TY - JOUR
T1 - The "Unseen Seen"-Earth mortared stone construction,a reilluminated historic construction technique in Britain
AU - Markley, Shirley
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Construction History Society. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Earth mortars, and significantly, earth mortared stone construction has been largely overlooked in the archaeological and historic building record in the United Kingdom and Ireland to date. The use of earth mortared stone construction is proven in primary building accounts in England dating to the later medieval period. Wider research across Britain and Ireland has shown that it represents a vernacular building technique present from prehistory to the post medieval period. It is noted in high status and lower status buildings and it is evident in all buildings categories such as ecclesiastical, domestic, agricultural, defensive, industrial, infrastructural and public. However, the descriptive terms used in the recording of earth mortar in published and unpublished literature, dating from the early nineteenth through to the twenty first centuries in Ireland and Britain, negatively portrays its presence indicating its poor acceptance, interpretation and recognition. This factor is persistently hindering its understanding as a durable material of construction and masking its wider acknowledgement as a historic construction technique in resulting building interpretations. This paper highlights the use of negative terminologies characterising the use of earth mortars in stone construction in Britain which has resulted in its presence being overlooked and alternative methods of construction being prescribed. This has resulted in the consistent lack of recognition of earth mortared stone construction as a ubiquitous and significant historic building technique. This paper demonstrates that earth, much like lime, was equally used as a mortar in stone construction through history.
AB - Earth mortars, and significantly, earth mortared stone construction has been largely overlooked in the archaeological and historic building record in the United Kingdom and Ireland to date. The use of earth mortared stone construction is proven in primary building accounts in England dating to the later medieval period. Wider research across Britain and Ireland has shown that it represents a vernacular building technique present from prehistory to the post medieval period. It is noted in high status and lower status buildings and it is evident in all buildings categories such as ecclesiastical, domestic, agricultural, defensive, industrial, infrastructural and public. However, the descriptive terms used in the recording of earth mortar in published and unpublished literature, dating from the early nineteenth through to the twenty first centuries in Ireland and Britain, negatively portrays its presence indicating its poor acceptance, interpretation and recognition. This factor is persistently hindering its understanding as a durable material of construction and masking its wider acknowledgement as a historic construction technique in resulting building interpretations. This paper highlights the use of negative terminologies characterising the use of earth mortars in stone construction in Britain which has resulted in its presence being overlooked and alternative methods of construction being prescribed. This has resulted in the consistent lack of recognition of earth mortared stone construction as a ubiquitous and significant historic building technique. This paper demonstrates that earth, much like lime, was equally used as a mortar in stone construction through history.
KW - Building technique
KW - Earth mortar
KW - Medieval
KW - Prehistory
KW - Stone construction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85060871667&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85060871667
SN - 0267-7768
VL - 33
SP - 23
EP - 41
JO - Construction History
JF - Construction History
IS - 2
ER -