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  2. Byre-dwelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byre-dwelling

    The generic German term is Wohnstallhaus from Wohnung ("dwelling"), Stall ("byre", "sty)" and Haus ("house"). From the Iron Age onwards the longhouse, developed from the byre-dwellings of the Bronze Age with its domestic area and adjacent cattle bays, was found across the North German Plain. As a result of the keeping of ever larger herds of ...

  3. Roundhouse (dwelling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roundhouse_(dwelling)

    The Taganrog Round House is a residential apartment building in Taganrog, Rostov and was the first round house built in the USSR. The building is a modern round house built in 1929 and inhabited on 7 November 1932. The shared toilet was outside the house, about 20 meters from it. [6]

  4. House of the Tiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_the_Tiles

    The House of the Tiles is a monumental Early Bronze Age building (two stories, approximately 12 x 25 m) located at the archaeological site of Lerna in southern Greece. [1] It is notable for several architectural features that were advanced for its time during the Helladic period, notably its roof covered by baked tiles, which gave the building its name.

  5. Housing in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_in_Scotland

    The oldest house in Scotland dates from the Mesolithic era. In the Neolithic era settled farming led to the construction of the first stone houses. There is also evidence from this period of large timber halls. In the Bronze Age there were cellular round crannogs (built on artificial islands) and hillforts that enclosed

  6. Architecture of Scotland in the prehistoric era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Scotland...

    As bronze working developed from about 2000 BCE, there was a decline in the building of large new structures, which, with a reduction of the total area under cultivation, suggests a fall in population. [17] From the Early and Middle Bronze Age there is evidence of cellular round houses of stone, as at Jarlshof and Sumburgh in Shetland. [18]

  7. Broch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broch

    Broch of Mousa. In archaeology, a broch / b r ɒ x / is an Iron Age drystone hollow-walled structure found in Scotland.Brochs belong to the classification "complex Atlantic roundhouse" devised by Scottish archaeologists in the 1980s.

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