The Medieval Houses of the Marsh: the Missing Evidence
Romney Marsh: the Debatable Ground (ed. J. Eddison), OUCA Monograph 41, 1995 The Medieval Houses of the Marsh: the Missing Evidence Sarah Pearson The image of Kent as a county with a multitude of identified in any of the three rural parishes. However, at medieval houses is a common one, and in many areas it The Woolpack Inn in Brookland, as in several late 16th or has a firm foundation. One may, for example, cite Charing, early 17th-centuryhouses in Lydd, smoke-blackened rafters, which runs from the southern edge of the Downs, across which must have come originally from open-hall houses, the Vale of Holmesdale and into the sand and ragstone of were reused as part of the later structures, indicating the the Chart Hills, where 24 medieval houses have been former presence of sizeable and sturdy medieval buildings identified; or Smarden, lying in the low Weald, where at which were rebuilt in the early modern period. If one looks least 21 medieval dwellings are known. Although these beyond the parishes surveyed by the Commission a similar large parishes have more houses remaining than most, the picture emerges. In New Romney two or three early stone density of survivors is not unusually high, and it results buildings, which survive to a greater or lesser extent, have in three, or even four or more, medieval houses occurring been recorded (Parkin 1973, 124-7; Harris 1992), and a per 1000 acres. But densities of this sort are not universal, number of later timber-framed medieval houses have been and among the regions where few early dwellings remain identified (Parkin 1973, 120-4).
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