Medieval wall construction
After the fall of the Roman Empire around 500 CE and into the Middle Ages, solid stone wall construction continued as a prevelant building material throughout Britain. Medieval builders had a good understanding of engineering and of solid wall construction, often building large temporary timber structures to keep stone walls in place as the lime mortars set, creating increasingly sophisticated Medieval Architecture. A large number of churches were built prior to the battle of Hastings in 1066, many of which stand today, are some of the oldest buildings in England and most are solid wall construction of stonewith lime mortar. The oldest is likely to be Beehive cells a monastic centre Eileach an Naoimh, Argyll, Scotland or St Martin's Church, Canterbury which is the oldest church building in England, and still being used.
During and after the Norman conquest, William the Conqueror ordered the construction of a vast number of castles, towers, cathedrals and churches across his realm, almost all of which were solid wall stone and most made from Caen stone brought from France. The best known examples of these are Norwich, Lincoln and Richmond Castles, Canterbury Cathedral,, Westminster Abbey and the Tower of London. In general the stone in most Medieval castle walls was built within a wooden frame designed to hold it in place while the mortar dried, in some cases for thicker walls, a cavity may have been introduced though it would usually have then been completely filled with rubble. In some examples very wide cavities were created between two single stones walls to house a thin stair case or rampart.
One construction method that stems from the Medieval period is the half-timber framed house, greek wood or oak frame with a wattle and daub infills. This type of wall build-up ais made up of different layered materials the full depth of the timbers. It was usually employed as part of a timber frame building as the infill between the framing elements. Wattle was substrate for the infill, usually wooden strips or thin branches, reeds, grasses or vines woven to form a plate spanning between and fixed to the frame. The wattle substrate was then covered with daub, made up of a combination of binders, clay, lime, chalk dust, etc, aggregates, subsoil, sand, crushed stone etc and reinforcement such as straw, hay and other fibrous materials creating a solid build-up between structural members also full depth, or covered internally.
Whilst earth was most likely used medieval Britain for earth burred stores, pits and dug outs it was not until some time later, around the 1400's that cob buildings started to appear across parts of Devon, Cornwall and Wales. This mixture of sandy sub-soil, clay and straw was often shuttered in place creating walls of half to one meter thick, wide enough to create a raised trail for livestock to walk over, thus stamping down the mixture to compact it. It was finished with a lime render and then a lime wash externally as wellas in some cases a lime plaster internally creating a breathable hygroscopic massive solid wall build up.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Architectural styles.
- Boss (medieval architecture).
- Durham Cathedral's Open Treasure project.
- Early medieval period.
- English architectural stylistic periods.
- Floors of the great medieval churches.
- Perpendicular Gothic.
- Romanesque Architecture.
- The Dukes of Normandy and the second world war.
- Main author
- Medieval architecture.
Featured articles and news
Reasons for using MVHR systems
6 reasons for a whole-house approach to ventilation.
Supplementary Planning Documents, a reminder
As used by the City of London to introduce a Retrofit first policy.
The what, how, why and when of deposit return schemes
Circular economy steps for plastic bottles and cans in England and Northern Ireland draws.
Join forces and share Building Safety knowledge in 2025
Why and how to contribute to the Building Safety Wiki.
Reporting on Payment Practices and Performance Regs
Approved amendment coming into effect 1 March 2025.
A new CIOB TIS on discharging CDM 2015 duties
Practical steps that can be undertaken in the Management of Contractors to discharge the relevant CDM 2015 duties.
Planning for homes by transport hubs
Next steps for infrastructure following the updated NPPF.
Access, history and Ty unnos.
The world’s first publicly funded civic park.
Exploring permitted development rights for change of use
Discussing lesser known classes M, N, P, PA and L.
CIOB Art of Building 2024 judges choice winner
Once Upon a Pass by Liam Man.
CIOB Art of Building 2024 public choice winner
Fresco School by Roman Robroek.
HE expands finance alliance to boost SME house building
Project follows on from Habiko public-private place making pension partnership for affordable housing delivery.
Licensing construction; looking back to look forward
Voluntary to required contractors (licensing) schemes.
A contractor discusses the Building Safety Act
A brief to the point look at changes that have occurred.
How orchards can influence planning and development.