Despite their historically attested importance as centres of agrarian and artisanal production in the
hinterland of the major towns, medieval rural settlements in the County of Flanders have seldom
been at the centre of academic archaeological studies. Only in recent years and building on
important methodological improvements in the field of landscape-archaeology, a more systematic
enquiry into the nature, diversity and transformation of medieval rural occupation forms and fieldsystems
has been developed. In this project we propose to explore in more detail one specific subtype
of medieval rural occupation, namely grouped rural settlements. Based on the case of the lost
ab nihilo planted site of Nieuw-Roeselare, the nature and spatio-temporal development of the site
will be assessed in a non-invasive way by applying a wide array of integrated landscapearchaeological
methods including historic map study, aerial photography, geophysical survey and
intra-site fieldwalking. The project will significantly contribute to, and add an important
methodological aspect to the debates on medieval rural settlements, planted villages and lost
villages in Flanders and Northwestern Europe.