The Archaeology of Medieval EnglandBritish Museum Publications, 1984 - 224 pages |
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Page 27
... seen ( as , for example , at Upton , Gloucestershire , fig . 8 ) and often the boundaries between village and surrounding fields and the trackways leading into them are also visible . The plans produced by the surveys can be extremely ...
... seen ( as , for example , at Upton , Gloucestershire , fig . 8 ) and often the boundaries between village and surrounding fields and the trackways leading into them are also visible . The plans produced by the surveys can be extremely ...
Page 86
... seen below , though , that even today only a handful of the post - Conquest monastic sites excavated between 1956 and 1980 have concentrated on features other than church and cloister . Since 1956 more than 400 excavations have taken ...
... seen below , though , that even today only a handful of the post - Conquest monastic sites excavated between 1956 and 1980 have concentrated on features other than church and cloister . Since 1956 more than 400 excavations have taken ...
Page 97
... seen . The first house of the Cluniac Order in England was founded in 1077 at Lewes , Sussex , by William de Warenne , one of the Conqueror's Norman supporters . " Of the other thirty - one houses founded in England that of Bermondsey ...
... seen . The first house of the Cluniac Order in England was founded in 1077 at Lewes , Sussex , by William de Warenne , one of the Conqueror's Norman supporters . " Of the other thirty - one houses founded in England that of Bermondsey ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey Anglo-Saxon appear Archaeol archaeological archaeological evidence areas aspects Benedictine Beresford Biddle buildings built carried castles centres changing church Cistercian clay cloth common concentrated construction continued crofts discovered distribution documentary documentation domestic early eleventh England English evidence example excavation farm fields firing floor foundations fourteenth Goltho ground historical houses illustrated important increased indicate individual industry instance interest iron kilns known land late later London materials Medieval Archaeology medieval towns medieval village mentioned methods Middle Ages moated sites monasteries monastic motte needed Norman occupied orders origins parish particularly past peasant period population possible pottery present preserved probably produced question reasons recent remains result seems seen settlement shown sources standing stone Street structures suggest Sulgrave surrounded thirteenth century throughout tiles timber tion tower towns trade twelfth urban usually walls Winchester