A beautifully illustrated guide to timber-framed buildings and how
they have been constructed from medieval times to the nineteenth
century.
Timber-framed buildings are a distinctive and treasured part of
Britain's heritage. The oldest of them are medieval but their numbers
peaked in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, with a revival again
in the nineteenth. The majority of timber-framed buildings are houses,
but timber was used in all kinds of other buildings, including shops,
inns, churches, town halls and farm buildings. This book outlines the
history of timber-framed buildings, including their construction
techniques, regional variations in style, and their social status. It
also shows how the buildings have been treated in subsequent centuries
and guides the reader in identifying timber-framing that is concealed
behind later work. Illustrated with color photographs, it is the ideal
primer for anyone interested in timber-framed buildings who wants to
explore them further.