7. f2014 Everyday life in early Tudor England Housing

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Vernacular housing in Tudor England

Transcript of 7. f2014 Everyday life in early Tudor England Housing

Every Day LifeHomes Before the ‘Great Rebuilding’

Solar

Chamber Hall

Kitchen

Some Aims in Home Design

Medieval

• Suitability to status

• Shelter

• Protection

• Accommodate occupations– Farming

– Crafts

• Freedom from discomfort

Early Modern

• Privacy

• Cleanliness

• Warmth

• Light

• Comfort

Additions of the ‘Great Rebuilding’

• Floor over hall

• Stairs

• Smoke bay or hood

– Fireplace and chimney

– More fireplaces

• Glazing

Rebuilding Over Time

• Original postulate (Hoskins) 1570-1640

• Kent; Sussex Weald; Halifax, Yorkshire 15th C.

• Devon Late 16th C

• Oxfordshire 1600-1640

• Gloucestershire 1630-1690

• Wales Mid 17th C.

Peasant houses - Yorkshire

31 houses

• 14 do not mention rooms

• 15 had halls – cooking, sitting, eating

• 17 had chambers - sleeping

• 12 use the word kitchen. (also service space)

Furnishings

• Rushes as floor covering

• Almary or aumbry (armoire) in six houses

• Trestle table; chairs; benches; stools

– Window seats built in

Hearth

• Smoke holes with shutters in roof or eaves

• Intake through windows

• Dangers?

Framing

Two bay longhouse, Dartmoor

Three bay yeoman’s longhouse, Buckinghamshire

Three Bay Cruck House

Reconstruction of house (before 1552)

Solar

Chamber Hall

Kitchen

Housing in Wales

• Gentry house: A permanent, multi-bayed timber house of distinctive cruck-framed (wood counterpart of the stone arch) type.

Two bayed hall

• Peasant House: Single bayed hall; less ornate truss

Great House, Newchurch, Radnorshire (Gentry house)

Bishop Bonner’s Cottage (Museum), Dereham, Norfolk

Cob House, Devon 1539

Tyddyn Llwydion, Pennant Melangell, Montgomeryshire. 1554Reconstruction of a peasant hall house (single-bayed hall)

Wealdon House

• Jettied (overhanging) ends,

• Linked at eaves level by a continuous plate

• Single hipped roof.

Building a peasant house

Cruck House Scotland

Fron-Goch, Nantmel, Walesrecorded 1875

Hampshire – New buildings and remodeled onesRoberts, Edward. "WG Hoskins's' Great Rebuilding’ and Dendrochronology in Hampshire." Vernacular architecture 38.1 (2007): 15-18.

Owner recognition in a Welsh peasant house

Base and full crucks

A Consequence of the Dissolution of the Monasteries

• Decline of domestic glass industry (loss of market)

• Availability of salvaged glass

• New glass importedPanel of leaded glass

fitted to diamond mullions at MeadlandsCottage, Needham Market, Suffolk

Windows

• No covering except shutter

• Cloth

• Glass after 13th century in high status dwellings: Windows often considered movables

Domestic furnishings

• Fabrics

– Bedding

– Pillows

– Sheets

– Coverlets

Bed 1480

Seating

• Chairs

• Stools

• Forms (backless benches)

Almary

Furniture ~1500

‘Form’