House, farmstead and settlement in the north and west of the Germania magna. Nüsse, H. M. Leidorf, Berlin, 2014.
House, farmstead and settlement in the north and west of the Germania magna [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Thanks to monitoring of building sites, new survey methods, and research projects, the inventory of house and settlement plans of the 1st to 5th century between the Netherlands and southern Scandinavia has approximately doubled since 1993, so that some 2,000 published ground plans of single- to triple-aisled buildings could be catalogued. For a differentiated analysis of their development, architectural characteristics such as the structure and sequence of rooms, outward appearance [e. g. roof type], wall construction technique, and entrance situations were investigated. Hereby more than 40 house types can be distinguished the precise dating of which forms the basis of dynamic models of house development. By chronologically staged maps, differences between landscapes emerge for the first time, e.g. in the case of three areas with triple-aisled longhouses. Altogether there were five architectural “tradition areas”. With regard to settlement type, regions with villages can be separated from regions with hamlets such as Westphalia. As to types of farmsteads another five variants were recognised. Last but not least the social history is explored by analysing so-called “princely seats”. Thèse FU Berlin, 2010
@book{hans-jorg_nusse_house_2014,
	address = {Berlin},
	series = {Berliner {Archäologische} {Forschungen}},
	title = {House, farmstead and settlement in the north and west of the {Germania} magna},
	isbn = {978-3-89646-523-8},
	url = {http://www.vml.de/e/detail.php?ISBN=978-3-89646-523-8},
	abstract = {Thanks to monitoring of building sites, new survey methods, and research projects, the inventory of house and settlement plans of the 1st to 5th century between the Netherlands and southern Scandinavia has approximately doubled since 1993, so that some 2,000 published ground plans of single- to triple-aisled buildings could be catalogued. For a differentiated analysis of their development, architectural characteristics such as the structure and sequence of rooms, outward appearance [e. g. roof type], wall construction technique, and entrance situations were investigated. Hereby more than 40 house types can be distinguished the precise dating of which forms the basis of dynamic models of house development. By chronologically staged maps, differences between landscapes emerge for the first time, e.g. in the case of three areas with triple-aisled longhouses. Altogether there were five architectural “tradition areas”. With regard to settlement type, regions with villages can be separated from regions with hamlets such as Westphalia. As to types of farmsteads another five variants were recognised. Last but not least the social history is explored by analysing so-called “princely seats”. Thèse FU Berlin, 2010},
	number = {13},
	publisher = {M. Leidorf},
	author = {Hans-Jörg Nüsse},
	year = {2014}
}

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