A number of kingdoms formed in the area now called Wales in the post-Roman period.
The last structure to be built, perhaps during the post-Roman period, was a timbered hall, outside the courtyard.
Some were used in the post-Roman period.
For most of the post-Roman period, the nation of Wales was divided into several smaller states.
These defences were often reused during the unstable post-Roman period.
The human remains appear to have been redeposited, perhaps from a nearby cemetery, in the very late or even post-Roman period.
In the late and post-Roman periods, this commercial economy was disrupted and abandoned, returning to its former subsistence level.
In the post-Roman period, the largest catacomb was enlarged and turned into a small church.
The kingdom developed during the post-Roman period.
This tribal name carried on into the Roman and post-Roman periods.