This survey examines a relatively small area of the Norfolk countryside to discover, as far as possible, how settlement patterns have evolved from Roman, Anglo-Saxon and medieval through to recent times. The area chosen, the Launditch Hundred in west central Norfolk, contains forty-one medieval villages. Research involved a combination of detailed fieldwork around those villages where conditions were suitable, the excavation of a deserted village at Grenstein, the excavation of a Middle and Late Saxon settlement near the ruins of the pre-Conquest cathedral at North Elmham and a study of maps, both printed and manuscript, as well as other documentary sources. A study of three deserted village sites in the Launditch Hundred, Godwick, Pudding Norton and Bittering is to be published in a forthcoming volume of East Anglian Archaeology. An appraisal of the four Dark Age linear earthworks in west Norfolk including the Launditch involved a re-interpretation of their plan and function. The overall pattern of these monuments was considered in relation to the expansion of Anglo-Saxon settlement in Norfolk.
Author(s): Peter Wade-Martins
Series: East Anglian Archaeology, 10
Publisher: The Norfolk Archaeological Unit
Year: 1980
Language: English
Pages: 210
City: Gressenhall
List of Plates
List of Figures
List of Tables
Contributors
PART 1: FIELDWORK ON VILLAGES IN THE LAUNDITCH HUNDRED
CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 2. THE SETTING
CHAPTER 3. BEETLEY
CHAPTER 4. EAST BILNEY
CHAPTER 5. BRISLEY
CHAPTER 6. HORNINGTOFT
CHAPTER 7. KEMPSTONE
CHAPTER 8. LONGHAM
CHAPTER 9. MILEHAM
CHAPTER 10. STANFIELD
CHAPTER 11. TITTLESHALL AND SUTTON
CHAPTER 12. WEASENHAM ALL SAINTS
CHAPTER 13. WEASENHAM ST. PETER
CHAPTER 14. WELLINGHAM
CHAPTER 15. WORTHING
CHAPTER 16. CALDECOTE
CHAPTER 17. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS
PART 2: FIELDWORK AND EXCAVATION AT GRENSTEIN (GREYNSTON)
CHAPTER 18. GRENSTEIN (GREYNSTON)
Bibliography 162