Transmission of Architectural Knowledge through Agricultural Practice

Author(s): Gary Shaffer

Year: 2016

Summary

This paper explores an example of cultural transmission from Neolithic to modern times in central and southern Italy: the passing on of architectural knowledge through agricultural practice. Excavation and analysis of wattle and daub buildings from the Stentinello period (6th and 5th millennia B.C.) of Calabria and observation of their 20th-century counterparts prompted study of the continuation of this architectural tradition. Several constructional components have multiple utility in rural life and may have become enmeshed in cycles of general farming practices. For example, willow shoots used to tie together wooden wall frames were used in later times to tie grape vines, fasten branches when grafting, and make baskets. The mud employed as daub also served historically as a plaster to cover tree grafts and beehives of woven withies. Furthermore, plants used as temper in architectural daub could be added to clay that covered tree grafts. The study presents new data from art history, classical and historical literature (both agricultural manuals and fiction), and ethnography to understand how new generations learned constructional skills through frequent farming activities and helped to keep a building method alive.

Cite this Record

Transmission of Architectural Knowledge through Agricultural Practice. Gary Shaffer. Presented at The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, Florida. 2016 ( tDAR id: 404530) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8MG7R9W

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

Spatial Coverage

min long: -11.074; min lat: 37.44 ; max long: 50.078; max lat: 70.828 ;

File Information

  Name Size Creation Date Date Uploaded Access
TRANSMISSION-OF-ARCHITECTURAL-KNOWLEDGE_Version2.pdf 123.43kb Apr 8, 2016 May 27, 2016 8:35:19 AM Public
SAA paper