This edited volume sets out the work of a team of scholars from
Northwestern University and the University of Southampton led by Matthew
Johnson, in collaboration with the National Trust. Between 2010 and
2014, different members of the group carried out topographical,
geophysical and building survey at four different late medieval sites
and landscapes in southeastern England, all owned and managed by the
National Trust: Bodiam, Scotney, Knole and Ightham. Studies were also
undertaken into documentary, map and other evidence. A particularly
important element of the research was to synthesize and re-present the
'grey literature' at all four sites. This volume seeks to present this
work and discuss its archaeological and historical importance. It places
the four sites and their landscapes in their setting, as part of the
wider landscape of southeast England. It discusses the importance of
these places in understanding later medieval elite sites and landscapes
in general, and in terms of their long-term biographies and contexts.
Central to the volume are the linked ideas of lived experience and
political ecology in presenting a new understanding of late medieval
sites and landscapes.