Abstract Submission is now Live
Follow the link to our abstract submission site - you will need to create a contact record and work your way through the submission steps. When you are happy with your submission don't forget to submit.
If you see a red triangle next to your submission this just means it is still open to edit until the deadline of 10 April 2026.
War: What is it Good For? Conflict and Defence in Roman Iron Age and Early Medieval Europe
Considering both conflict and defence in archaeology illuminates how human societies experience, organise, and respond to violence, examining both the traces of conflict itself and the structures built to resist or manage it.
Originating from early antiquarian interest in fortifications and traditional military history, the field has grown into a multidisciplinary endeavor that integrates battlefield studies, fortification analysis, environmental reconstruction, and the study of social responses to warfare. Over time, archaeologists have shifted from cataloguing weapons, ramparts, and battlefield deployment to exploring the wider landscapes of conflict and defence, using tools such as GIS, LiDAR, geophysics, and forensic analysis to reveal how conflict and defence shapes terrain, settlement patterns, and long-term cultural experience and memory.
Modern approaches emphasise not only the physical evidence of battles, trauma, and defensive architecture, but also the social, political, and ideological contexts in which these forms of material culture were created and used. This holistic perspective underscores how conflict and defence influence identity, power relations, movement through landscapes, and the structuring of communities across the longue durée.
Call for Abstracts
Reflecting this broadening scope, the Conference will bring together scholars to explore a range of interconnected themes in Roman Iron Age and Early Medieval Europe, including:
- Conflict archaeology
- Defence
- Hillforts and defended settlements
- Burial record and weaponry
- Material culture
- The iconography of conflict
- Socio-anthropological models of warfare
- The longue durée: conflict in the long-term
- Kingship, clientship and warrior culture
Through the meeting of our society and sustained dialogue the conference will aim to highlight the rich and evolving ways in which history, archaeology and scientific approaches continues to deepen our understanding of human conflict and defence across the Roman and early medieval periods. The conference will showcase recent developments in the study of fortified settlements in late Roman and early medieval Britain, alongside talks from colleagues across Europe that will explore the broader themes of the conference.
Abstracts reflecting the conference themes and invited, and submission can be of up to 300 words. The deadline for submissions is 10 April 2026.
Abstract Submission is now Live
Follow the link to our abstract submission site - you will need to create a contact record and work your way through the submission steps. When you are happy with your submission don't forget to submit.
If you see a red triangle next to your submission this just means it is still open to edit until the deadline of 10 April 2026.