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[...]... throw the remains of a meal into the furthest corner ofthe hut and leave it there They were not nervous about ghosts, since they did not mind having a skeleton sticking out ofthe wall of one of their huts Pit 1 shows two distinct layers of occupation, and it is possible that when the hut became too stinking and verminous it was either abandoned for a time or a layer of soil spread over the old floor... organized from the remains ofsettlements and their fields? THE DEVELOPMENT OF SETTLEMENT ARCHAEOLOGY 4 The blueprint for the study ofthemedieval economy drawn up by historians such as Duby (1968, p xi) urged further investigation ofthe daily life and 3 Following Giddens’s definition, communitiesin which there is only short distance in time–space separation’ and where interaction was of necessity... and the Netherlands, on the other hand, identifying the origins of manorial organization is often a central aim of archaeological fieldwork EXCAVATION METHODS Excavation methods also play a role in determining the kinds of data available for different regions Inthe sandy districts of Denmark, northwest Germany, and the Netherlands, for example, a distinctive, cost-efficient method of excavating settlements. .. obviously, true of ordinary houses If, furthermore, we are to assess the economic conditions and daily life oftheearly Middle Ages, we need to understand the nature ofthe buildings in which people lived and worked Indeed, the study ofearlymedievalsettlementsin northwest Europe has traditionally been dominated by the study of buildings, chiefly for two reasons: first, on a small number of waterlogged... within 1 One possible explanation for the prevalence of east–west orientation is that this would maximize the benefit derived from the warmth ofthe sun on the southern wall, while offering protection against a westerly wind (Hedeager 1992, 196–7) 16 TheArchaeologyof Buildings Fig 2.5 The distribution ofthe longhouse in northwest Europe After Ramqvist 1992 the walls was a truly single-span building,... longhouses ofthe Frisian terp of Ezinge, research into earlymedieval buildings across northern Europe has focused on these remarkable structures (van Giffen 1936; Waterbolk 1989, 303; 1991b) The Architecture of the Longhouse Arguably the most significant architectural development oftheearly Middle Ages was the transition from the longhouse, with its complex arrangement of interior roof-supporting posts... thrust of the roof: by means of internal supports or by placing the load-bearing posts within the walls The problem of how to build wider structures while freeing the interior space of roof supports was ultimately resolved by introducing transverse joists supported by corresponding pairs of posts The end-result of this shift from stability derived from rows of internal roof-supporting posts to stability... sunken-floored weaving shed depicted inthe Utrecht Psalter 45 2.22 Plans of short houses without internal roof-supporting posts in Germany and the Netherlands 49 3.1 Vorbasse: phases of the shifting settlement 55 3.2 Vorbasse: plan of the settlement inthe fifth century 56 3.3 Vorbasse: plan ofthe settlement inthe sixth and seventh centuries 57 List of Illustrations xii 3.4 Vorbasse: the Viking age village... pits (Figs 2.3 and 2.4) The fact that these timber buildings have naturally fared less TheArchaeologyof Buildings 13 Fig 2.1 Excavation of preserved Iron Age timber buildings at Ezinge Photo: Courtesy ofthe Groningen Institute ofArchaeology Fig 2.2 Plan and reconstruction ofthe ‘Great Hall’ at Lejre After Christensen 1991, fig 14 14 TheArchaeologyof Buildings Fig 2.3 The ‘Great Hall’ at Gudme... generally took the form of an east–west oriented building1 with living quarters containing a hearth and a variable number of compartments at the west end, a central entrance ‘hall’ with two opposing doorways, and a byre at the east end; two rows of massive, paired internal posts supported the weight ofthe roof and divided the interior space into three aisles (Fig 2.6) Ever since the excavation ofthe well-preserved . alt="" Medieval History and Archaeology General Editors JOHN BLAIR HELENA HAMEROW Early Medieval Settlements EARLY MEDIEVAL SETTLEMENTS The Archaeology of Rural Communities in Northwest Europe. and arguably marking the beginning of the widespread, systematic study of Migration period and early medieval settlements in the region. This work was followed in the 1960s and 1970s by a number of large-scale excavations. agricultural exploitation was organized from the remains of settlements and their fields? THE DEVELOPMENT OF SETTLEMENT ARCHAEOLOGY 4 The blueprint for the study of the medieval economy drawn up by historians such