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E-grāmata: Rethinking Roundhouses: Later Prehistoric Settlement in Britain and Beyond

(Abercromby Professor Emeritus of Prehistoric Archaeology, University of Edinburgh)
  • Formāts: 288 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192645968
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  • Cena: 93,34 €*
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  • Formāts: 288 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 11-Jan-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192645968

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Excavated plans of roundhouses may compound multiple episodes of activity, design, construction, occupation, repair, and closure, reflecting successive stages of a building's biography. What does not survive archaeologically, through use of materials or methods that leave no tangible trace, may be as important for reconstruction as what does survive, and can only be inferred from context or comparative evidence. The great diversity in structural components suggests a greater diversity of superstructure than was implied by the classic Wessex roundhouses, including split-level roofs and penannular ridge roofs. Among the stone-built houses of the Atlantic north and west there likewise appears to have been a range of regional and chronological variants in the radial roundhouse series, and probably within the monumental Atlantic roundhouses too.

Important though recognition of structural variants may be, morphological classification should not be allowed to override the social use of space for which the buildings were designed, whether their structural footprint was round or rectangular. Atlantic roundhouses reveal an important division between central space and peripheral space, and a similar division may be inferred for lowland timber roundhouses, where the surviving evidence is more ephemeral. Some larger houses were evidently byre-houses or barn houses, some with upper or mezzanine floor levels, in which livestock might be brought in or agricultural produce stored. Such 'great houses' doubtless served community needs beyond those of the resident extended family.

The massively-increased scale of development-led excavations of recent years has resulted in an increased database that enables evaluation of individual sites in a wider landscape environment than was previously possible. Circumstances of recovery and recording in commercially-driven excavations, however, are not always compatible with research objectives, and the undoubted improvements in standards of environmental investigation are sometimes offset by shortcomings in the publication of basic structural or stratigraphic detail.

Recenzijas

While Rethinking Roundhouses provides a useful snapshot of the state of knowledge on the subject, its most exciting aspect lies in the author's suggestion that we should reconceptualise roundhouses in terms of both design and function. Rethinking Roundhouses will deservedly find its way on to the shelves of university libraries...I would recommend it to anyone with an interest in architecture and settlement in late prehistoric Britain. * Trevor Creighton, The Past *

List of Illustrations
xi
List of Abbreviations
xv
1 Landmarks in Roundhouse Studies
1(24)
Crannogs and Lake-Villages
2(6)
Wessex between the Wars
8(4)
Pimperne and Longbridge Deverill
12(2)
The 1970s: Experiment and Interpretation
14(2)
Survey and Excavation in the Tyne-Forth Region, c. 1948--1985
16(2)
Brochs, Fieldwork and Interpretation, 1980--2000
18(3)
Structuralism and Roundhouse Cosmology
21(4)
2 Twenty-First-Century Archaeology: Radical Change
25(20)
Archaeology, Science, and Technology
26(3)
A Change of Scale in Excavation
29(3)
Publication of Excavations
32(2)
Archaeological Theory
34(2)
`House Societies'
36(4)
Egalitarian or Hierarchical?
40(2)
Archaeology as Entertainment
42(1)
Archaeology and Climate Change
43(2)
3 Analysing and Interpreting Timber Roundhouses
45(43)
Some Key Sites
45(7)
Post-Ring, Double-Ring, and Central Post Construction
52(4)
Ring-Grooves and Wall-Slots
56(8)
`Drip-Gullies' and Drainage Trenches
64(1)
Floors and Internal Fittings
65(3)
Superstructure: Walls and Roofs
68(2)
Central Four-Posters
70(2)
Central Towers
72(2)
Multi-Ringed Roundhouses
74(2)
Houses with Ring-Ditches: Erosion, Storage, or Headroom?
76(4)
`Special' Roundhouses
80(8)
4 Analysing and Interpreting Stone-Built Roundhouses
88(25)
Brochs, Broch Towers, and Complex Atlantic Roundhouses
88(1)
An Architectural Perspective
89(3)
Canonical Brochs: A Traditionalist View Reasserted?
92(6)
The Problem of Non-Brochs with Broch Attributes
98(2)
`Simple' Atlantic Roundhouses
100(2)
Dun Houses
102(5)
Radial Roundhouses
107(6)
5 Roundhouses in Context: Settlements and Landscape
113(30)
The Thames Valley
114(8)
The English Midlands
122(6)
West Yorkshire
128(6)
The Northumberland Coastal Plain
134(5)
Roundhouses in Hillforts
139(4)
6 Archaeotectural Alternatives
143(22)
The Wessex Model Reviewed
143(3)
Oval Houses
146(1)
Figure-of-Eight, `Shamrocks' and Cellular Houses
147(8)
Houses That Leave Minimal Trace
155(3)
Rectangular Houses: Continuity or Change?
158(3)
Aisled Houses and Aisled Halls
161(3)
Conclusions
164(1)
7 Regional Diversity in Britain and Beyond
165(37)
Wales and the West
165(10)
Ireland
175(12)
Northern and North-Western France
187(11)
The Castro Culture of the Peninsular North-West
198(3)
Postscript
201(1)
8 Chronology, Origins, and Aftermath
202(25)
Neolithic Antecedents?
202(1)
Bronze Age Circular Structures in Northern Britain
203(9)
Middle and Late Bronze Age Structures in Southern England
212(3)
The Roman Iron Age
215(12)
9 Roundhouses: Space, Time, and Social Use
227(22)
Life-Cycle of Roundhouses
227(3)
Roundhouses and Round Houses
230(2)
Round and Rectangular: Squaring the Circle
232(2)
Change through Time
234(4)
Methodology and Theoretical Afterthoughts
238(4)
Roundhouses and Iron Age Society
242(29)
Bibliography 249
Index
271
D. W. Harding graduated from Keble College, Oxford in English Language and Literature before gaining his D. Phil under the supervision of Professor Christopher Hawkes. He was temporary Assistant Keeper in the Ashmolean Museum before being appointed lecturer in Archaeology at Durham University in 1966. He was Abercromby Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at Edinburgh University (1977-2007), serving as Dean of Arts (1983-6) and Vice-Principal of the University (1988-91). He has excavated later prehistoric sites from Wessex to the Western Isles, and had a particular interest in aerial archaeology, holding a current pilot's license for nearly thirty years.