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pro vyhledávání: '"Bob Meeson"'
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 51:155-158
The books reviewed here are best understood in the context of the evolving project which led to their publication. Uniquely, since 1969, David and Barbara Martin have applied themselves for more th...
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 52:129-130
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 47:61-68
From the seventeenth century to the nineteenth, carpenters’ and builders’ manuals have defined tusks as shoulders above or below tenons. In recent decades, especially in English archaeological lite...
Autor:
Bob Meeson, Nat Alcock
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 47:1-19
The structure and use of the medieval renter row, 119–23 Upper Spon Street, Coventry, is examined and compared to the ‘Wealden’ row, 159–62 Spon Street, Coventry, 34–50 Church Street, Tewkesbury, the longest surviving row of medieval renter
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 43:58-75
Since the first annual lists of tree-ring dated buildings were published in Vernacular Architecture in 1980, dendrochronologists have assigned either a precise felling date or reasonably narrow dating parameters to more than 3000 building constructio
Autor:
Bob Meeson, Nat Alcock
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 40:96-102
Radiocarbon dating using Bayesian wiggle-matching of multiple dates has been applied to a cruck blade reused in a seventeenth-century farmhouse, Church End Farm, Nether Whitacre, Warwickshire, which was believed on typological grounds to date from th
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 36:41-48
This short paper was prompted by recent recording of ritual marks and graffiti in the west midlands. One set of marks is so complex as to suggest a palimpsest, resulting from incisions made at different dates, implying continuity of this traditional
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 32:1-15
The underlying tenet of this paper is that as the Vernacular Architecture Group approaches its first half-century, theoretical archaeology and the dismemberment of established models will compel more meticulous building recording and a more explicit
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
The Antiquaries Journal. 89:438-440
Autor:
Bob Meeson
Publikováno v:
Vernacular Architecture. 27:10-27
Two- or three-bay houses with square panel and straight braces in the walls, and side-purlin roofs with tiebeams and single collars trusses, were common in much of the post-medieval Staffordshire. Although such buildings are the predominant visible e