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Following on from that I would like to announce the recent publication of The Buildings of Medieval Reykholt. The Wider Context, edited by Guđrún Sveinbjarnardóttir and Bergur Ţorgeirsson, published by Snorrastofa at Reykholt and University of Iceland Press. See flyer for further information.


The excavations at the farmsite at Reykholt in Western Iceland revealed well preserved structural remains which could date from the time that Snorri Sturluson, the chieftain and author of the Prose Edda and Heimskringla among other works, resided there in the first half of the thirteenth century. These remains include some unusual building types not encountered elsewhere in Iceland. Snorri travelled abroad and may have picked up ideas on these trips to apply at his residence back home. This book attempts to throw light on the appearance and character of a thirteenth century Icelandic magnate‘s farm by comparing it with sites of similar status in Scandinavia and the Scottish Isles. The eleven articles published here are written by specialists in Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Scotland.

 

Regards
Guđrún




From: E-list for the Medieval Settlement Research Group <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of Judith Winters <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: 10 May 2018 09:28
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: New in IA47: Medieval Building and its Contents at Island Farm, Ottery St Mary
 
I am pleased to announce the following publication

Mudd, A., Cobain, S. and Haines, C. 2018 A Medieval Building and its Contents at Island Farm, Ottery St Mary, East Devon: excavations in 2014, Internet Archaeology 47. https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.47.4

Excavations by Cotswold Archaeology in advance of housing development on land at Island Farm, Ottery St Mary, Devon, examined archaeological remains that included what is interpreted as a medieval longhouse (c. AD 1250–1350) that had been destroyed by fire. The evidence included the charred remains of timbers and deposits of charcoal and other botanical remains. The identifications and spatial arrangements of this material are used to suggest the materials employed in the construction of the building, together with its contents, which included a variety of crops stored in the chamber. 

Analysis has provided unusual detail of the types of wood used in the construction of the building, principally oak for the timber framing and alder and willow for the wattle panelling, and of the composition of the stored harvest, which included oats, wheat, rye, barley, broad beans, peas and vetches.

The longhouse has similarities with others known from Devon, although the interpretation of partial timber-framing appears to be unique in the archaeological record from the county. The crops identified provide physical evidence of what is recorded in historical documents, but also suggest others, such as the composition of fodder. This report includes primary data on the botanical remains to allow readers to interrogate the information for further (and perhaps different) insights.

Other finds include fragments derived from the repair of copper-alloy vessels, an axe-head, and a Bronze Age palstave (found in association with a large group of medieval metalwork - probably collected as scrap metal but possibly kept as a curio or charm).


-->And since announcing the publication on Twitter, I have already been informed me that Double-looped Palstaves are pretty much only known in Somerset and Iberia so it is possible that this may be the first of its kind from Devon! Got to love that instant, open access impact!


regards
Judith

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Judith Winters
Editor, Internet Archaeology
http://intarch.ac.uk

Open access publishing for Archaeology

Department of Archaeology, University of York YO1 7EP, UK
Twitter: @IntarchEditor
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