Bowhill: The Archaeological Study of a Building Under Repair in Exeter, Devon, 1977-95

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

With major contributions from N. W. Alcock, J. P. Allan, B. M. A. Ellis, C. M. Groves, G. Edwards, J. R. Harrison, A. J. Hopper-Bishop, R. E. Howard, B. Knight, F. P. Kelly, R. McNeilage, N. Shiel, and illustrations by P. J. F. Bishop, D. A. Garner, T. Ives, R. W. Parker, A. Simm and others. E-book (PDF) published 2013. Bowhill is a late medieval country house located about a mile to the west of the centre of Exeter and was probably built c. 1500 by Roger Holland (c. 1450-1506). Its original owners were two important country families - first the Hollands in the fifteenth century and then the Carews in the early sixteenth century, under whose ownership it remained until the 1930s. The house underwent periods of extensive development and at various times was used as a family home, tenanted property, botanical nursery and finally, briefly, as a restaurant, all of which entailed many destructive alterations. By the mid-twentieth century suburban development had engulfed the site. The Department of the Environment finally rescued the building in 1976. The subsequent phase of repair carried out first under the auspices of the Directorate of Ancient Monuments and Historic Buildings and then of English Heritage, lasting almost twenty years, provided the opportunities for the study of the building that is the subject of this book. This book is extensively illustrated and its integrated approach to the study of the building will appeal to architectural historians, conservators, architects and others with professional and scholarly interests in historic buildings as well as to archaeologists.

Author(s): Stuart R. Blaylock
Series: Exeter Archaeology Reports, 5
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 2004

Language: English
Pages: XVI+396
City: Swindon

Foreword vii
Acknowledgements viii
Summary xi
Abbreviations xiii
Preface xiv
1. Introduction: background and context 1
2. Pictorial and cartographic sources 15
3. Historical outline 24
4. The excavations 43
5. The standing building: description and analysis of the exterior 73
6. The standing building: description and analysis of the interior 97
7. The standing building: description and analysis of the roofs 143
8. General discussion of the building 169
9. The finds 199
10. Dendrochronology and mortar analysis 243
11. The development of the conservation programme 283
12. Concluding discussion 331
Appendix: the archive 344
Notes 346
Glossary 375
References 377
Index 386