The bestselling author of The King in the North turns his attention
to the obscure era of British history known as 'the age of Arthur'.
Somewhere in the dim void between the departure from Britain of the
Roman legions at the start of the fifth century and the days of the
venerable Bede, the kingdoms of Early Medieval Britain were formed. But
by whom? And out of what?
Max Adams scrutinizes the narrative handed down to us by later
historians and chronicles, stripping away the most lurid nonsense about
Arthur and synthesizing the research of the last forty years to tease
out strands of reality from myth. His central theme evolves from an
apparently simple question: how, after the end of the Roman state, were
people taxed? Rejecting ethnic and nationalist explanations for the
emergence of the Early Medieval kingdoms, Adams shows how careful use of
a wide range of perspectives from anthropology to geography can deliver
a picture of the emergence of distinct polities in the sixth century
that survive long enough to be embedded in the medieval landscape,
recorded in the lines of river, road and watershed and in place names.