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The Houses Of Hereford 12001700 Unknown

  • SKU: BELL-59420574
The Houses Of Hereford 12001700 Unknown
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Houses Of Hereford 12001700 Unknown instant download after payment.

Publisher: Casemate Publishers & Book Distributors, LLC
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 33 MB
Author: Unknown
ISBN: 9781785708176, 1785708171
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

The Houses Of Hereford 12001700 Unknown by Unknown 9781785708176, 1785708171 instant download after payment.

The cathedral city of Hereford is one of the best-kept historical secrets of the Welsh Marches. Although its Anglo-Saxon development is well known from a series of classic excavations in the 1960s and '70s, what is less widely known is that the city boasts an astonishingly well-preserved medieval plan and contains some of the earliest houses still in everyday use anywhere in England. Three leading authorities on the buildings of the English Midlands have joined forces combining detailed archaeological surveys, primary historical research, and topographical analysis to examine 24 of the most important buildings, from the great hall of the Bishop's Palace of c.1190, to the first surviving brick town-house of c.1690. Fully illustrated with photographs, historic maps, and explanatory diagrams, the case-studies include canonical and mercantile hall-houses of the Middle Ages, mansions, commercial premises, and simple suburban dwellings of the early modern period. Owners and builders are identified from documentary sources wherever possible, from the Bishop of Hereford and the medieval cathedral canons, through civic office-holding merchant dynasties, to minor tradesmen otherwise known only for their brushes with the law.
About the Author: Nigel Baker is a freelance archaeologist specialising in historic towns and has previously published books on Worcester and Gloucester, and Shrewsbury. He worked for Herefordshire Council for eight years and is an Honorary Research Fellow of the School of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Birmingham.
About the Author: Pat Hughes has 40 years experience in documentary research, studying the background to historic houses, townscapes, and landscapes across the Midlands and the west of England; she is particularly interested in the insights provided by documents in interpreting standing buildings and archaeological sites.
About the Author: Richard K Morriss is a freelance archaeologist and author specializing in buildings, transport, and industry, and lives in south-west Shropshire. For eight years he was Assistant Director of the City of Hereford Archaeological Unit; he is presently the archaeological consultant to four cathedrals, including Hereford.

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