
Contents
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Earthfast buildings Earthfast buildings
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The life cycle of the Anglo‐Saxon house The life cycle of the Anglo‐Saxon house
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Form, function, and the configuration of internal space Form, function, and the configuration of internal space
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Halls Halls
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Kitchens and bakehouses Kitchens and bakehouses
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Barns and granaries Barns and granaries
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Latrines Latrines
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Grubenhäuser (sunken‐featured buildings) Grubenhäuser (sunken‐featured buildings)
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The relationship between Grubenhäuser and earthfast timber buildings The relationship between Grubenhäuser and earthfast timber buildings
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References References
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9 Anglo‐Saxon Timber Buildings and their Social Context
Get accessHelena Hamerow is Professor of Early Medieval Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford.
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
Despite the great progress made in the fifty years since Radford described the study of timber buildings as ‘one of the most intractable problems in the whole range of early medieval studies’, key issues remain unresolved regarding their origins, construction, and function, and consideration of the relationship between buildings and the social life of Anglo-Saxon communities has scarcely begun. Apart from churches and a handful of high-status late Saxon buildings, timber construction — mostly using oak — continued to dominate during the mid and late Saxon periods. Convincing examples of halls, kitchens, bakehouses, barns, granaries and latrines have all been identified in Anglo-Saxon buildings. If most Grubenhäuser possessed suspended floors and could have been as substantial as earthfast buildings, then this has enormous implications for the interpretations of Anglo-Saxon settlements. The distinction between earthfast timber buildings and Grubenhäuser may yet prove to have been less rigid than archaeologists have tended to assume.
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