6533b861fe1ef96bd12c450f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Early Middle Ages Houses of Gien (France) from the Inside: Geoarchaeology and Archaeobotany of 9th–11th c. Floors

Rowena BanerjeaSabrina SaveTerry BallAlys Vaughan-williamsMélinda BizriColine LejaultQuentin Borderie

subject

010506 paleontologyArcheology[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and PrehistoryDark earthEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)01 natural sciencesmacro-remainstownPaleoethnobotanycastle11. SustainabilityphytolithsMicromorphology0601 history and archaeologyMiddle Agesdark earth0105 earth and related environmental sciences[SHS.ARCHI]Humanities and Social Sciences/Architecture space management060102 archaeologyGeoarchaeology06 humanities and the arts15. Life on landcrop processing[SDE.ES]Environmental Sciences/Environmental and SocietyArchaeologyGeography[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologyurban

description

International audience; At Gien (France), indoor floors from early Middle Ages occupation (8th–10th c. AD) are very well preserved, providing a new reference for archaeological investigation in northern France. This site is located on an outcrop, 20 m above the Loire valley, where a 15th c. castle stands now. The medieval occupation combines high-status houses with crafting and agricultural areas. They constitute a new urban nucleus, which grew 2 km east from an ancient Roman settlement. During the rescue excavation, four buildings of different status were sampled and studied using an integrated approach, combining stratigraphy, micromorphology, chemical, macro-remain and phytolith analyses. Micromorphological investigations helped to identify 74 built floors, from 0.5 to 150 mm thick, made with transformed local clay or imported silty earth. Mineral floors were covered by vegetal ones, consisting of crop processing refuse. These litters include an abundance of phytoliths and some seeds, both produced by cultivated cereals, which were processed in situ, such as Triticum durum, Secale cereale and Hordeum vulgare. The refuse above the mineral and vegetal floors were trampled. They were produced not only by domestic activities, such as cooking and eating, but also by metallurgic activities and animal husbandry. The investigation of a contemporary pit indicated that, despite the large amount of refuse, floors were well maintained and regularly rebuilt. The spatial distribution of waste indicated that a single space could be dedicated to several activities, which were not necessarily separated by new floors. Moreover, the total absence of bioturbation allowed the study of a stage of dark earth formation, by comparing it to the contemporaneous mechanical disturbance of a part of the strata which occurred when building new floors. All these results give new evidence of the richness and the complexity of the early Middle Ages town, in addition to help identifying the activities which could take place in early castral areas.

https://doi.org/10.1080/14614103.2018.1534716