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E-grāmata: Lincoln Castle Revealed: The Story of a Norman Powerhouse and its Anglo-Saxon Precursor

  • Formāts: 256 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Oxbow Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789257380
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  • Cena: 16,91 €*
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  • Formāts: 256 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Oxbow Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789257380

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This book tells a new story of the royal castle of Lincoln in the north of England, how it was imposed on the late Anglo-Saxon town, and how it developed over the next 900 years in the hands of the English king or his aristocratic associates, leaving us a surviving monument of three great towers, each with its own biography. Led by FAS Heritage, archaeologists, architectural historians and a large cohort of the general public have combined to produce a revealing and accessible account of the story of Lincoln Castle and a reborn historical attraction for the city of Lincoln.

Accessible, lavishly illustrated history of Lincoln Castle, from the Roman period through to the 20th century incorporating the results of numerous archaeological excavations.

Recenzijas

[ T]he volume provides a much needed and significant addition to the panoply of published British urban castles (including Oxford and Norwich) and is a fine example of its type. * Speculum * The book caters for the specialist and non-specialist alike It is lavishly illustrated with photographs, diagrams, maps, tables and reconstructions, making it a book to which the reader will want to keep going back A good benchmark for how a well-funded excavation should be presented to the public. * The Local Historian * A book youll want to return to again and again, as it takes you on a journey deep into the heart and soul of this most remarkable place. * Lincoln Archaeology * The book is superbly balanced while the archaeology is explored in a good level of detail, the text retains an accessible and engaging style throughout that will appeal to a broad audience. Wonderfully illustrated with colour photos, maps and plans, this high quality volume represents a fitting tribute to one of Europes most exceptional castles. * Lincolnshire Past & Present * It's very good, accessible yet scholarly [ ] The material on the prison is fascinating. * British Archaeology * The text is written specifically to avoid specialist terminology (there is a glossary at the back) and to be intelligible to a wider readership. Full colour is used to stunning effect throughout, with as much emphasis on representations of the archaeological process as results. It is a real achievement to present such a comprehensive account so concisely as well as attractively. Visually stunning and combining communication of new primary research with a concise, accessible text, the volume is a model of its type and highly recommended. * Medieval Archaeology *

List of illustrations ix
List of tables xiv
Foreword xv
Preface xvi
Acknowledgements xvii
Picture credits xix
1 The campaign to reveal Lincoln Castle 1(12)
Introduction
1(1)
Opportunity
1(4)
Research incentives
3(1)
Community involvement
4(1)
A guide to this book
4(1)
Overview
5(8)
Before the Romans
5(2)
Roman Lincoln
7(2)
Post-Roman and Anglo-Saxon Lincoln
9(1)
The medieval castle
9(1)
Coda: Lincoln Castle into the 21st century
10(3)
2 The Roman fortress and colonia 13(16)
Introduction
13(1)
The legionary fortress
14(3)
Remains of the fortress in the grounds of Castle Moat House
14(3)
The Roman colonia
17(5)
Archaeological observations made in the grounds of Castle Moat House
17(1)
The Roman colonia beneath the castle
17(1)
Structures 13 and 14, Roman 'strip' houses
18(2)
Structure 15, a late Roman townhouse
20(2)
Significant Roman finds
22(2)
A statue of Domitian?
23(1)
Life in the townhouse
24(1)
The end of Roman Lincoln
24(5)
3 The city beneath the castle 29(20)
Roman to medieval in the Upper City
29(1)
Early medieval settlement before the castle
30(3)
The lost cemetery and church or chapel
33(9)
Burial 9
35(1)
Burial 1, the foundation burial
35(1)
Burial 11
36(1)
Burial 3
37(1)
Burial 2
37(1)
Burial 6, with Burial 7
38(1)
Burial 4
39(1)
Burial 5, the sarcophagus burial
39(3)
The sarcophagus
42(1)
Who lived and died in the former Roman city? Portrait of a community
42(2)
The documentary context of the Masons' Yard church or chapel
44(5)
4 The early castle and the Lucy Tower 49(18)
An introduction to Lincoln Castle
49(2)
Lincoln and the Norman Conquest
51(1)
The early castle
51(3)
The southern enclosure and the lost South Gate
52(2)
The Lucy Tower
54(13)
Countess Lucy
54(1)
The pike mark
54(1)
A study of the shell-keep
55(1)
Inside the Lucy Tower
56(1)
The lost chambers
56(11)
5 The castle gates and walls 67(18)
Introduction
67(1)
West Gate
68(4)
West Gate barbican and tower
71(1)
East Gate
72(4)
The Magna Aula or Great Hall
76(2)
The castle walls
78(7)
East curtain wall
78(1)
North curtain wall
79(1)
West curtain wall
80(5)
6 The Observatory Tower 85(18)
East Range
85(1)
Ranulf's Tower
86(6)
Lincoln Castle and the Anarchy
87(3)
Structures 9 and 10
90(2)
The gaol tower
92(3)
Feasting at Lincoln Castle - the 12th-century midden
95(8)
A commentary on the dice, by Mark Hall
96(1)
A commentary on the animal bones, by Matilda Holmes
97(6)
7 Cobb Hall and the last flowering of the medieval castle 103(14)
Historical introduction, from King John to Henry III
103(3)
Strengthening a fortress
106(1)
Cobb Hall, a new tower
107(5)
Martial
108(1)
Official
108(3)
Regal
111(1)
All the king's horses, the castle stables, mill and brewhouse
112(1)
Cobb Hall and Lincoln Castle in the Civil War
112(5)
8 Lincoln Castle recreated 117(24)
The Old Gaol and County Hall
118(1)
The Georgian gaol, 1785-1788
118(5)
The gaol yards
122(1)
The 1820s debtors' yard or airing court
123(1)
The new debtors' yard
123(1)
Keepers of the gaol
124(1)
The 1840s prison
125(5)
The Eastern Courtyard
127(3)
Death and burial
130(1)
Romantic ruins
131(2)
Governor John Merryweather and the gentrification of Lincoln Castle
131(2)
E.J. Willson and Lincoln Castle recreated
133(2)
Lincoln Castle into the 21st century
135(6)
9 Legacy 141(6)
Overview
141(6)
The Roman to Anglo-Scandinavian Upper City
141(2)
The medieval castle
143(1)
Rebirth: the Lincoln Castle Revealed project
144(3)
Digest of evidence 147(74)
General
147(6)
1 Glossary of terms
147(3)
2 Master index to interventions
150(3)
Roman
153(15)
3 Roman pottery, Ian M. Rowlandson
153(5)
4 Roman finds, H.E.M. Cool
158(5)
5 Roman glass, H.E.M. Cool
163(3)
6 Roman coin list, Craig Barclay
166(1)
7 Roman spindle whorl, Penelope Walton Rogers
167(1)
Anglo-Saxon, medieval and later
168(53)
8 Post-Roman pottery, Jane Young
168(14)
9 The human bone, Shirley Curtis-Summers
182(11)
10 Multi-isotope analysis, Mandy Jay and Janet Montgomery with data reporting by Derek Hamilton and Kerry Sayle
193(8)
11 Radiocarbon dating, stable isotope analyses and Bayesian modelling, Derek Hamilton and Kerry Sayle
201(6)
12 Evidence for textiles, Penelope Walton Rogers
207(2)
13 Medieval and later finds, Cecily Spa11
209(12)
Bibliography 221(10)
Index 231
Jonathan Clark is a buildings archaeologist and architectural historian who has spent much of his career researching, recording and analysing medieval castles, houses and monasteries across the British Isles. He has been researching Lincoln Castle for over 20 years and is Lincoln Cathedral Archaeologist. Justin Garner-Lahire is the managing director at FAS Heritage, an archaeological research practice founded in 1993. He has excavated extensively on medieval sites in England and Scotland, having led major excavations at Castle Sinclair Girnigoe, Lincoln Castle and Somerton Castle. Cecily Spall is a senior archaeological researcher in FAS Heritage who has excavated, studied and published numerous medieval stratified sequences in Britain, famously at Portmahomack, Easter Ross where she was the leading co-director. Nicola Toop studied the early medieval Irish Sea region for her PhD and is a long-term researcher at FAS Heritage involved in archaeological and documentary research at castles and monasteries, such as Lincoln Castle and Bolton Abbey.