Early Medieval Britain was more Roman than we think. The Roman Empire
left vast infrastructural resources on the island. These resources lay
buried not only in dirt and soil, but also in texts, laws, chronicles,
charters, even churches and landscapes. This book uncovers them and
shows how they shaped Early Medieval Britain. Infrastructures, material
and symbolic, can work in ways that are not immediately obvious and
exert an influence long after their creators have gone. Infrastructure
can also rest dormant and be reactivated with a changed function, role
and appearance. This is not a simple story of continuity and
discontinuity: It is a story of adaptation and transformation, of how
the Roman infrastructural past was used and re-used, and also how it
influenced the later societies of Britain.