Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches

Tower-nave churches are essentially free-standing towers which incorporated chapels, and are characteristically Anglo-Saxon in date and construction. Due to their elaborate form and limited capacity they have been suggested as having a dual ecclesiastical and secular high-status function. This study...

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Main Author: Shapland, M.
Published: University College London (University of London) 2013
Subjects:
930
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.587796
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5877962015-12-03T03:28:43ZBuildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churchesShapland, M.2013Tower-nave churches are essentially free-standing towers which incorporated chapels, and are characteristically Anglo-Saxon in date and construction. Due to their elaborate form and limited capacity they have been suggested as having a dual ecclesiastical and secular high-status function. This study has identified thirty-five examples, dating mainly to the 10th and 11th centuries, both standing and known from documentary sources and excavation. A thorough study of each site has been undertaken: a review of previous work on the site, extant fabric drawn and described, documentary sources investigated, and each site placed in its settlement and landscape contexts. All but two tower-naves were constructed at the behest of powerful secular or ecclesiastical lords, either at their residences or at major early medieval monasteries. The monastic tower-naves are more heterogeneous in size and form than the lordly examples, which are almost uniformly small and square. Both monastic and lordly tower-naves can be related to the highest ranks of early medieval society. Monastic tower-naves functioned as funerary structures, gateways, high-status private chapels or burial-chapels. Lordly tower-naves were private chapels and architectural embodiments of aristocratic status, many of which would have made useful watchtowers and articulated with landscapes of social power. The construction of tower-naves largely ceased after c. 1100. Monastic tower-naves endured as free-standing monastic belltowers, which shared their gateway and mortuary functions, whilst lordly tower-naves are argued to have influenced the development of the early Norman tower-keep.930University College London (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.587796http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1396780/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 930
spellingShingle 930
Shapland, M.
Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
description Tower-nave churches are essentially free-standing towers which incorporated chapels, and are characteristically Anglo-Saxon in date and construction. Due to their elaborate form and limited capacity they have been suggested as having a dual ecclesiastical and secular high-status function. This study has identified thirty-five examples, dating mainly to the 10th and 11th centuries, both standing and known from documentary sources and excavation. A thorough study of each site has been undertaken: a review of previous work on the site, extant fabric drawn and described, documentary sources investigated, and each site placed in its settlement and landscape contexts. All but two tower-naves were constructed at the behest of powerful secular or ecclesiastical lords, either at their residences or at major early medieval monasteries. The monastic tower-naves are more heterogeneous in size and form than the lordly examples, which are almost uniformly small and square. Both monastic and lordly tower-naves can be related to the highest ranks of early medieval society. Monastic tower-naves functioned as funerary structures, gateways, high-status private chapels or burial-chapels. Lordly tower-naves were private chapels and architectural embodiments of aristocratic status, many of which would have made useful watchtowers and articulated with landscapes of social power. The construction of tower-naves largely ceased after c. 1100. Monastic tower-naves endured as free-standing monastic belltowers, which shared their gateway and mortuary functions, whilst lordly tower-naves are argued to have influenced the development of the early Norman tower-keep.
author Shapland, M.
author_facet Shapland, M.
author_sort Shapland, M.
title Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
title_short Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
title_full Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
title_fullStr Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
title_full_unstemmed Buildings of secular and religious lordship : Anglo-Saxon tower-nave churches
title_sort buildings of secular and religious lordship : anglo-saxon tower-nave churches
publisher University College London (University of London)
publishDate 2013
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.587796
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