Security and Settlement in the Mediaeval and Post-Mediaeval Peloponnese, Greece

'Hard' History versus Oral History

Authors

  • Hamish Forbes Nottingham University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v13i2.204

Keywords:

Methana, oral histories, fear

Abstract

Two recent publications have questioned the hypothesis that insecurity explains the later Ottoman period settlement pattern in the Greek Peloponnese. The present article re-examines the arguments against the demographic retreat hypothesis, focusing particularly on the evidence from a small case-study area, the peninsula of Methana. While previous discussion depended on historical documents, the present study incorporates material cultural and ethnographic evidence. It is argued that simple altitude zonation of settlements is an inadequate indicator of insecurity: the relationship of settlement to geomorphology, and non-settlement elements, such as hidden storage structures and details of house construction, contribute important evidence. However, the understanding of the meanings of all these elements is dependent on local ethnographic sources, especially oral histories. The article concludes that a genuine fear of attack explains the Methana settlement pattern, despite a lack of evidence that the fear was justified.

Author Biography

  • Hamish Forbes, Nottingham University
    Hamish Forbes is a Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Nottingham. His research has concentrated on traditional agrarian technology in Greece and on the links between archaeology and social anthropology. He also has interests in the history of Greek rural landscapes in the past few centuries. He first visited the Methana peninsula in 1971 and has returned there on numerous occasions. Following the publication of C.B. Mee and H.A. Forbes (eds.), 'A Rough and Rocky Place: The Landscape and Settlement History at the Methana Peninsula, Greece', he is currently engaged in research on the multiple meanings of landscapes, both in Methana and in rural Britain.

Published

2001-03-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Forbes, H. (2001). Security and Settlement in the Mediaeval and Post-Mediaeval Peloponnese, Greece: ’Hard’ History versus Oral History. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 13(2), 204-224. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v13i2.204

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