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Landscape Hist 22
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Landscape Hist 22
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Landscape History
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
22
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Editor
The editor of the publication or report
Editor:
Della Hooke
Publisher
The publisher of the publication or report
Publisher:
Society for Landscape Studies
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
2000
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
01 May 2002
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Sulh -- the Anglo-Saxon plough c. AD 1000
David H Hill
5 - 19
Attempts to establish the form of the Anglo-Saxon plough by reviewing archaeological and historical evidence, including manuscript illustrations. Compares the evidence with medieval and later examples.
Population density and Norman castle building: some evidence from East Anglia
Robert Liddiard
37 - 46
This paper challenges the belief that castles were necessarily raised in areas which allowed them to dominate the population. Areas with large numbers of freeholders were unattractive to castle builders as buying out other landowners was a costly and time-consuming exercise. It therefore cast doubt upon the assertion that castle building in the years following the Norman conquest was necessarily concerned with population control.
Medieval upland cultivation on the Berwyns in North Wales
Robert J Silvester
47 - 60
This paper identifies three areas of relict medieval cultivation together with habitation sites at high altitude in the Berwyn mountains of North Wales. Their characteristics are considered and it is argued that they reflect the discrete expansion of existing settlements in the valleys on to more marginal hilly areas prior to the climatic changes and natural disasters of the fourteenth century.
`John O'Gaunt's House', Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire: a fifteenth century landscape
Susan M Oosthuizen
Christopher Taylor
61 - 76
This paper describes a remarkable archaeological site interpreted as the remains of a house and a late medieval garden of a type hitherto unknown in Britain. Historical research suggests that it may have been based on the then new gardens of Renaissance Italy.