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Military Architecture in England During the Middle Ages

Chapter 29: INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH CHURCH ARCHITECTURE FOR GENERAL READERS
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About This Book

The study traces the evolution of military fortification in England from Roman antecedents and Saxon–Danish defenses through Norman earth-and-timber castles to their stone successors, outlining siegecraft, the emergence of keeps, 12th–13th-century arrangements, and the sophisticated planning of Edward I’s fortresses. It situates castles alongside walled towns, highlights eastern and crusading influences on siege methods, and contrasts the pragmatic solidity of fortress construction with incidental Gothic decoration. The concluding chapters follow the transition from castles to fortified manor-houses after the arrival of firearms, and the text combines archaeological, documentary, and illustrative material while acknowledging areas needing further research.

INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH CHURCH ARCHITECTURE FOR GENERAL READERS

By FRANCIS BOND, M.A., F.G.S.

This book has been specially prepared for those who have not had an architectural training and desire an account of English Ecclesiastical Architecture not overlaid with archæological and technical detail. It will be a quarto volume of large size and handsome type, illustrated with many hundred Plans, Drawings, and large size Photographs, and will probably be published at a Guinea.

LONDON: HENRY FROWDE