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A Timber-framed bibliography

list compiled by R Haddlesey for www.medievalarchitecture.net

Aberth, J., 2001. Confronting Famine, War, Plague, and Death in the Later Middle
Ages: From the Brink of the Apocalypse, London: Routledge.
Addy, S. O., 1898. The Evolution of the English House, London: S. Sonnenschein &
Co.
Alcock, N., 1981. Cruck Construction: An Introduction and Catalogue: The Council
for British Archaeology.
Alcock, N., Barley, M., Dixon, P. & Meeson, R., 1989. 1st. Recording Timber-
Framed Buildings: An Illustrated Glossary, London: CBA.
Aldsworth, F. G. & Harris, R., 1988. The Tower and 'Rhenish Helm' Spire of St.
Mary's Church, Sompting. Sussex Archaeological Collections, 126, 105-44.
Allen, S. J., (1993). The Mill (BAB): Structural Timber Sequence, in A Medieval
Industrial Complex and its Landscape: the Metalworking Watermills and Workshops
of Bordesley Abbey. ed. G. G. Astill. Council for British Archaeology, 66-85.
Amunssen, S. D., 1988. An Ordered Society: Gender and Class in Early Modern
England: Oxford.
Andrews, D. D., (1984). The Grange Barn, http://unlockingessex.essexcc.gov.uk,
Sussex SMR 8808, (08/10/07)
Andrews, K. & Doonan, R., 2003. Test Tubes and Trowels: Using Science in
Archaeology, Gloucestershire: Tempus.
Antoine, D. & Hillson, S., 2005. Famine, Black Death and Health in Fourteenth-
Century London. Archaeology International, 8, 26-8.
Arnold, D., 2002. Reading Architectural History, London: Routledge.
Art Recon Inc, (2005). RECON3D, http://www.artrecon.com/, (18/07/2005)
Bahn, P. (ed.) (2002). Written in Bones, Newton Abbot: David and Charles.
Bailey, J., 1979. Timber Framed Buildings: A Study of Medieval Timber Buildings
in Bedfordshire and Adjoining Counties, Bedfordshire: Historic Buildings
Research Group.
Bailey, M., 1998. Peasant Welfare in England, 1290-1348. Economic History
Review, L1(2), 223-51.
Baillie, M. G. L., 1982. Tree-ring Dating and Archaeology, USA: University of
Chicago Press.
Baillie, M. G. L., 1995. Digital Print. A Slice Through Time: Dendrochronology
and Precision Dating, Oxon: Routledge.
Barry, J. & Brooks, C., 1994. The Middling Sort of People: Culture, Society and
Politics in England, 1550-1800, Basingstoke.
Bayliss, A., (2004). Dendrochronology: Guidelines on Producing and Interpreting
Dendrochronological Dates,
http://www.helm.org.uk/upload/pdf/Dendrochronology.pdf, H.E.L.M.,
Bealer, A., 1996. Rev Ed. Old Ways of Working Wood: The Techniques & Tools of a
Time-honored Craft, New Jersey: Castle.
Benedictow, O. J., 2004. The Black Death 1346-1353: The Complete History,
Suffolk: Boydell Press.
Berger, R., (1970). The Potential and Limitations of Radiocarbon Dating in the
Middle Ages: The Radiochronologist's View, in Scientific Methods in Medieval
Archaeology. ed. R. Berger. California: UCLA, 89-140.
Berger, R. (ed.) (1970). Scientific Methods in Medieval Archaeology, California:
UCLA.
Binding, G., 2001. Medieval Building Techniques, Gloucestershire: Tempus.
Binski, P., 2001. Medieval Death, London: Yale University Press.
Blair, J., (2003). Hall and Chamber: English Domestic Planning 1000—1250, in
Anglo-Norman Castles. ed. R. Liddiard. NY: Boydell Press, 307-28.
Bradley, H., 1918. 2nd. The Enclosures in England an Economic Reconstruction,
Canada: Batoche Books (2001 reprint).
Braun, H., 1951. An Introduction to English Medieval Architecture, London: Faber
& Faber Ltd.
Breckon, B., Parker, J. & Andrew, M., 2001. Tracing the History of Houses,
Berkshire: Countryside Books.
Brigham, T., (1992). Reused House Timbers from the Billingsgate Site, 1982-3, in
Timber Building Techniques in London c.900-1400: An Archaeological Study of
Waterfront Installations and Related Material. ed. G. Milne. London: London &
Middlesex Archaeological Society, 86-105.
Brunskill, R. W., 1971. Illustrated Handbook of Vernacular Architecture, London:
Faber & Faber.
Brunskill, R. W., 1976. A Systematic Procedure for Recording English Vernacular
Architecture, London: Ancient Monuments Society.
Brunskill, R. W., 1978. Distribution of Building Materials and some Plan Types
in the Domestic Vernacular Architecture of England and Wales, London: Ancient
Monuments Society.
Brunskill, R. W., 1982. Houses, London: Collins.
Brunskill, R. W., 1983. Review: Vernacular Architecture: A Review of Recent
Literature. Reviewed Work(s): Cruck Construction, an Introduction and Catalogue
by W. Alcock - The Framed Houses of Massachusetts Bay by A. L. Cummings -
English Historic Carpentry by C. A. Hewett - Medieval Houses at Flaxengate,
Lincoln by R. H. Jones. Architectural History, 26, 105-12.
Brunskill, R. W., 1992. Traditional Buildings of Britain: An Introduction to
Vernacular Architecture, London: Gollancz.
Brunskill, R. W., 2000. 4th. Vernacular Architecture: An Illustrated Handbook,
London: Faber & Faber.
Brunskill, R. W., 2004. Timber Building in Britain, London: Orion Publishing Co.
Campbell, B. M. S., 2000. Britain 1300. History Today, 10-7.
Cantor, N., 1999. The Pimlico Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages, London: Pimlico.
Cantor, N., 2002. 1st. In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World
it Made, New York: Harper Perennial.
Chan, C. D. N., (2006). Shaded drawing of a cube using isometric projection
pseudo-perspective,
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/Perspective_isometrique_cube_
gris_2.svg, (Sept 2007)
Chapelot, J. & Fossier, R., 1985. English. The Village & House in the Middle
Ages, London: Batsford.
Charles, F., 1967. Medieval Cruck-building and its Derivatives: A Study of
Timber-framed Construction based on Buildings in Worcestershire, London: Society
for Medieval Archaeology.
Charles, F., (1970). The Medieval Timber-Framed Tradition, in Scientific Methods
in Medieval Archaeology. ed. R. Berger. California: UCLA, 213-38.
Clark, P., (2001). The Story of the 'Dover Bronze Age Boat',
http://www.canterburytrust.co.uk/annreps/pdfs/2001/005.pdf, Post Excavation and
Research, (01/10/07)
Clarke, H., 1984. The Archaeology of Medieval England, London: British Museum.
Clarke, J., 2005. An Early Vernacular Hammer-Beam Structure: Imberhorne Farm
Cottages, East Grinstead, West Sussex. Vernacular Architecture, 36, 32-40.
Currie, C., 1988. Time and Chance: Modelling the Attrition of old Houses.
Vernacular Architecture, 19, 1-9.
Currie, C., (1989). The Age of Carpentry: The New Art and Society in Plantagenet
England, in Society for Medieval Studies London.
Davey, N., 1961. A History of Building Materials, London: Phoenix House.
Deneux, H., 1927. L’Evolution des Charpentes du XIe au XVIIe Siecle L'
Architecte.
Dixon, R. & Muthesius, S., 1985. 2nd. Victorian Architecture, London: Thames and
Hudson.
Dunning, G. C., (1939). A Thirteenth-century Midden at Windcliff, Near Niton, in
Proceedings of the Isle Of Wight Natural History and Archaeological Society.
Newport: The County Press.
Durant, D., 1992. The Handbook of British Architectural Styles, London: Barrie &
Jenkins.
Dyer, C., 1986. English Peasant Buildings in the Later Middle Ages (1200-1500).
Medieval Archaeology, 30, 19-45.
Dyer, C., 1997. History and Vernacular Architecture. Vernacular Architecture,
28, 1-8.
Dyer, C., 1998. Revised Ed. Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages: Social
Change in England c.1200-1520, Cambridge: Cambridge Medieval Textbooks.
Dyer, C., 2002. Making a Living in the Middle Ages: The People of Britain 850-
1520, USA: Yale University Press.
Dyer, C., 2002. Small places with large consequences: the importance of small
towns in England, 1000-1540. Historical Research, 75(187), 1-24.
Dyer, C., 2006. Vernacular Architecture and Landscape History: The Legacy of
'The Rebuilding of Rural England' and 'The Making of the English Landscape'.
Vernacular Architecture, 37(1), 24-32.
Dyer, C., Jones, R. & Page, M., (2005). The Whittlewood Project: Medieval
Settlements and Landscapes in the Whittlewood Area,
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/archive/whittlewood_ahrb_2006/, (July 2007)
English_Heritage, (2005). Historic Buildings and Landscapes, http://www.english-
heritage.org.uk/server/show/ConWebDoc.4504, (04/04/06)
English_Heritage, 2006. Understanding Historic Buildings: A Guide to Good
Recording Practice, Swindon: English Heritage.
EssexCC, (2007). Essex SMR, http://unlockingessex.essexcc.gov.uk, (20/10/07)
Evans, D., (2002). Buried with the Friars, in Written in Bones. ed. P. Bahn.
Newton Abbot: David and Charles, 27-31.
Fergusson, P., 1977. Reviewed Work: Studies in Medieval Domestic Architecture by
J. T. Smith; P. A. Faulkner; A. Emery. The Journal of the Society of
Architectural Historians, 36(3), 202-3.
Fletcher, J. M., (1970). Radiocarbon Dating of Medieval, Timber-Framed Cruck
Cottages, in Scientific Methods in Medieval Archaeology. ed. R. Berger.
California: UCLA, 141-58.
Forrester, H., 1959. The Timber-framed Houses of Essex: A Short Review of Their
Types and Details 14th to 18th Centuries, Chelmsford: Clarke.
Fox, C. & Raglan, F. R. S., 1951. Monmouthshire Houses : a Study of Building
Techniques and Smaller House-plans in the Fifteenth to Seventeenth Centuries.
Part 1 Medieval Houses, Cardiff: National Museum of Wales.
Fox, C. & Raglan, F. R. S., 1953. Monmouthshire Houses : a Study of Building
Techniques and Smaller House-plans in the Fifteenth to Seventeenth Centuries /
Part 2 Sub-medieval Houses, c.1550-1610, Cardiff: Museum of Wales.
Fox, C. & Raglan, F. R. S., 1954. Monmouthshire Houses : a Study of Building
Techniques and Smaller House-plans in the Fifteenth to Seventeenth Centuries /
Part 3, Renaissance,c.1590-1714, Cardiff: Museum of Wales.
Gaimster, D., (1994). The Archaeology of Post-Medieval Society, c.1450-1750:
Material Culture Studies Since the War, in Building on the Past: Papers
Celebrating 150 Years of the Royal Archaeological Institute. ed. Vyner. 293-312.
Gardiner, M., 2000. Vernacular Buildings and the Development of the Later
Medieval Domestic Plan in England. Medieval Archaeology, 44.
Gerrard, C., 2003. Medieval Archaeology: Understanding Traditions and
Contemporary Approaches, London: Routledge.
Gibson, A., (1998). Obituary: Cecil Hewett, in The Independent London.
Godwin, H., 1970. The Contribution of Radiocarbon Dating to Archaeology in
Britain. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A,
Mathematical and Physical Sciences: A Symposium on the Impact of the Natural
Sciences on Archaeology, 269(1193), 57-75.
Goodall, I. H., 1981. The Medieval Blacksmith and his Products. Medieval
Industry, Ed, D. W. Crossley, 51-62.CBA
Goodburn, D., (1992). Woods and Woodland: Carpenters and Carpentry, in Timber
Building Techniques in London c.900-1400: An Archaeological Study of Waterfront
Installations and Related Material. ed. G. Milne. London: London & Middlesex
Archaeological Society.
Goodburn, D., 1999. An Image of Ancient English Woodland. British Archaeology,
42(42, March).
Goodburn, D., (2005). Anglo-Saxon Boat and Ship Building Techniques: Were They
Distinctive in the Early Medieval Period?, http://www.suttonhoo.org/saxon.htm,
Saxon, (08/10/07)
Goodman, W. L., 1962. The History of Woodworking Tools, London: G. Bell & Sons.
Grenville, J., 1999. Medieval Housing: Cassell.
Haddlesey, R., (2005). “Virtual Meccano”: The Creation of Virtual Joints to
Explore Vernacular Timber-framed Construction Methods of the Late Medieval
Period (c1400-1530), www.medievalarchitecture.net, (28/02/06)
Haddlesey, R., 2006. Building on Fear: Vernacular Carpentry and the Black Death.
The Archaeologist, Summer 2006(60), 20.
Harding, J., 1993. Timber-Framed Early Buildings in Surrey: A pattern for
Development, c1300-1650. Transactions of the Ancient Monuments Society, 37, 117-
45.
Harding, V., 2002. Space, Property, and Propriety in Urban England. Journal of
Interdisciplinary History, XXXII:4, 549-69.
Harris, R., 1978. Discovering Timber-framed Buildings, Bucks: Shire.
Harris, R., 1980. Timber Framed Buildings, London: Arts Council GB.
Harris, R., 1989. The Grammar of Carpentry. Vernacular Architecture, 20, 1-8.
Harris, R., (1990). Dismantling & Re-erection of Timber-framed Buildings:
Problems & Opportunities, in Understanding Timber Framed Buildings: Archaeology,
Recording and Repair London: ICOMOS.
Hawkins, D., 1990. The Black Death and the new London Cemeteries of 1348.
Antiquity, 64(244), 637-42.
Hewett, C. A., 1962. Structural Carpentry in Medieval Essex. Medieval
Archaeology, 6, 240-70.
Hewett, C. A., 1967. The Barns at Cressing Temple, Essex, and Their Significance
in the History of English Carpentry. The Journal of the Society of Architectural
Historians, 26(1), 48-70.
Hewett, C. A., 1969. The Development of Carpentry 1200-1700: An Essex Study,
Newton Abbot: David and Charles.
Hewett, C. A., 1980. English Historic Carpentry, Chichester: Phillimore & Co
Ltd.
Hewett, C. A., 1982. Church Carpentry, Chichester: Phillimore.
Hewett, C. A., (1982). Tool-marks on Surviving Works from the Saxon, Norman and
Later Medieval Periods, in Woodworking Techniques Before A.D. 1500. ed. S.
McGrail. Oxford: BAR International, 339-48.
Hewett, C. A., 1985. English Cathedral and Monastic Carpentry, Chichester:
Phillimore.
Hewett, C. A., 1968-9. The Dating of French Timber Roofs by Henri Deneux: An
English Summary. Ancient Monuments Society, 16, 89-108.
Hewett, C. A., 1989. Evidence for an Intermediate Stage between Earth-fast and
Sill-mounted Posts. Ancient Monuments Society, 33, 181-92.
Hillam, J., Morgan, R. & Tyres, I., (1987). Sapwood Estimates and the Dating of
Short Ring Sequences, in Applications of Tree-ring Studies: Current Research in
Dendrochronology and Related Areas. Oxford: BAR International, 165-85.
Hillier, W. & Hanson, J., 1984. The Social Logic of Space, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Hiscock, N., 2000. The Wise Master Builder: Platonic Geometry in Plans of
Medieval Abbeys and Cathedrals, Aldershot: Ashgate.
Hoffsummer, P. (ed.) (2002). Les Charpentes du XIe au XIXe siècle : Typologie et
Evolution en France du Nord et en Belgique, Paris: Editions du patrimoine.
Horn, W., (1970). The Potential and Limitations of Radiocarbon Dating in the
Middle Ages: The Art Historian's View, in Scientific Methods in Medieval
Archaeology. ed. R. Berger. California: UCLA, 23-88.
Horrox, R., 1994. The Black Death, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Horrox, R., (1999). Purgatory, Prayer and Plague: 1150-1380, in Death in
England. eds. C. Gittings & P. Jupp. Manchester: Manchester University Press,
90-118.
Hoskins, W. G., 1953. The Rebuilding of Rural England, 1560-1640. Past and
Present, 4, 44-59.
Hoskins, W. G., 1955. The Making of the English Landscape, London: Hodder &
Stoughton.
Hoskins, W. G., 1959. Local History in England, London: Longmans.
Hoskins, W. G., 1967. Feildwork in Local History, London: Faber & Faber.
Huber, B. & Giertz, V., (1970). Central European Dendrochronology for the Middle
Ages, in Scientific Methods in Medieval Archaeology. ed. R. Berger. California:
UCLA, 201-12.
Innocent, C. F., 1916. The Development of English Building Construction,
Plymouth: Clarke, Doble & Brendon.
James, T. B., 1997. Winchester, London: Batsford.
James, T. B., 1999. The Black Death in Hampshire, Winchester: Hampshire County
Council.
James, T. B., (1999). The Black Death: A turning Point for Winchester?, in The
Black Death in Wessex. ed. T. B. James. Hatcher Review.
James, T. B., (1999). The Black Death's Lasting Impact on British Society,
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/society_culture/welfare/black_impact_01.shtml, BBC
History Online, (15/12/05)
James, T. B., (2001). Years of Pestilence,
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba61/feat1.shtml, Britarch (61), (15/12/05)
James, T. B. & Roberts, E., 2000. Winchester and Late Medieval Urban
Development: From Palace to Pentice. Medieval Archaeology, xliv.
James, T. B. & Roberts, E., 2000. Winchester and Late Medieval Urban
Development: From Palace to Pentice. Medieval Archaeology, XLIV, 181-200.
Johnson, M., (1990). The Englishman's Home and it's Study, in The Social
Archaeology of Houses. ed. R. Samson. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,
245-57.
Johnson, M. H., 1993. Housing Culture: Traditional Architecture in an English
Landscape, London: UCL Press.
Johnson, M. H., 1993. Rethinking the Great Rebuilding. Oxford Journal of
Archaeology, 12(1), 117-24.
Johnson, M. H., (1997). Rethinking Houses, Rethinking Transitions: of Vernacular
Architecture, Ordinary People and Everyday Culture, in The Age of Transition:
the Archaeology of English Culture 1400-1600. ed. D. Gaimster. Oxford: Oxbow.
Johnson, M. H., (2000). Self-made Men and the Staging of Agency, in Agency in
Archaeology. eds. M.-A. Dobres & J. E. Robb. London: Routledge.
Johnson, M. H., (2005). Virtual Meccano, ed. R. Haddlesey Southampton.
Jokilehto, J., 1999. A History of Architectural Conservation, Oxford:
Butterworth-Heinemann.
Jones, R., (2003). Whittlewood Project: Medieval Settlements and Landscapes in
the Whittlewood Area, http://www.le.ac.uk/elh/whittlewood/index.htm, (July 2007)
Karakacili, E., 2004. English Agrarian Labour Productivity Rates Before the
Black Death: A Case Study. The Journal of Economic History, 64(1).
Kirk, J. C., (2004). The Early-modern Carpenter and Timber Framing in the Rural
Sussex Weald, in Sussex Archaeological Collections. eds. L. Barber & M. Kitch.
Lewes: Sussex Archaeological Society, 93-105.
Kitsikopoulos, H., 2002. The Impact of the Black Death on Peasant Economy in
England, 1350-1500. The Journal of Peasant Studies, 29(2), 71-90.
Knüsel, C. J. & Margerison, B. J., 2002. Paleodemographic Comparison of a
Catastrophic and an Attritional Death Assemblage. American Journal of Physical
Anthropology, 119(2), 134-43.
Kovar, A. J., 1996. Problems in Radiocarbon Dating at Teotihuacan. American
Antiquity, 31(1), 427-30.
Lachlan, (2004). The History and Construction of Medieval Timber-framed Houses
in England and Wales, http://www.today.plus.com/, (03/07/05)
Lewis, E., Roberts, E. & Roberts, K., 1988. Medieval Hall Houses of the
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Lilley, K. D., 2004. Cities of God? Medieval urban forms and their Christian
symbolism. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 29(3), 296-313.
Lindley, P. G., (1996). The Black Death and English Art: A Debate and Some
Assumptions, in The Black Death in England. eds. P. G. Lindley & W. M. Ormrod.
Lincolnshire: Paul Watkins, 125-46.
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MacAlasdair, F., A Carpenter's Chest: Tools of the 15th Century,
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Meeson, B., 2005. Ritual Marks and Graffiti: Curiosities or Meaningful Symbols?
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Miles, D., 2006. Refinements in the Interpretation of Tree-ring Dates for Oak
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Historical Literature, 85(1), 28-47.
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Roberts, E., 2003. Hampshire Houses 1250-1700: Their Dating and Development,
Winchester: Hampshire County Council.
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