Modern Newcastle & Gateshead are renowned for coal a football club & a vibrant cultural scene; their pre-modern history is equally distinctive as the former was for centuries the pre-eminent north-east port trading across the North Sea focal point of regional society & the main military base for the eastern Scottish marches. This collection of essays by scholars eminent in their fields brings together under one cover the results of recent archaeological & historical research to reveal the vigour & variety of the early history of these settlements at the lowest bridging point of the Tyne. The topics covered include the spectacular economic growth that followed the building of the Norman castle & the halt caused by conflict with Scotland; the rise of the coal trade; the significance of religion & the influence of the bishops of Durham; the governance of the towns & the buildings to which this gave rise; the impact time after time of plague; the relations of local elites with wider regional society; & the financial & other networks within which both Newcastle & Gateshead operated which included London & the ports of northern Europe. A recurring theme is the rivalry between the communities either side of the Tyne. United by proximity & by the bridge that has spanned the river since the early 12th century they share a history that has always been a fraught combination of co-operation & conflict. By including them both in this new book & linking their varying fortunes up to the birth of modern times the collection does for the past what the Millennium Bridge does for the present & bears witness to a new spirit of harmony centred on the river.