The historic character of a depopulating borderland: historic landscape characterisation on the Duero river
Fecha
2022Versión
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Tipo
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa
Identificador del proyecto
Impacto
|
10.1080/01426397.2022.2089351
Resumen
International borderland landscapes have a shared history through the movement of ideas, people, culture, and even conflict. Understanding the similarities and nuanced differences of temporal landscape change between frontiers requires approaches that can effectively detail and explain the territorial evolution of both countries. Historic Landscape Characterisation (HLC) is a valuable methodologi ...
[++]
International borderland landscapes have a shared history through the movement of ideas, people, culture, and even conflict. Understanding the similarities and nuanced differences of temporal landscape change between frontiers requires approaches that can effectively detail and explain the territorial evolution of both countries. Historic Landscape Characterisation (HLC) is a valuable methodological tool originally used for landscape studies in the United Kingdom. Its application outside of Britain has been limited. In this pilot study, HLC is used in the Duero River borderland context of Spain and Portugal. It is a rural region with a common history, but it also presents new methodological challenges in the acquisition of source data and the creation of a typology that effectively characterises the region while also recognising the distinctiveness between nations. This research presents the development of the classes and broad types chosen for this analysis and demonstrates their diachronic evolution to the present. [--]
Materias
Historic landscape characterisation,
Portugal,
Spain,
Borderlands,
Rural,
Depopulation
Editor
Taylor & Francis Online
Publicado en
Landscape Research, 2022
Departamento
Universidad Pública de Navarra. Departamento de Ciencias Humanas y de la Educación /
Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa. Giza eta Hezkuntza Zientziak Saila
Versión del editor
Entidades Financiadoras
Navarra and support from the Institute for Advanced Social Science Research (I-COMMUNITAS). Additional financial support is from the project LOKI (Local Economies, Imperial Economy: Western Iberia (II B.C.-II A.D.)) [PID2019-104297GB-I00]. We are grateful for the support from Almudena Orejas of the Spanish National Research Council, Eloísa Ramírez of the Universidad Pública de Navarra, and Sam Turner, Alex Turner, and Niels Dabaut of Newcastle University.