482
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

Barn Dance: Suggested Medieval Grain Storage of the Northern European Type On The Manor of Patcham, East Sussex

Bibliography

  • Albion Archaeology 2013, La Grava The Archaeology and History of a Royal Manor and Alien Priory of Fontevrault [data-set]. York: Archaeology Data Service [distributor] <https://doi.org/10.5284/1020234>
  • ASE 2014, An Archaeological Watching Brief at 145 Vale Avenue, Patcham. A Post-Excavation Assessment and Updated Project Design Report (ASE unpublished report no 2014027).
  • Astill, G and Langdon, J (eds) 1997, Medieval Farming and Technology: The Impact of Agricultural Change in Northwest Europe, Leiden: Brill.
  • Baker, E 2013, La Grava: The Archaeology and History of a Royal Manor and Alien Priory of Fontevrault, Research Report 167, York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Ballantyne, R 2010, ‘Charred and mineralised biota’ in Thomas, 164–76.
  • Bell, M 1977, ‘Excavations at Bishopstone’, Sussex Archaeological Collections, 115, 1–299.
  • Blair, J 2018, Building Anglo-Saxon England, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Campbell, G, Moffett, L and Straker, V 2011, Environmental Archaeology; a Guide to the Theory and Practice of Methods, from Sampling and Recovery to Post-Excavation, (2nd edition). Swindon: English Heritage
  • Carlie, A 2008, ‘Magnate estates along the road: Viking Age settlements, communication and contacts in south-west Scania, Sweden’, ACAR, 79, 110–44.
  • Comet, G 1997, ‘Technology and agricultural expansion in the Middle Ages: the example of France north of the Loire’, in Astill and Langdon, Leiden: Brill, 11–39.
  • Cunliffe, B W 2005, Iron Age Communities in Britain, (4th edn), Abingdon: Routledge.
  • Dodgson, J 1973, ‘Place-names from hām, distinguished from hamm names, in relation to the settlement of Kent, Surrey and Sussex’, Anglo-Saxon England, 2, 1–50.
  • Dyer, C 1986, ‘English Peasant Buildings in the later Middle Ages’, Medieval Archaeology, 30, 19–45.
  • Fransson, U 2019, ‘A farmstead from the late-Viking Age and early medieval period. House constructions and social status at Vik, Ørland’, in I Ystgaard (ed), Environment and Settlement: Ørland 600 bcad 1250: Archaeological Excavations at Vik, Ørland Main Air Base, Oslo: Cappelen Damm Akademisk/Nordic Open Access Scholarly Publishing, 323–50.
  • Gardiner, M 1990, ‘An Anglo-Saxon and medieval settlement at Botolphs, Bramber, West Sussex’, Archaeology Journal, 147, 216–75.
  • Gardiner, M 1993, ‘The excavation of a late Anglo-Saxon settlement at Market Field, Steyning 1988–89’, Sussex Archaeological Collections, 131, 21–67.
  • Gardiner, M 2013a, ‘An early medieval tradition of building in Britain’, Arqueol Arquitect, 9, 231–46.
  • Gardiner, M 2013b, ‘Stacks, barns and granaries in early and high medieval England: crop storage and its implications’, in A Vigil-Escalera Guirado, G Bianchi and J Quirós Castillo (eds), Horrea, Barns and Silos: storage and Incomes in Early Medieval Europe, Bilbao: Documentos de Arqueología Medieval 5, 23–38.
  • Gardiner, M 2014a, ‘An archaeological approach to the development of the late medieval peasant house’, Vernacular Architecture, 45:1, 16–28.
  • Gardiner, M 2014b, ‘The distribution and adoption of the byre-house (longhouse) in late medieval Britain’, in I Boháčová and P Sommer (eds), Medieval Europe in Motion, in Honour of Jan Klápště, Prague: Archaeological Institute, 145–62.
  • Groenewoudt, B J 2011, ‘The visibility of storage’, in J Klapste and P Sommer (eds), Food in the Medieval Rural Environment: Processing, Storage, Distribution of Food, Ruralia 8, Turnhout: Brepols, 187–9.
  • Hamerow, H 1993, Excavations at Mucking Volume 2: The Anglo-Saxon Settlement, Archaeological Report 21, Swindon: English Heritage.
  • Hamerow, H 2002, Early Medieval Settlements: The Archaeology of Rural Communities in Northwest Europe 400–900, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Hamerow, H 2006, ‘Special deposits’ in Anglo-Saxon settlements’, Medieval Archaeology, 50:1, 1–30.
  • Hamerow, H 2011, ‘Timber buildings and their social context’, in H Hamerow, D A Hinton and S Crawford (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Archaeology, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 128–55.
  • Hamerow, H and McKerracher, M (eds) 2022, New Perspectives on the Medieval ‘Agricultural Revolution’: Crop, Stock and Furrow, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.
  • Hardy, A, Mair Charles, B and Williams, R J 2007, Death and Taxes: The Archaeology of a Middle Saxon Estate Centre at Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire, Oxford: Oxford Archaeology Monograph 4
  • Hearne, T (ed), 1720, Textus Roffensis [Annals of Rochester], Oxford: Sheldonian.
  • Heidinga, H A 1987, Medieval Settlement and Economy North of the Lower Rhine, Assen/Maastricht: Van Gorcum.
  • Hey, G 2004, Yarnton: Saxon and Medieval Settlement, Thames Valley Landscapes Monograph 20, Oxford: Oxford Archaeology.
  • Hvass, S 1980, ‘The Viking Age settlement at Vorbasse, Central Jutland’, Acta Archaeologica, 50, 137–72.
  • Hvass, S 1983, ‘Vorbasse: The development of a settlement through the first millennium ad’, Journal Danish Archaeology, 2, 127–36.
  • Jervis, B 2010, ‘Pottery’ in Thomas, 87–102
  • Kooi, P B 1995, ‘Het project Peelo: het onderzoek in de jaren 1981, 1982, 1986, 1987 en 1988’, Palaeohistoria, 35–6, 169–306.
  • Lewis, C P 2012, ‘The invention of the manor in Norman England’, Anglo-Norman Studies, 34, 123–50.
  • Lyne, M 2000, ‘The Pottery’, in C Butler, Saxon Settlement and Earlier Remains at Friars Oak, Hassocks, West Sussex, Oxford: British Archaeological Report, British Series 295, 23–6.
  • Margetts, A 2018, Wealdbǣra: Eexcavations at ‘Wickhurst Green’, Broadbridge Heath and the Landscape of the West Central Weald, Archaeology South-East (UCL)/Surrey County Archaeological Unit Spoilheap Monograph Series 18.
  • Mawer, A and Stenton, F M (eds) 1930, The Place-Names of Sussex: Part 2, Nottingham: English Place-Name Society 7.
  • McCloskey, D N and Nash, J 1984, ‘Corn at interest: The extent and cost of grain storage in medieval England’, American Economic Review, 74:1, 174–87.
  • McKerracher, M 2016a, ‘Bread and surpluses: the Anglo-Saxon ‘bread wheat thesis’ reconsidered’, Environment Archaeology, 21:1, 88–102.
  • McKerracher, M 2016b, ‘Playing with fire? Charred grain as a proxy for cereal surpluses in early medieval England’, Medieval Settlement Research, 31, 63–6.
  • Meeson, R A and Welch, C M 1993, ‘Earthfast posts: The persistence of alternative building techniques’, Vernacular Architecture, 24:1, 1–17.
  • Morris, J (ed) 1976, Domesday Book: Sussex, London/Chichester: Phillimore.
  • Myrdal, J 2011, ‘Farming and feudalism, 1000–1700’, in J Myrdal and M Morell (eds), The Agrarian History of Sweden: 4000 bc to Ad 2000, Lund: Nordic Academic Press, 72–117.
  • Peytremann, E 2012, ‘The archaeology of early medieval (6th–12th century) rural settlements in France’, in J A Quirós (ed), Archaeology of Architecture and Household Archaeology in Early Medieval Europe, Madrid/Vitoria: Cisc, 213–30.
  • Raepsaet, G 1997, ‘The development of farming implements between the Seine and the Rhine from the second to the twelfth centuries’, in Astill and Langdon, Leiden: Brill, 41–68.
  • Reynolds, P J 1974, ‘Experimental Iron Age storage pits: an interim report’, Proc Prehist Soc, 40, 118–31.
  • Rickett, R 2021, Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns: Foundations of Archaeological Research, Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Salzman, L F (ed) 1940, A History of the County of Sussex: Victoria County History, Volume 7, London: Oxford University Press.
  • Sigaut, F 1988, ‘A method for identifying grain storage techniques and its application for European agricultural history’, Tools Tillage, 6, 3–32.
  • Skov, H 2001, ‘The development of rural house types in the old Danish region 800–1500 ad’, in J Klapste (ed), The Rural House, from the Migration Period to the Oldest Still Standing Buildings, Ruralia 4, Turnhout: Brepols, 30–3.
  • Smith, A H 1956, English Place-Name Elements: Part 1, the Elements A-IW, Maps, London: English Place-Name Society 25.
  • Søvsø, M 2012, ‘The Bishop of Ribe’s rural property in Lustrup’, Danish Journal of Archaeology, 1:1, 4–26.
  • Thomas, G 2010, The Later Anglo-Saxon Settlement at Bishopstone: A Downland Manor in the Making, Research Report 163, York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Tipper, J 2004, The Grubenhaus in Anglo-Saxon England: An Analysis and Interpretation of the Avidence from a most Distinctive Building Type, Yedingham: The Landscape Research Centre Archaeological Monograph 2:1.
  • van der Veen, M, Hill, A and Livarda, A 2013, ‘The archaeobotany of medieval Britain (c ad 450–1500): identifying research priorities for the 21st century’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, 151–82.
  • Waterbolk, H T 1973, ‘Odoorn im friihen. Mittelalter. Bericht der Grabung 1966’, Nette Ausgrabungen Und Forschungen in Niedersachsen, 8, 25–89.
  • Waterbolk, H T and Harsema, O 1979, ‘Medieval farmsteads in Gasselte (Province of Drenthe)’, Palaeohistoria, 21, 227–65.
  • West, S E 1985, West Stow. The Anglo-Saxon Village, Ipswich: East Anglian Archaeology 24.