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EAA 153: A Late Saxon Village and Medieval Manor [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 200 pages
  • Serija: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph 153
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Feb-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford Archaeology East
  • ISBN-10: 1907588051
  • ISBN-13: 9781907588051
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 200 pages
  • Serija: East Anglian Archaeology Monograph 153
  • Išleidimo metai: 05-Feb-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford Archaeology East
  • ISBN-10: 1907588051
  • ISBN-13: 9781907588051
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Botolph Bridge, now within urban Peterborough, lay beside an important crossing of the River Nene and once formed part of a well-known medieval vill, referenced in Domesday Book. Botolph Bridge was noted for its well preserved medieval earthworks but since the late 1980s these have gradually been destroyed by housing development.

Botolph Bridge, now within urban Peterborough, lay beside an important crossing of the River Nene and once formed part of a well-known medieval vill, referenced in Domesday Book. Botolph Bridge was noted for its well preserved medieval earthworks but since the late 1980s these have gradually been destroyed by housing development. An earthwork survey carried out in 1982 amply demonstrated the complexity and importance of the site, showing a church and manorial complex with house plots strung out along an adjacent road and fields separated from the main settlement by a hollow way. Excavation demonstrated that the manorial enclosure had replaced earlier house plots by c.1200. In the later 14th century, there was considerable investment by the manorial holders, the Draytons. A manorial farm was built above earlier fields, with stone buildings constructed around a courtyard including a farmhouse, dovecote and ancillary buildings. Within the manorial enclosure itself, further agricultural buildings were laid out. All these buildings had been abandoned by c.1600. The church, located just north of the excavation area, was finally demolished in 1695.
List of Contents
v
List of Plates
v
List of Figures
vi
List of Tables
vii
Abbreviations viii
Contributors viii
Acknowledgements ix
Summary/Resume/Zusammenfassung x
Chapter 1 Introduction
I Project Background
1(1)
II Geology and Topography
2(3)
III Archaeological Background
5(2)
IV Archaeological Interventions
7(2)
V Site Phasing and Presentation
9(1)
VI Research Objectives
9(2)
Chapter 2 Historical and Documentary Background
I Sources
11(1)
II Botolph Bridge
11(4)
III The Botolph Bridge Manors
15(2)
IV The de Vere, Drayton and Lovet Families
17(2)
V Manorial Court Rolls 1661--86
19(1)
VI Churches
20(1)
Chapter 3 The Archaeological Sequence
I Roman and Earlier
21(1)
II Period 1: Middle to Late Saxon (c.700--c.900)
21(5)
III Period 2: Late Saxon to Saxo-Norman (c.1000--c.1200)
26(16)
IV Period 3: Medieval (c.1200--c.1350)
42(15)
V Period 4: Late Medieval (c,1350-c.1500)
57(13)
VI Period 5: Post-Medieval (c,1500-c.1650)
70(3)
Chapter 4 The Finds
I Lithics
73(1)
Stephen Kemp
II Coins and Jetons
73(1)
Martin Allen
Adrian Popescu
III Metalwork
74(14)
Holly Duncan
IV Metalworking
88(1)
David Dungworth
V Glass
88(1)
Holly Duncan
VI Roman Pottery
89(1)
Stephen Macaulay
VII Post-Roman Pottery
89(17)
Paul Spoerry
VIII Ceramic and Stone Building Material
106(1)
Carole Fletcher
Rob Atkins
Steve Kemp
IX Quernstones, Rubbing Stones and Whetstones
106(2)
Stephen Kemp
Chapter 5 The Zoological and Botanical Evidence
I Animal and Bird Bones
108(8)
Ian L. Baxter
Chris Faine
II Fish Remains
116(2)
S. Hamilton-Dyer
III Marine Mollusca
118(2)
Jan Light
IV Pollen
120(1)
James Grieg
V Phosphate Analysis
121(1)
Paul Middleton
VI Plant Macrofossils and Other Remains
122(6)
A.J. Clapham
Chapter 6 General Discussion and Conclusions
I The Prehistoric and Roman Legacy
128(1)
II Roman to Saxon Continuity?
128(1)
III Middle Saxon Settlement Origins
129(1)
IV Late Saxon Settlement
130(2)
V The Transition from Late Saxon to Early Medieval
132(1)
VI Medieval Manors and Village
133(3)
VII Late Medieval Developments
136(3)
VIII Understanding Medieval Rural Building Plans
139(3)
IX Daily Life, Environment and Economy
142(3)
X Decline and Abandonment
145(1)
XI Conclusions
146(1)
Appendix 1 Characterisation of Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Pottery 147(12)
Alan Vince
Appendix 2 Catalogue of Coins and Tokens 159(1)
Martin Allen
Adrian Popescu
Appendix 3 Tables of Plant Macrofossils and Other Remains 160(10)
Alan Clapham
Bibliography 170(8)
Index 178
Sue Vaughan