The Rows of Chester: The Chester Rows Research Project

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 contribution by Cathy Groves, Jennifer Hillam, Malcolm Hughes, Pat Leggett. Ebook (PDF) published 2013. Almost ten years of historical and archaeological research on the Rows of Chester, the most extensive surviving example in Europe of a medieval two-tier complex of shops, are detailed in this thorough and authoritative report. The Rows of Chester form a unique system of walkways through the frontages of buildings on the city's four main streets. They pass above the street-level shops, giving access to a second tier of shops at Row (first floor) level. Established in 1984, the Chester Rows Research Project aimed to survey all the Rows buildings using an interdisciplinary approach, in which an appreciation of the architectural and social influences that gave rise to the two-tier system were combined with archaeological investigation and historical research. The ultimate aim was to understand the origins of the Rows and the reasons for their survival. There is no evidence for an imposed planning scheme at any stage. The Rows system developed in the Middle Ages, especially during a prosperous period fostered by the Edwardian campaigns in North Wales. A century or more of subsequent economic depression helped to preserve the Rows system from change. Despite commercial recovery in the seventeenth century, two thirds of the Rows survived despite extensive redevelopment of the Row buildings. Copious fascinating illustrations include archival prints of the Rows in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; early photographs of them before the Victorian rebuilding of the Vernacular revival; colour reproductions of reconstruction drawings, and attractive Victorian and Edwardian water colours.

Author(s): Andrew Brown (ed.), Peter de Figueiredo, Jane Grenville, Roland Harris, Jane Laughton, Alan Thacker, Rick Turner
Series: English Heritage Archaeological Reports, 16
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 1999

Language: English
Pages: XVIII+216
City: London

List of illustrations vi
List of tables ix
Acknowledgements x
Preface xi
Note on authors xii
Summaries xiii
Editor's note xvii
1. Introduction 1
2. Early medieval buildings 15
3. Early medieval stonework 33
4. Early medieval timberwork 44
5. Origins of the rows 55
6. Late medieval buildings 64
7. The great rebuilding 79
8. An ornament to the city 96
9. The Vernacular Revival 114
10. Postcript - renewal and conservation 131
Appendix A: Notes on some of the property and building terms 136
Appendix B: Report on the dendrochronological sampling programme 139
Appendix C: Documentary references for the enclosure of the Rows 151
Gazetteer 156
Glossary 186
Bibliography 189
Endnotes 193
Index 202