Medieval HousingLeicester University Press, 1997 - 230 pages The archaeological study of standing buildings is experiencing a welcome renaissance. This book outlines recent developments in the field and shows how they have contributed to our understanding of medieval domestic dwellings. Evidence from the buildings themselves, from excavation and from documentary sources is combined to provide an outline of the development of building techniques in the Middle Ages, and current knowledge about the housing of the rich, the middling sort and the poor is reviewed. The specific adaptations demanded of domestic dwellings in the growing context of towns are also discussed. |
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Page 84
... period ( Portchester , Netherton and Sulgrave ) . Figure 3.7 shows that foundations of earthfast posts in the earliest post - Roman period ( period 2 ) are replaced by shallow foundation trenches or beam slots presumably containing ...
... period ( Portchester , Netherton and Sulgrave ) . Figure 3.7 shows that foundations of earthfast posts in the earliest post - Roman period ( period 2 ) are replaced by shallow foundation trenches or beam slots presumably containing ...
Page 85
... Period 2. Two two - roomed houses , one with a yard to the north . ( b ) Period 3. A hall and bower with a putative weaving shed and possible kitchens and a further bower . ( c ) Period 4. Replacements of the period 3 buildings . ( d ) ...
... Period 2. Two two - roomed houses , one with a yard to the north . ( b ) Period 3. A hall and bower with a putative weaving shed and possible kitchens and a further bower . ( c ) Period 4. Replacements of the period 3 buildings . ( d ) ...
Page 109
... period , there are only five instances of lengths greater than 80 feet or 24.38 m , and the earliest of these dates to the very end of the fourteenth century . This exceptional example was , of course , Westminster Hall , which almost ...
... period , there are only five instances of lengths greater than 80 feet or 24.38 m , and the earliest of these dates to the very end of the fourteenth century . This exceptional example was , of course , Westminster Hall , which almost ...
Contents
the practicalities | 23 |
The postConquest hall | 66 |
The later medieval hall | 89 |
Copyright | |
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accommodation aisled Alcock analysis appearance archaeological architecture argument block buildings built carpentry Castle chamber chapter clear common complex considerable considered construction cross crown post cruck Currie detailed discussed documentary domestic door earlier earliest early England evidence example excavation existence fairly fifteenth century Figure first-floor floor fourteenth century framing function ground hall identified illustrate important instance interpretation joint kitchen known late later longhouse major Manor material medieval Middle notes original parallel passage peasant perhaps period plate position possible problem produced purlin rafters range recent record referred remains represent roof rooms seems seen separate shows significance Smith social solar sometimes space standing stone street structures suggests techniques thirteenth century tiebeam timber timber framing timber-framed town upper wall West whilst Wood York