词条 | Welsh Tower houses | |||||
释义 |
Distribution of Tower Houses in WalesThe main concentration of Tower houses is in southern Pembrokeshire. These were first published with detailed drawings in 1877-8 by Rev. E L Barnwell.[2] The Pembrokeshire examples have a coastal distribution and this also true of the Monmouth and Glamorgan Tower Houses as well as the demolished examples at Penhryn in Caernarfonshire and Ty-gwyn, Abermo. Otherwise the Tower houses are distributed along the Welsh - English border, with one example, Wattlesborourgh, just over the border in Shropshire. In 1976 Hilling produced a map (with listing) showing 17 examples.[3] Further houses have been added by Suggett and it is possible that new examples will be recognised as being incorporated into existing buildings, as at Sandyhaven House in Pembrokeshire.[4] Dating and features of Welsh Tower HousesThe Welsh Tower houses are not particularly large and have up to three storeys above an undercroft, as at the Old Rectory, Angle and the Tower at Talgarth. Smith distinguished a smaller group of house which only have one storey above an undercroft, The best example of this type is Carswell in Pembrokeshire. Smith compared this group to the Irish £10 Tower houses. These were built after 1427 when a statute was passed that any of the King’s liege living within the Pale would be paid £10 for building a house of a minimum size.[5] It seems likely that the Welsh houses were built about the same time.[6]” Taller Tower houses, such as the Old Rectory, Angle, are likely to have been built before 1400, as they have arrow slits, rather than an early form of gun port, which would have been used after that date. At Penhryn, Licence to crenellate was granted in 1438. The internal round staircase at the corner at the Old Rectory, Angle is similar to some Irish Tower houses and some the Welsh Tower house have projecting gardrobes similar to the Scottish and Irish Tower Houses. There is also some evidence that a stone or timber hall would have been built or added to the tower at the same time or shortly after the Tower house was built, At Eastington and Bonville Court, the tower which was built against a hall, is rectangular, rather than square. The Old Rectory at Angle clearly shows the evidence for a gable of a hall butting up against the tower. List of Welsh Tower HousesBreconshire
Denbighshire
Caernarfonshire
Flintshire
Glamorgan
Merioneth
Montgomeryshire
Monmouthshire
Pembrokeshire
Welsh Marches
Welsh Tower house GallerySee also
References1. ^Smith P. Houses of the Welsh Countryside, 2nd Edition, 1988, HMSO/ RCAHMW Map1, 338–9. 2. ^Barnwell E L ‘’Domestic Architecture of South Pembrokeshire’’, Archaeologia Cambrensis, Vol 13, 1867, 193–204, 363–374 & Vol 14,1868, 70–84. 3. ^Hilling J Historic Architecture of Wales: An Introduction. (1976), Univ. Wales Press, Cardiff,, pp. 95–6 4. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 29 5. ^Leask H G, Irish Castles, 2nd ed, pp. 76–7 6. ^”Smith”, 1988, 25, note 7 7. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 8. ^Scourfield and Haslam, 2013, 565 9. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 10. ^Scourfield and Haslam, 2013, 570 11. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 12. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 28 13. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 28–30, ills. 14. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 15. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 16. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 17. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 18. ^"Scourfield and Haslam", (2013), 244 19. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 20. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 21. ^”Smith”, 1988, p. 32, fig 7 22. ^”Smith”, 1988, pp. 31 & 33, fig 8b 23. ^”Smith”, 1988, p. 31, fig 6 24. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 25. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 26. ^”Smith”, 1988, 339 27. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 29 28. ^””Smith”, 1988, pp. 23 & 33, fig 8 29. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 29 30. ^”Suggett”, 2010, p. 29 31. ^”Suggett”, 2010, pg 29 32. ^J Newman and N Pevsner “The Buildings of England: Shropshire”, Yale 2006, pg 105-6 Bibliography
6 : Tower houses in the United Kingdom|Welsh architecture|14th-century fortifications|14th century in Wales|15th-century fortifications|15th century in Wales |
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