Thornton, David E.Stafford, P.2019-04-232019-04-2320099781405106283http://hdl.handle.net/11693/50900Chapter 7The purpose of this chapter is to examine the local communities that existed in Britain and Ireland during the sub- and post-Roman periods. What was the nature of these communities? Should they be seen as population groups or territories? What were their internal dynamics and what were the personal networks that determined how their individual members interacted with one another? And how were such interactions, especially disputes, regulated by society? It is not an easy task to answer such questions for this particularly “dark” period: our extant historical documents are few and far between, and those that have survived are invariably later in date and not always reliable when dealing with the fi fth to eighth centuries. Furthermore, most of these sources are concerned primarily with the important kingdoms and their rulers, and have little to say about the lives of their more ordinary inhabitants.EnglishCommunities and kinshipFifth and sixth centuries, representing end of centralized Roman administration in WestPost‐Roman communities, squatting on Roman predecessorsAnglo‐Saxon chronicleKinship, representing fundamental social networkKinship, agnatic and patrilineal“hide” ‐ terra unius familiaeChristianity and canon law, influencing native legal traditionCommunities and kinshipBook Chapter10.1002/9781444311020.ch710.1002/97814443110209781444311020