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Theoretical Structural Archaeology

A field archaeologist’s view of building and architecture in the ancient world, especially the lost timber built environment of prehistoric Southern England. It is a series of posts that are designed to be read in order, and to be accessible to the non specialist, - and there even some humour.
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Notes & Queries; Sledges

Nov 15, 2009
My observation that a 7000 year old LBK longhouse from Olszanica in Poland had 2 wide doors, prompted the question was it a cart shed? I think I satisfied myself, and my readers, it was not; it is simply too early. I somewhat reluctantly concluded that...

Notes & Queries: Chou Literature, an Iron Age view of Prehistory

Nov 8, 2009
Once upon a time books had a life of their own, but in around C7th AD the first wood block printed books appeared in China. This was the beginning of the end, and while this was not yet the soulless reproduction of mechanised printing, this cloning...

35. Olszanica Longhouse 6: Why has it got wide doors?

Oct 26, 2009
When I saw her, it was love at first sight; beautiful, slender, elegant, complex, and I know size isn’t everything, but she has got the biggest roof I’ve ever seen on an early Neolithic building. But there was something else. Not that I noticed it...

34. The Curious Case of the Lengyel Longhouses

Oct 5, 2009
There are some things that are just wrong, and Lengyel longhouses transcend odd, through strange, into weird; buildings should not taper. Well, not at 7°, they shouldn’t. It's just not a right and proper thing for them to do. At least two sides...

Notes and Queries - Roman Forts

Sep 24, 2009
One of the advantages of publishing research on a website, is that you can respond to questions and enquires from readers. Tim Holland recently sent me a very detailed piece concerning his observations about the layout of Roman Forts, complete with...


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