Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

Bowhill, Exeter, Devon: The Archaeological Study of a Building Under Repair, 1977-1995 [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 393 pages, height x width: 276x219 mm, many b/w figs and pls
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Mar-2005
  • Izdevniecība: English Heritage
  • ISBN-10: 1873592604
  • ISBN-13: 9781873592601
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 94,16 €*
  • * Šī grāmata vairs netiek publicēta. Jums tiks paziņota lietotas grāmatas cena
  • Šī grāmata vairs netiek publicēta. Jums tiks paziņota lietotas grāmatas cena.
  • Daudzums:
  • Ielikt grozā
  • Pievienot vēlmju sarakstam
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 393 pages, height x width: 276x219 mm, many b/w figs and pls
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Mar-2005
  • Izdevniecība: English Heritage
  • ISBN-10: 1873592604
  • ISBN-13: 9781873592601
Bowhill is a late medieval country house located about a mile to the west of the centre of Exeter and was probably built c. 1500 by Roger Holland (c. 1450-1506). Its original owners were two important country families - first the Holland's in the fifteenth century and then the Carews in the early sixteenth century, under whose ownership it remained until the 1930s. The house underwent periods of extensive development and at various times was used as a family home, tenanted property, botanical nursery and finally, briefly, as a restaurant, all of which entailed many destructive alterations. By the mid-twentieth century suburban development had engulfed the site. The Department of the Environment finally rescued the building in 1976. The subsequent phase of repair carried out first under the auspices of the Directorate of Ancient Monuments and Historic Buildings and then of English Heritage, lasting almost twenty years, provided the opportunities for the study of the building that is the subject of this book. This book is extensively illustrated and its integrated approach to the study of the building will appeal to architectural historians, conservators, architects and others with professional and scholarly interests in historic buildings as well as to archaeologists.
Foreword vii
Bridget Cherry
Acknowledgements viii
Summary xi
Resume xi
Zusammenfassung xii
Abbreviations xiii
Preface xiv
Introduction: background and context
The site and its setting
1(1)
Early analysis of the building
1(2)
State ownership (1976-97)
3(1)
Circumstances of the work
3(2)
Work methods and report plan
5(2)
The anatomy of the building
7(8)
Pictorial and cartographic sources
15(329)
Historical outline
N W Alcock
S R Blaylock
The Holand family and property in the parish of St Thomas, Exeter
24(4)
The site in late medieval documents
28(2)
The Holand/Carew marriage
30(1)
Sixteenth-century evidence
30(1)
The Civil War - fortification of the site in 1645-6
30(1)
Later Carew ownership and residence
31(1)
Bowhill and Barley houses in the 17th and early 18th centuries
32(1)
The Bowhill and Barley estate
33(1)
Size of the Bowhill estate
33(2)
The Bowhill cottages
35(1)
Management of the estate in the 18th and 19th centuries
35(1)
Twentieth-century ownership and occupation
36(1)
The second Bowhill House (Lower Bowhill)
37(1)
Appendix: the executors' accounts for Sir Thomas Carew
38(5)
The excavations
Sequence of excavations
43(2)
Chronology of site periods
45(24)
General discussion of the excavations
69(4)
The standing building: description and analysis of the exterior
East elevation
73(6)
South elevation
79(4)
North elevation of south range
83(5)
West elevation
88(3)
North elevation of west range
91(2)
East elevation of west range
93(1)
West elevation of the east (hall) range, east side of courtyard
94(3)
The standing building: description and analysis of the interior
East range
97(10)
South range: ground floor
107(20)
West range: the kitchen
127(6)
South range: first floor
133(9)
West range: the first-floor room
142(1)
The standing building: description and analysis of the roofs
Introduction
143(2)
Structural aspects of the roofs
145(2)
The east range
147(4)
The south range
151(12)
The west range
163(3)
Roof coverings
166(3)
General discussion of the building
The plan
169(4)
Contemporaneity of parts of the building
173(1)
The evidence for a chapel
174(3)
General discussion of the roofs of Bowhill
177(13)
Other structural carpentry
190(3)
Discussion of other architectural features
193(6)
The finds
The pottery
199(7)
John Allan
The ridge tiles
206(5)
John Allan
The floor tiles
211(1)
John Allan
The clay tobacco pipes
211(1)
John Allan
Ironwork
211(1)
Non-ferrous metals
212(1)
Two spurs from Bowhill
212(2)
Blanche M A Ellis
Lead musket balls
214(1)
Leather shoe fragment
215(1)
Glynis Edwards
Textile fragments
215(1)
Alison Hopper-Bishop
The coins
216(1)
Norman Shiel
Window glass
216(1)
John Allan
Stuart Blaylock
Lead window cames
217(1)
Barry Knight
Architectural ironwork
218(5)
A fragment of architectural sculpture
223(3)
Architectural fragments
226(4)
Roofing slates and related materials
230(6)
Other wooden artefacts
236(6)
Metal window casement
242(1)
Dendrochronology and mortar analysis
Dendrochronological analysis of timbers from Bowhill
243(24)
Cathy Groves
Tree-ring analysis of timbers from four of the Exeter group of medieval roofs
267(9)
Robert Howard
Robert Laxton
Cliff Litton
Classification of mortars and plasters
276(7)
Stuart Blaylock
The development of the conservation progamme
J R Harrison
F P Kelly
Objectives
283(1)
Acquisition and chronology of repair campaigns
283(1)
Inspectorate proposals 1979-92
284(5)
The works
289(42)
Concluding discussion
The development of the site
331(13)
Appendix: the archive 344(2)
Notes 346(29)
Glossary 375(2)
References 377(9)
Index 386