The last couple of decades have witnessed an unprecedented upsurge of public interest in the historic environment, and the growth of the tourism and ‘heritage’ industries has focused new attention on churches. While some visitors to churches, cathedrals and monastic ruins seem content to wander around with little or no understanding of what they are looking at, many have an interest in learning about the history or usage of the building. How far does it go back? Where is the earliest part of the building? Warwick Rodwell discusses the archaeological techniques that can attempt to answer such questions.
In this lavishly illustrated, informative guide, Professor Rodwell explores the buildings themselves, their component parts, from foundations to finials, their sites, furnishings, fixtures and fittings, as well as churchyards and monuments.
Having been responsible for archaeological investigations that involved both of these doors and their settings at Westminster and Hadstock, in this book Warwick Rodwell has brought them together, along with evidence from other early, particularly hide-covered, doors. At these and other locations in England, the assertion was that the remains of hides on church doors were human, and mostly attributed to pillaging Danes. The arguments for why this gruesome claim could not be true are explored and scientific investigations presented in order to separate fact from fiction.
Yet this book is concerned with more than just the hides. It considers the form and construction of the earliest surviving English doors. The application of dendrochronology made it possible to date the oak boards from which church doors were constructed. Architectural and archaeological evidence pointed to three doors as potential claimants for the status of being the oldest in Britain and dendrochronology ranked them in date order: Westminster Abbey, 1050s; Hadstock Church, 1060s–70s; and Rochester Cathedral, c. 1080s–90s. All three doors are still in daily use in their respective buildings.
A surprising variety of techniques is displayed in the later 11th and 12th centuries, and the Westminster door is unique. Its form of construction is unmatched by any other recorded door in Britain. Are its origins Anglo-Saxon or Norman-French? Two woodwork historians, Peter Massey and Paul Reed, undertook a detailed study of the construction method and tools required to fabricate the Westminster door, and a chapter has been devoted here to their findings.