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E-grāmata: Archaeology of Churches

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Amberley Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781445620008
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-May-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Amberley Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781445620008

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? Professor Rodwell is the foremost expert in church archaeology

? Full color throughout – over 240 color photographs

?Churches are a hugely popular subject, with best selling titles such as Simon Jenkins’ England’s Thousand Best Churches

Churches are Britain’s most completely surviving class of historic monument. They are also usually the oldest buildings within their settlements. As such, these structures, from parish churches to cathedral, from medieval to Georgian, are a huge architectural and archaeological resource.

The last couple of decades have witnessed an unprecedented upsurge of public interest in the historic environment, and the growth of the tourism and ‘heritage’ industries has focused new attention on churches. While some visitors to churches, cathedrals and monastic ruins seem content to wander around with little or no understanding of what they are looking at, many have an interest in learning about the history or usage of the building. How far does it go back? Where is the earliest part of the building? Warwick Rodwell discusses the archaeological techniques that can attempt to answer such questions.

In this highly illustrated, informative guide, Professor Rodwell explores the buildings themselves, their component parts, from doorways to turrets, their sites, furnishings, fixtures and fittings, as well as churchyards and monuments.

REVIEWS

'You will not regret purchasing (the book).'
Cathedral City Guide
Foreword 8(1)
Dr. John Hall
Preface 9(3)
Acknowledgements 12(2)
1 The Archaeological Study of Churches
14(18)
Chroniclers and early antiquaries
14(1)
Architectural and archaeological records before the nineteenth century
15(3)
Nineteenth-century scholarship
18(3)
Declining interest in the early twentieth century
21(2)
Revival: towards modern church archaeology
23(1)
World War II and its aftermath
24(3)
Church archaeology reborn
27(5)
2 Church Archaeology Today
32(22)
The quest for knowledge
32(3)
New opportunities for research
35(1)
Archaeology and the living church
36(4)
Redundancy and its aftermath
40(6)
The parameters of church archaeology
46(1)
The importance of church archaeology
47(2)
Organization and responsibility
49(1)
Embracing church archaeology
50(4)
3 Researching Historical and Antiquarian Sources
54(12)
Medieval records
54(4)
Records of destruction, from the Reformation to the Civil War
58(2)
Later church and antiquarian records
60(2)
Documentation of church restorations
62(2)
Record offices and local sources
64(2)
4 Churches and their Component Parts
66(26)
Single-celled buildings
66(2)
Nave
68(4)
Chancel
72(1)
`Quire', transepts and crossing
73(3)
Aisles and clerestories
76(1)
Towers and bell-cotes
77(3)
Side-chapels, vestries and other small appendages
80(2)
Porches
82(3)
Crypts
85(3)
Upper chambers
88(3)
Unconventional buildings
91(1)
5 The Archaeology of Construction
92(51)
Alignment, layout and topographical influences
92(9)
Foundations and walls
101(8)
Scaffolding and formwork
109(6)
Doorways and windows
115(4)
Great arches and arcades
119(2)
Buttresses, turrets and stairs
121(4)
Roofs and vaults
125(4)
Structural carpentry
129(6)
Reinforcement and repair
135(2)
Surface finishes
137(6)
6 The Archaeology of Fixtures and Fittings
143(46)
Doors
143(2)
Glazing
145(4)
Floors
149(6)
Ceilings
155(1)
Smaller architectural features and sculpture
156(8)
Screens, galleries and stairs
164(9)
Seating
173(4)
Decoration
177(3)
Belfries
180(3)
Church furniture
183(6)
7 Surveys of Churches
189(12)
Architects' surveys and reports
189(3)
General archaeological surveys
192(5)
Detailed archaeological surveys
197(4)
8 Recording the Fabric: Aims and Methods
201(27)
Preparing church plans
203(4)
Drawing elevations of walls
207(3)
Photogrammetric recording and related methods
210(2)
Drawing sections through buildings
212(2)
Recording roofs, vaults and structural timberwork
214(2)
Recording individual architectural features
216(2)
Mouldings
218(1)
Architectural sculpture and loose fragments
219(2)
Trade signatures, marks and graffiti
221(3)
The photographic record
224(2)
Geophysics and remote sensing
226(2)
9 Investigations into the Fabric
228(21)
Analyzing walls
228(4)
Enigmatic features
232(3)
Invasive archaeology
235(6)
Recycled components
241(3)
Incidental archaeology
244(4)
Archaeology and conservation
248(1)
10 Church Excavations
249(18)
Nature and limitations of the evidence
249(3)
Categories of evidence
252(13)
Archaeological investigation: the corollary
265(2)
11 Analyzing a Church's Evolution
267(29)
The plan
267(2)
Development of the plan - by addition
269(4)
Development of the plan - by contraction
273(2)
Stratified elevations in walls
275(2)
Inserted and cutaway features
277(3)
Roofs and upper parts
280(4)
Analysis: example 1, Dorchester Abbey
284(8)
Analysis: example 2, Barton-upon-Humber
292(4)
12 Churchyard Archaeology
296(14)
Churchyard layout
296(5)
Ancillary buildings in churchyards
301(4)
Churchyard excavation
305(2)
Churchyards in the landscape
307(3)
13 Bones, Burials and Monuments
310(29)
Burials inside churches
311(4)
Survival of the evidence
315(5)
Rites of burial
320(4)
Exhumation and relics
324(3)
The excavation of graves
327(4)
Monuments and tombstones
331(8)
14 Synthesis and Publication: Reconstructing History
339(16)
Safeguarding the record
339(2)
Analysis and synthesis
341(8)
Archaeological re-creation
349(3)
Publication
352(3)
Notes 355(9)
Bibliography 364(14)
Index 378
Professor Warwick Rodwell is a consultant archaeologist and architectural historian. He has published extensively on church archaeology. Warwick Rodwell is currently a Visiting Professor at the University of Reading and Consultant Archaeologist to Westminster Abbey, and the cathedrals of Bristol, Lichfield and Wells, and formerly to Glastonbury Abbey.