Glossary of Prehistoric and Historic Timber Buildings - Glossar zum prähistorischen und historischen Holzbau

Editor(s): Haio W Zimmermann; Lutz Volmer

Year: 2012

Summary

This book enables researchers to communicate more easily and more precisely about historical European timber buildings than was possible before. The idea to collect terms for the subject of timber buildings occurred at a colloquium in Århus, DK, in 1987 and was implemented as a glossary of five languages and some 230 archaeological expressions until 1995. The present volume expands these beginnings to include existing buildings and was supplied with words from nine languages by one archaeologist and one historian each. Beginning with basic house types, the functional features and room types, it also deals with structural elements of wall frames and roofs as well as with wood joints. There are additional sections on building materials and woodworking techniques with their related tools. Special fields such as fortifications, bridges, or mills were excluded, however, as were areas with an early dominance of stone architecture such as the Mediterranean. The published glossary includes almost 900 terms and has a chronological range from the dwellings of the earliest sedentary people of the Neolithic until the beginning of the Industrial Age around 1800/1850.

Cite this Record

Glossary of Prehistoric and Historic Timber Buildings - Glossar zum prähistorischen und historischen Holzbau. Haio W Zimmermann, Lutz Volmer. Studien zur Landschafts- und Siedlungsgeschichte im südlichen Nordseegebiet. Wilhelmshaven: Niedersächsisches Institut für historische Küstenforschung, Marie Leidorf Verlag. 2012 ( tDAR id: 424461)

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

Spatial Coverage

min long: -8.158; min lat: 41.367 ; max long: 31.074; max lat: 71.138 ;

Individual & Institutional Roles

Contact(s): EXARC Experimental Archaeology Collection Manager

Record Identifiers

ExArc Id(s): 13123

Notes

Rights & Attribution: The information in this record was originally compiled by Dr. Roeland Paardekooper, EXARC Director.