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Trans Ancient Monuments Soc 38
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Trans Ancient Monuments Soc 38
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Transactions of the Ancient Monuments Society
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
38
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
1994
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The British Archaeological Bibliography (BAB))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
20 Jan 2002
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Ivor Bulmer-Thomas 1905-93: in memoriam
1 - 14
Extensive tribute to Ivor Bulmer-Thomas, whose wide range of interests and achievements included being and active member of the Ancient Monuments Society, inspiration for -- and first chairman of -- the Redundant Churches Fund, Member of Parliament, member of the General Synod, and author. Firstly, the text of a `Memorial address' by the Marquess of Anglesey (2-6), is printed, followed by `Thoughts on Ivor Bulmer-Thomas' by John H Harvey (6-8), `An appreciation' by Matthew Saunders (8-11) and more detail of his work for `The Redundant Churches Fund' by John Bowles (11-14).
Wesley's chapel, City Road, Islington: anniversary address 1993
Christopher Stell
15 - 29
The chapel was built in 1777-78 as a replacement for previous Methodist buildings. The name of its architect remains a matter for conjecture, but its influence on other chapels in the denomination is evident. It has been `improved' on several occasions, but retains its basic characteristics.
Listing in Scotland: origins, survey and resurvey
David M Walker
31 - 96
Listing officially began in Scotland in 1945 with the adoption of lists of traditional urban dwellings of the sixteenth-eighteenth-centuries prepared for the National Trust for Scotland in 1936-39 and resulting in differences of usage between England and Scotland that still exist. From 1945 listing policy, as in England, was determined by the Maclagan Committee, adapted for Scottish conditions. Provisional lists covering the whole of Scotland were produced from 1948, with statutory implementation delayed by the complications of the Scottish land registry system, a problem not fully resolved until 1969. By the latter date the Historic Buildings Council for Scotland, set up in 1954, had replaced the Maclagan and later Holford Committee. Resurvey policy was determined by a sub-committee of the (Historic Buildings Council) the Listing Committee from 1972, the thirty-year rule being formally substituted in 1975 for the Maclagan Committee requirement that the work of living architects be excluded. In that same year the longer English standards of description were introduced, but it was not until 1978 that the resurvey programme was fully under way.
Listing as I knew it in 1949
John H Harvey
97 - 104
Supplement or follow-on to an earlier article (see 94/828), first delivered as an address to the Ancient Monuments Society. Continues on from post-WWII moves to create a `Provisional List' from previous records, finally produced under Section 30, Town & Country Planning Act of 1947. Referring to another earlier article (see 94/{**}), a number of apparent errors regarding committee names, the training and background of the first fieldworkers, and the character of S J `Richard' Garton are addressed.
The spire of All Saints' church, Maldon, Essex
Cecil A Hewett
Elphin Watkin
105 - 146
The Romanesque timber frame spire of Maldon church is unique in England. Not studied in detail until 1992, this hexagonal shingled spire with its three spirelets, set on the triangular plan of the tower walls, has proved to be unequalled in quality of design, constructional detail, lasting quality of form, and technical excellence. Other, comparable, Essex spires are also considered and a typological and chronological sequence suggested on the basis of stylistic dating and the study of the evolution of timber joints.
Conservation in 1993: a review of selected cases
Matthew Saunders
169 - 195
Describes what are in turn described as interesting cases from some of the 7,000 put before the Ancient Monuments Society during this year.