways, family structures, or technological innovation in historical contexts will find particularly valuable insights. The interdisciplinary approach combining archaeology, paleoecology, and legal texts makes it useful for researchers needing methodological examples of reconstructing past daily life.

Author:

Ann Washington

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 22, 2026

Word Count:

81,290 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 42 minutes

Sample:

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