Warrington in 50 Buildings

Warrington in 50 Buildings

The Beatles' Landmarks in Liverpool

The Beatles' Landmarks in Liverpool

Dry Stone Walls

History and Heritage

Publication Date15th December 2016

Book FormatPaperback

pages96

Illustrations180

Height234

Width165

Prof. Angus Winchester provides an illustrated history of the history and heritage of dry stone walling in Britain.
Regular Price £15.99 Online Price: £14.39
Availability: In stock
ISBN
9781445651484
Dry stone walls create much of the character of upland landscapes across Britain. How do we go about dating dry stone walls? Why were they built and by whom? This book seeks answers to these questions and also suggests how walls themselves may be ‘read’ as historical evidence, shedding light on past farming practice and the history of local communities.

The first part of the book traces the history of dry stone walls from medieval times to the present. The standard form of most dry stone walls probably dates from Tudor times but the great era of wall-building in the uplands took place comparatively recently, in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. There are numerous regional variations: ‘Galloway dykes’ in south-west Scotland; stone slab fences, found from Orkney to mid-Wales; ‘consumption’ walls, built to absorb vast quantities of stone from the fields.

The second part of the book looks at dry stone walls as part of Britain’s cultural heritage. The walls themselves contain evidence of why they were built and how they functioned as part of the hill farming system. They sometimes preserve information about their builders and owners or evidence of lost features in the landscape.
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