The Early Norman Castles of the British Isles (Illustrations)Oliver And Boyd, Edinburgh, 2015 M04 3 - 269 pages Example in this ebook The study of earthworks has been one of the most neglected subjects in English archæology until quite recent years. It may even be said that during the first half of the 19th century, less attention was paid to earthworks than by our older topographical writers. Leland, in the reign of Henry VIII., never failed to notice the “Dikes and Hilles, which were Campes of Men of Warre,” nor the “Hilles of Yerth cast up like the Dungeon of sum olde Castelle,” which he saw in his pilgrimages through England. And many of our 17th- and 18th-century topographers have left us invaluable notices of earthworks which were extant in their time. But if we turn over the archæological journals of some fifty years ago, we shall be struck by the paucity of papers on earthworks, and especially by the complete ignoring, in most cases, of those connected with castles. The misfortune attending this neglect, was that it left the ground open to individual fancy, and each observer formed his own theory of the earthworks which he happened to have seen, and as often as not, stated that theory as a fact. We need not be surprised to find Camden doing this, as he wrote before the dawn of scientific observation; but that such methods should have been carried on until late in the 19th century is little to the credit of English archæology. Mr Clark’s work on Mediæval Military Architecture (published in 1884), which has the merit of being one of the first to pay due attention to castle earthworks, counterbalances that merit by enunciating as a fact a mere guess of his own, which, as we shall afterwards show, was absolutely devoid of solid foundation. The scientific study of English earthworks may be said to have been begun by General Pitt-Rivers in the last quarter of the 19th century; but we must not forget that he described himself as a pupil of Canon Greenwell, whose careful investigations of British barrows form such an important chapter of prehistoric archæology. General Pitt-Rivers applied the lessons he had thus learned to the excavation of camps and dykes, and his labours opened a new era in that branch of research. By accumulating an immense body of observations, and by recording those observations with a minuteness intended to forestall future questions, he built up a storehouse of facts which will furnish materials to all future workers in prehistoric antiquities. He was too cautious ever to dogmatise, and if he arrived at conclusions, he was careful to state them merely as suggestions. But his work destroyed many favourite antiquarian delusions, even some which had been cherished by very learned writers, such as Dr Guest’s theory of the “Belgic ditches” of Wiltshire. A further important step in the study of earthworks was taken by the late Mr I. Chalkley Gould, when he founded the Committee for Ancient Earthworks, and drew up the classification of earthworks which is now being generally adopted by archæological writers. This classification may be abridged into (a) promontory or cliff forts, (b) hill forts, (c) rectangular forts, (d) moated hillocks, (e) moated hillocks with courts attached, (f) banks and ditches surrounding homesteads, (g) manorial works, (h) fortified villages. To be continue in this ebook |
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... BY HENRY I. 392 R. THE SO - CALLED SHELL KEEP 393 S. PROFESSOR LLOYD'S " HISTORY OF WALES " 393 SCHEDULE OF ENGLISH CASTLES FROM THE ELEVENTH CENTURY 396 INDEX 401 FIG. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND PLANS Motte-Castles from the Bayeux.
... that it got that meaning because the fortified towns, the only ones which were called burhs or burgi, were the first to be enfranchised, and while the fortifications have become less and less important , the franchise has.
... called in contemporary records fif burga , the five boroughs . [ 37 ] Burh is a noun derived from the word beorgan , to protect . Undoubtedly its primitive meaning was that of a protective enclosure . As in the case of the words tun ...
... called a burgus, that is a fortified town, and that our word borough is lawfully descended from it. It would not have been necessary to spend so much time on the history of the word burh if this unfortunate word had not been made the ...
... called the Icknield way . On a peninsula which now runs out into the great fens of the Cam and the Ouse there is still a village called Wicken , 6 miles west of the Roman road ; and possibly , when the land surrounding this peninsula ...
Contents
APPENDIX D THE WORDS CASTRUM AND CASTELLUM | |
APPENDIX E THE BURGHAL HIDAGE | |
APPENDIX F THELWALL | |
APPENDIX G THE WORD BRETASCHE | |
APPENDIX H THE WORDS HURDICIUM AND HORDIARI | |
APPENDIX I HERICIO ERICIO HERITO HERISSON | |
APPENDIX K THE CASTLE OF YALE | |
APPENDIX L THE CASTLE OF TULLOW OR COLLACHT p 335 | |
CHAPTER VIII MOTTECASTLES IN NORTH WALES | |
CHAPTER IX MOTTECASTLES IN SOUTH WALES | |
CHAPTER X MOTTECASTLES IN SCOTLAND | |
CHAPTER XI MOTTECASTLES IN IRELAND | |
CHAPTER XII STONE CASTLES OF THE NORMAN PERIOD | |
APPENDICES | |
APPENDIX B WATLING STREET AND THE DANELAGH | |
APPENDIX C THE MILITARY ORIGIN OF ALFREDS BOROUGHS | |
APPENDIX M THE CASTLE OF SLANE | |
APPENDIX N THE WORD DONJON | |
APPENDIX O THE ARRANGEMENTS IN EARLY KEEPS | |
APPENDIX P KEEPS AS RESIDENCES | |
APPENDIX Q CASTLES BUILT BY HENRY I | |
APPENDIX R THE SOCALLED SHELL KEEP | |
APPENDIX S PROFESSOR LLOYDS HISTORY OF WALES | |
SCHEDULE OF ENGLISH CASTLES KNOWN TO DATE FROM THE ELEVENTH CENTURY1207 | |
INDEX | |