When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Peasant homes in medieval England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peasant_homes_in_medieval...

    Peasant homes in medieval England were centered around the hearth while some larger homes may have had separate areas for food processing like brewhouses and bakehouses, and storage areas like barns and granaries. There was almost always a fire burning, sometimes left covered at night, because it was easier than relighting the fire.

  3. Great hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_hall

    In the medieval period, the room would simply have been referred to as the "hall" unless the building also had a secondary hall. The term "great hall" has been mainly used for surviving rooms of this type for several centuries to distinguish them from the different type of hall found in post-medieval houses. Great halls were found especially in ...

  4. Medieval architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_architecture

    Medieval architecture was the art and science of designing and constructing buildings in the Middle Ages. The major styles of the period included pre-Romanesque , Romanesque , and Gothic . In the fifteenth century, architects began to favour classical forms again, in the Renaissance style , marking the end of the medieval period.

  5. Medieval Engineers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Engineers

    The Medieval Engineers landscape is a spheroid voxel-based planet, approximately 10 game-kilometers in radius, which is fully explorable by the player.It contains high mountain ranges with limited passable areas, deep rocky valleys, varied woodlands, grasslands and fields, desert, and a network of dirt roads, which a player may use to navigate or fast travel if they choose.

  6. Romanesque secular and domestic architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanesque_secular_and...

    This modestly sized building, fronting onto a square, has a symmetrical façade, a low gable that retains the appearance of a Classical pediment, and a portal that has a semi-circular arch raised above a broad lintel supported on corbels, a common feature of medieval Italian domestic architecture and also seen at the House of Dante. [37]

  7. Medieval Scandinavian architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Scandinavian...

    The floor of a turf house could be covered with wood, stone or earth depending on the purpose of the building. They also had a fireplace that would be in the center of the house heating and lighting the whole house. Over time, the turf houses changed in size which directly related to their purpose and status of the owner.

  8. Fortified house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortified_house

    A fortified house or fortified mansion is a type of building which developed in Europe during the Middle Ages, generally with significant fortifications added. During the earlier Roman period it was common for wealthy landowners to construct unfortified villas on their lands.

  9. Anglo-Saxon architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_architecture

    Anglo–Saxon building forms were very much part of this general building tradition. Timber was 'the natural building medium of the age': [ 5 ] the very Anglo–Saxon word for 'building' is 'timbe'. Unlike in the Carolingian world, late Anglo–Saxon royal halls continued to be of timber in the manner of Yeavering centuries before, even though ...