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communication, trade volume and motivations for choosing certain
locations as harbours while
dismissing others. One of the main questions is that of continuity or discontinuity of antique centres
in the Middle Ages. For this reason also environmental changes have to be considered. Basically the
aim is to depict an accurate and realistic image of ports of different dimensions on the background
of environmental conditions, edificial structures and the documentation of the trading volume.
The weighting of these categories of local and over-regional significance and the distribution of the
representatives of different types of ports will allow us to develop further the concept of separate, but
overlapping “shipping-zones” and to better understand the interaction of ports with the hinterland.
The transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages in
Dalmatia and Albania shows
basically the same features as most parts of the Roman world: the abandonment and depopulation
of once productive areas, the loss of territories to foreign people, the ruralization and fortification of
urban centres are by no means unique for the Adriatic. However, here we
can see how this transition
evolved in an almost exclusively sea-orientated part of the Roman/Byzantine oikumene that was
soon reduced to more or less isolated outposts on peninsulas and off-shore islands. Circulation
of people and goods decreased considerably in the course of the 6
th
century, but still, the Adriatic
periphery remained part of the supply network of the Byzantine world.
At first sight, the maritime
infrastructure conveys an image of relative continuity: many important harbours of Roman antiquity
(Durres, Zadar) kept their role in the Early Middle Ages while others (Salona, Epitaurum) were
replaced by others nearby (Split, Dubrovnik). The shift of settlements, however, was in most cases
not necessitated by deterioration of their harbour conditions but usually
due to hostile pressure
(even if local foundation myths unduly exaggerate the drama of the flight).
A closer look, however, makes more drastic changes of infrastructures obvious. Harbour towns
of secondary importance sometimes cease to exist after having suffered demolition by invaders
or economic downfall without being substituted by a nearby settlement. Even more telling is the
disappearance of the rich networks of small-scale landing places connected to the once large number
of flourishing villae and production sites. However, due to their often
favourable location from a
nautical point of view, many of them were revived in the Early Middle Ages and used as fortresses,
settlements or monasteries. Yet, contrary to Roman times, there is a remarkable renunciation of
veritable harbour architecture (quays, moles, warehouses) already from the 5
th
century onwards.
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