Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Patterns in Stonework: The Early Churches in Northern England: A further study in ecclesiastical geology Part A: The Counties of Cheshire, Cumberland, Derbyshire, Durham, Lancashire and Lincolnshire
John F. Potter
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
This work follows the rapid survey of the ecclesiastical geology of the stonework of known Anglo-Saxon churches throughout England undertaken by the author a decade ago. From that brief study it proved possible to both understand and distinguish clearly obvious patterns in the use of the stonework. Furthermore, the use and value of specific rock types were determined and diagnostic features which could be used to identify buildings of the period were described. Subsequent, more widespread published studies in Scotland, Ireland and Wales, expanded the English studies by revealing closely analogous examples of the same indicative features. Beyond the domain of the Anglo-Saxons but, of the same pre-Romanesque age, a widespread building fashion had been followed and to this the name 'Patterned' was applied. Chapters 1 and 2 introduce and summarize this work and give brief details of the specific features that are diagnostic of this period. Although a number of relatively minor regional studies have been undertaken by the author in England, nothing had until this time been attempted for the North of England. The present work takes the same form as those studies for both Ireland and Wales. It provides a comprehensive analysis to cover all the early churches over an area of eleven North of England counties. Too large to be bound within one volume, the churches in these counties have been described in two volume parts, this being Part A. In this, the (pre-1974) counties involved are, in alphabetical order, Cheshire, Cumberland, Derbyshire, Durham, Lancashire and Lincolnshire; 79 churches or sites in all. This widespread regional study further endorses the existence of those distinctive Patterned features in stonework fashions seen elsewhere. That building fashions changed in the past, if less dramatically, much as they do today, was further emphasised with stonework of Norman and later periods showing the same significant style changes as re-described here and noted in previous studies. This study, by county, drew attention to the dramatic differences that exist in the numbers of early churches that remain in existence today by geographical region. Consequential to this far-reaching study a variety of supplementary aspects of church construction are also discussed.
-
Front Cover
-
Title Page
-
Copyright
-
Frontispiece
-
Table of Contents
-
ABSTRACT
-
LIST OF TABLES
-
LIST OF FIGURES
-
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
-
IMPORTANT NOTE AND RESULTING APOLOGIES
-
CHAPTER ONE TECHNIQUES IN THE STUDY AND THE DETERMINATION OF AGE AND STRUCTURAL HISTORY OF ECCLESIASTICAL ARCHITECTURE
-
CHAPTER TWO MASONRY DETAIL AND STONEWORK IN EARLY ECCLESIASTICAL ARCHITECTURE IN THE BRITISH ISLES
-
CHAPTER THREE THE EARLY CHURCHES OF CHESHIRE
-
CHAPTER FOUR THE EARLY CHURCHES OF CUMBERLAND
-
CHAPTER FIVE THE EARLY CHURCHES OF DERBYSHIRE
-
CHAPTER SIX THE EARLY CHURCHES OF THE COUNTY OF DURHAM
-
CHAPTER SEVEN EARLY CHURCHES OF THE COUNTY OF LANCASHIRE
-
CHAPTER EIGHT THE EARLY CHURCHES OF LINCOLNSHIRE
-
CHAPTER NINE FURTHER ANALYSES AND DISCUSSION
-
CHAPTER TEN CONCLUSIONS
-
GLOSSARY
-
APPENDIX
-
REFERENCES
Citable Link
Published: 2015
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407313931 (paperback)
- 9781407323015 (ebook)
BAR Number: B617