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Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns Robert Rickett

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns By Robert Rickett

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns by Robert Rickett


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Summary

Drying kilns, corn-dryers and malting ovens are familiar features in post-Roman, Anglo-Saxon and medieval archaeology, yet few works of synthesis are available. Robert Rickett's pioneering dissertation is published here for the first time, with additional material from Mark McKerracher which sets the work within the context of more recent studies.

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns Summary

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns: Foundations of Archaeological Research by Robert Rickett

Drying kilns, corn-dryers and malting ovens are increasingly familiar features in post-Roman, Anglo-Saxon and medieval archaeology. Their forms, functions and distributions offer critical insights into agricultural, technological, economic and dietary history across the British Isles. Despite the significance and growing corpus of these structures, exceptionally few works of synthesis have been published. Yet such a foundational study was produced by Robert Rickett as early as 1975: an undergraduate dissertation which, for the first time, assembled a gazetteer of drying kilns from across the British Isles, critically examined this archaeological evidence in the light of documentary research, and established a typology and uniform terminology for drying kiln studies. This pioneering and oft-cited dissertation is here published for the first time, providing a foundation for the future study of drying kilns in Britain, Ireland and beyond. A new introduction and notes by Mark McKerracher set the original work within the context of drying kiln research since 1975.

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns Reviews

'Overall, this is a fascinating and valuable study for which the author, editor and publisher are to be congratulated for making so widely available.' - Stephen Rippon (2022): Medieval Archaeology, 66/1, 2022

About Robert Rickett

Robert Rickett became interested in archaeology while he was at school in Stamford, Lincolnshire. After participating in several excavations, he went to University College, Cardiff, to study Archaeology and graduated in 1975. He worked on excavations in East Anglia before becoming a Research Officer for the Spong Hill Project (North Elmham, Norfolk), from 1977 to 1989. This included excavation supervision, archiving and publication work. Meanwhile his work in education with all age groups inspired him to study at U.E.A., Norwich, and from 1991 he taught in Primary Education. ;

Mark McKerracher is a Postdoctoral Researcher in the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford, where he completed his DPhil - studying Mid Saxon agriculture - in 2014. After working in museum archiving, software development and freelance archaeobotany, he is currently researching medieval farming practices as part of the ERC-funded Feeding Anglo- Saxon England project (FeedSax). His interests include archaeobotany, database development, agricultural production and Anglo-Saxon archaeology.

Table of Contents

Introduction ;

Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns ;
Identifying drying kilns in archaeology ;
Evidence of function ;
Other functions, and relationship of kiln type to function ;
Purposes of kiln drying ;
Evidence of fuel ;
Siting, and materials and methods of construction ;
Construction of superstructure and drying floors ;
Distribution, dating and origins ;
Historical context ;

Gazetteer of Drying Kilns ;
Introduction to the Gazetteer ;
Summary of types ;

Type I ;
K1: Stamford kiln 1 (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K2: Stamford kiln 2 (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K3: Stamford kiln 3 (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K4: Great Casterton (Rutland, England) ;
K5: Montgomery Castle (Powys, Wales) ;
K6: Stamford kiln 4 (Lincolnshire, England) ;

Type II ;
K7: Barrow (Rutland, England) ;
K8: Grafton Regis (Northamptonshire, England) ;
K9: Brixworth (Northamptonshire, England) ;
K10: Faxton (Northamptonshire, England) ;

Type III ;
K11: Nottingham Caves (Nottinghamshire, England) ;
K12: Rue Farm (Dumfries, Scotland) ;
K13: Sandal Castle (West Yorkshire, England) ;
K14: Doncaster (South Yorkshire, England) ;
K15: Nottingham (Nottinghamshire, England) ;
K16: Stanhope (Co. Durham, England) ;

Type IV ;
K17: Alcester (Warwickshire, England) ;
K18: Houndtor (Devon, England) ;
K19: South Witham (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K20: Ballymacash (Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland) ;
K21: Beere (Devon, England) ;
K22: Glenvoidean (Bute, Scotland) ;
K23: Rathbeg (Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland) ;
K24: Sandal Castle (West Yorkshire, England) ;
K25: St Blane's (Bute, Scotland) ;
K26: Buckden (Cambridgeshire, England) ;
K27: Glen Parva (Leicestershire, England) ;

Type V ;
K28: Jarlshof (Shetland, Scotland) ;
K29: Kirkstall Abbey (West Yorkshire, England) ;
K30: Stretham (West Sussex, England) ;

Type VI ;
K31: Ballycatteen (Co. Cork, Ireland) ;

Type VII ;
K32: Doarlish Cashen (Isle of Man) ;
K33: Highlight (Glamorgan, Wales) ;
K34: Hullasey (Gloucestershire, England) ;
K35: Letterkeen (Co. Mayo, Ireland) ;
K36: Lundy Island (Devon, England) ;
K37: Uisneach (Co. Westmeath, Ireland) ;
K38: Underhoull (Shetland, Scotland) ;
K39: Altmush (Co. Meath, Ireland) ;
K40: Garranes (Co. Cork, Ireland) ;
K41: Michelham Priory (East Sussex, England) ;
K42: Tintagel (Cornwall, England) ;
K43: Merthyr Dyfan (Glamorgan, Wales) ;

Insufficient Evidence for Type ;
K44: Alcester (Warwickshire, England) ;
K45: Block Eary (Isle of Man) ;
K46: Deddington Castle (Oxfordshire, England) ;
K47: Inishkea North (Co. Mayo, Ireland) ;
K48: Lincoln (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K49: Northampton (Northamptonshire, England) ;
K50: Rhuddlan (Denbighshire, Wales) ;
K51: Scole (Norfolk, England) ;
K52: Spaunton New Inn (North Yorkshire, England) ;
K53: Sutton (Shropshire, England) ;
K54: Thetford (Norfolk, England) ;
K55: Wallingford Castle (Oxfordshire, England) ;

Not Drying Kilns ;
K56: Fountains Abbey (North Yorkshire, England) ;
K57: Stamford (Lincolnshire, England) ;
K58: Winchester (Hampshire, England) ;

Appendix: The Brewhouse and Bakehouse at Grafton Regis, Northamptonshire ;

Bibliography

Additional information

NGR9781803270708
9781803270708
1803270705
Post-Roman and Medieval Drying Kilns: Foundations of Archaeological Research by Robert Rickett
New
Paperback
Archaeopress
2021-10-07
156
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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