Eckweek, Peasedown St John, Somerset

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A01=Andrew Young
aerial photographic surveys
archaeological stratigraphy
Author_Andrew Young
Avon County Council
Cal Ad
Calibrated Radiocarbon Age
Category=NKD
Clay Tobacco Pipe
Continual Programme
CP1
Early 12th Century Ad
Early 13th Century Date
Earthwork Surveys
Eckweek excavations
Edward III
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Floor Layers
Geophysical Survey
hamlet-type occupation
Late Saxon
Limestone Rubble
Magnetometer Survey
medieval building sequence analysis
medieval domestic artefacts
medieval rural settlement
Natural Clay
Os Field
palaeoenvironmental analysis
Period Iv
Queen's University Belfast
Queen’s University Belfast
Radiocarbon Dating Laboratory
rural settlement archaeology
Strap Hinges
Survey Squares
timber to masonry transition
Tithe Map
Topsoil Stripping
West Field

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367860295
  • Weight: 1120g
  • Dimensions: 210 x 297mm
  • Publication Date: 12 May 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume presents the results of archaeological survey and excavation at Eckweek, Somerset, which yielded one of the most important medieval rural settlement sequences yet excavated from south-west England.

At the centre of the narrative is a succession of well-preserved buildings spanning the late 10th to the 14th centuries A.D. forming the nucleus of a Domesday manor and its Late Saxon precursor. Detailed analysis of the structural sequence offers a new regional perspective on pre-Conquest earthfast timber architecture and its subsequent (12th-century) replacement by masonry traditions. Culminating in a richly preserved 14th-century farmhouse, including a very complete assemblage of structural and domestic objects, the structural archaeology provides an unusually refined picture of the internal organisation of later medieval domestic space within a rural farming setting. Detailed analytical attention is given to the abundant artefactual and environmental datasets recovered from the excavations (including prolific assemblages of medieval pottery and palaeonvironmental data) with a nuanced appraisal of their interpretative implications.

Anyone with an interest in the dynamics and regional complexity of medieval rural communities will find this a stimulating and enlightening read.

Andrew Young was born in Gloucestershire, is a graduate of the University of Bristol and a former student of the late Mick Aston. He is a Member of the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists and has worked as a commercial archaeologist since 1987 and as Principal Archaeologist with Avon Archaeological Unit in Bristol, which he founded in 1991. He and his wife Donna live in Highland Scotland but he remains a Director of Avon Archaeology and also works part-time as Senior Archaeologist with Highland Archaeology Services.

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