This volume offers a new perspective on social dynamics and culture
change in the North Central European Plains (NCEP) from 600 to 900 CE.
It discusses long-term causal processes leading to the formation of
state at the fringes of the Merovingian and Frankish Kingdoms, the
Carolingian and the Holy Roman Empire, the Scandinavian Kingdoms, the
Czech Kingdom, and the Kingdom of Rus. The central problem addressed is
how to account for and explain the transition from noncomplex to
supra-tribal polities between 600 and 900 CE. The examined evidence
shows that a very basic community-level management of common pool
resources seems a successful strategy to manage short term risk and may
lead to sustainable higher level political organization. In conclusion
it present a models of social dynamics of the NCEP, 600-900 CE that
suggests that the state formation process was an outcome of spontaneous
processes and deterministic factors occurring within a period of
approximately 400 years, of which the last two hundred years (800-900
CE) were the most critical. In a broader context, the point discussed is
that decisions with short-term goals have long-term consequences.