Lincoln Castle Revealed
Lincoln Castle Revealed
The Story of a Norman Powerhouse and its Anglo-Saxon Precursor
Author(s):
Jonathan ClarkJustin Garner-Lahire
Publication Date: 04 August, 2021
Available in all formats
Publisher: Oxbow Books
ISBN: 9781789257366
ISBN: 9781789257366
Price: INR 1356.99
Description
Table of contents
This book tells a new story of the royal castle of Lincoln in the north of England, how it was imposed on the late Anglo-Saxon town, and how it developed over the next 900 years in the hands of the English king or his aristocratic associates, leaving us a surviving monument of three great towers, each with its own biography. Led by FAS Heritage, archaeologists, architectural historians and a large cohort of the general public have combined to produce a revealing and accessible account of the story of Lincoln Castle and a reborn historical attraction for the city of Lincoln.
Description
This book tells a new story of the royal castle of Lincoln in the north of England, how it was imposed on the late Anglo-Saxon town, and how it developed over the next 900 years in the hands of the English king or his aristocratic associates, leaving us a surviving monument of three great towers, each with its own biography. Led by FAS Heritage, archaeologists, architectural historians and a large cohort of the general public have combined to produce a revealing and accessible account of the story of Lincoln Castle and a reborn historical attraction for the city of Lincoln.
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Picture credits
- 1. The campaign to reveal Lincoln Castle
- Introduction
- Opportunity
- Research incentives
- Community involvement
- A guide to this book
- Overview
- Before the Romans
- Roman Lincoln
- Post-Roman and Anglo-Saxon Lincoln
- The medieval castle
- Coda: Lincoln Castle into the 21st century
- 2. The Roman fortress and colonia
- Introduction
- The legionary fortress
- Remains of the fortress in the grounds of Castle Moat House
- The Roman colonia
- Archaeological observations made in the grounds of Castle Moat House
- The Roman colonia beneath the castle
- Structures 13 and 14, Roman ‘strip’ houses
- Structure 15, a late Roman townhouse
- Significant Roman finds
- A statue of Domitian?
- Life in the townhouse
- The end of Roman Lincoln
- 3. The city beneath the castle
- Roman to medieval in the Upper City
- Early medieval settlement before the castle
- The lost cemetery and church or chapel
- Burial 9
- Burial 1, the foundation burial
- Burial 11
- Burial 3
- Burial 2
- Burial 6, with Burial
- Burial 4
- Burial 5, the sarcophagus burial
- The sarcophagus
- Who lived and died in the former Roman city? Portrait of a community
- The documentary context of the Masons’ Yard church or chapel
- 4. The early castle and the Lucy Tower
- An introduction to Lincoln Castle
- Lincoln and the Norman Conquest
- The early castle
- The southern enclosure and the lost South Gate
- The Lucy Tower
- Countess Lucy
- The pike mark
- A study of the shell-keep
- Inside the Lucy Tower
- The lost chambers
- An introduction to Lincoln Castle
- 5. The castle gates and walls
- Introduction
- West Gate
- West Gate barbican and tower
- East Gate
- The Magna Aula or Great Hall
- The castle walls
- East curtain wall
- North curtain wall
- West curtain wall
- 6. The Observatory Tower
- East Range
- Ranulf’s Tower
- Lincoln Castle and the Anarchy
- Structures 9 and 10
- The gaol tower
- Feasting at Lincoln Castle – the 12th-century midden
- A commentary on the dice, by Mark Hall
- A commentary on the animal bones, by Matilda Holmes
- 7. Cobb Hall and the last flowering of the medieval castle
- Historical introduction, from King John to Henry III
- Strengthening a fortress
- Cobb Hall, a new tower
- Martial
- Official
- Regal
- All the king’s horses, the castle stables, mill and brewhouse
- Cobb Hall and Lincoln Castle in the Civil War
- 8. Lincoln Castle recreated
- The Old Gaol and County Hall
- The Georgian gaol, 1785–1788
- The gaol yards
- The 1820s debtors’ yard or airing court
- The new debtors’ yard
- Keepers of the gaol
- The 1840s prison
- The Eastern Courtyard
- Death and burial
- Romantic ruins
- Governor John Merryweather and the gentrification of Lincoln Castle
- E J Willson and Lincoln Castle recreated
- Lincoln Castle into the 21st century
- 9 Legacy
- Overview
- The Roman to Anglo-Scandinavian Upper City
- The medieval castle
- Rebirth: the Lincoln Castle Revealed project
- Overview
- Digest of evidence
- General
- 1 Glossary of terms
- 2 Master index to interventions
- Roman
- 3 Roman pottery, Ian M. Rowlandson
- 4 Roman finds, H.E.M Cool
- 5 Roman glass, H.E.M Cool
- 6 Roman coin list, Craig Barclay
- 7 Roman spindle whorl, Penelope Walton Rogers
- Anglo-Saxon, medieval and later
- 8 Post-Roman pottery, Jane Young
- 9 The human bone, Shirley Curtis-Summers
- 10 Multi-isotope analysis, Mandy Jay and Janet Montgomery with data reporting by Derek Hamilton and Kerry Sayle
- 11 Radiocarbon dating, stable isotope analyses and Bayesian modelling, Derek Hamilton and Kerry Sayle
- 12 Evidence for textiles, Penelope Walton Rogers
- 13 Medieval and later finds, Cecily Spall
- General
- Bibliography