The initial work consisted of a training programme. The Fellow was provided specialist training in the use of GIS the application of HLC and the use of various remote sensing techniques by members of the McCord Centre at Newcastle University.
Following the Training phase, the Fellow collated the data required to conduct the HLC of the Core Case Study. These data were then integrated into the project GIS. Where these data did not have geographical information to line them up with the geographic co-ordinates of modern mapping, it was necessary to link them up through a process known as geo-referencing. This process was carried out for the 1826 Napoleonic Cadastral maps, which provided a window onto the pre-industrial landscape of the region. An Access Database was created to store the information for the HLC. As this was the first time a HLC had been conducted on this area of France, it was necessary to establish the character types of the region. When all of this preparatory work had been completed, work began on dividing the landscape into distinctive character types. The results were then interrogated to highlight specific changes or trends, and this allowed for the production of maps which informed our understanding of this landscape over time. In order to ensure accuracy in the HLC, a process known as ‘ground-truthing’ was carried out, which involved fieldwork on the ground in the study area to test certain hypotheses.
The Core Case Study was followed by an initial Comparative Study of the landscape setting of the monastery of Luxeuil, also founded by St. Columbanus. A similar process was undertaken for this area (data collation, integration into GIS, Access Database, completion of HLC). A further comparative case study of the monastery of Bobbio was delayed by issues with the Secondment host, however, the required data to complete this comparative HLC has, been obtained and the comparative case study is currently underway.
Results: In the case of Annegray it has been demonstrated that for the periods following the Early Medieval period the land was subject to extensive agricultural exploitation – there are also indications that this was the case in the period preceding the Early Medieval Period. This would suggest that the landscape that Annegray was located in was heavily exploited, and thus inhabited, upon Columbanus’ arrival. In the case of Luxeuil, this has been demonstrated even more emphatically. Thus not only has the description by Jonas of Bobbio of these two locations as deserts been shown to be false, but a more accurate image of the actual landscape in which this important religious and political actor was functioning has been provided.