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dc.contributor.authorFraiture, Pascale
dc.contributor.authorCharruadas, Paulo
dc.contributor.authorGautier, Patrice
dc.contributor.authorPiavaux, Mathieu
dc.contributor.authorSosnowska, Philippe
dc.date2016
dc.date.accessioned2022-06-15T14:53:00Z
dc.date.available2022-06-15T14:53:00Z
dc.identifier.citationP. Fraiture, P. Charruadas, P. Gautier, M. Piavaux & P. Sosnowska (eds.), Between carpentry and joinery : wood finishing work in European medieval and modern architecture (Brussels : Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage, 2016)en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://orfeo.belnet.be/handle/internal/9967
dc.descriptionFrom the examination of the historiography of finishing work in wood for architecture from the medieval to modern period, it is clear that this field of research is the poor relation of historical and archaeological studies, with the lion’s share focusing on the structural work of carpentry. It is on the basis of this observation that the present work has been produced, which results from a conference held in Brussels in 2013. The work demonstrates first the real interest in an approach to finishing work for the study of ancient buildings and the establishment of a precise chronology for their phases of layout as well as in obtaining better understanding of material cultures and ways of living. Second, it reiterates that the limit between carpentry and joinery was often porous, sometimes artificial. Finally, the work stresses that an overall approach to the use of wood is crucial to comprehensively address the organisation of a building, the logic of its construction and its ‘utilisation’, and more generally, the complex history of the buildings studied. This work, which thus represents a first step toward an overall approach of ‘wood material’ in European architecture, includes thirteen contributions divided into two thematic sections in keeping with current research practices. The first addresses the divide between structural and finishing work via the question of flooring, ceiling and roofing techniques. The second focuses intrinsically on finishing work by examining the contribution of this craft domain to the organisation, comfort and ornamentation of houses.en_US
dc.descriptionInhoud - contenu : Introduction: Wood finishing work, a promising area of research? / Paulo Charruadas, Pascale Fraiture, Patrice Gautier, Mathieu Piavaux, Philippe Sosnowska. - Part I: Between carpentry and joinery: Constructing flooring, ceilings and roofing Constructing ceilings: The floors of the Rhone region in the south of France at the end of the Middle Ages / Émilien Bouticourt. - Structural timber in 15th- and 16th-century town houses in ’s-Hertogenbosch (The Netherlands): Recent research on supporting structures / Maarten W. Enderman. - Ceilings and floorings in Austria: Types, dating and wood species / Michael Grabner, Andrea Klein, Sebastian Nemestothy, Erwin Salzger. - Contribution to the history of Brussels floorings, Belgium (16th-19th centuries): Initial results of an archaeological and dendrochronological investigation / Philippe Sosnowska, Pascale Fraiture, Sarah Crémer. - Panelled frames, modes of use: A technological and typological study of several roof frames in the Hainaut (Belgium) / Jean-Louis Vanden Eynde. - Wood shingles of medieval roofs: A first approach in France / Pierre Mille. - Part II: Organising light and space: Doors, windows, stairs and panelling Wooden witnesses: Romanesque joinery and other wooden elements or their negatives divulging historical secrets of the St Martin’s Church, Zaventem (Belgium) / Karin Keutgens, Bernard Delmotte, Charles Indekeu. - Wooden nailed doors in western France: An Armorican model inherited from the Middle Ages? / Vincent Bernard, Bruno Béthencourt, Yannick Le Digol, David Nicolas-Mery, Pierre Mille. - Analyses of wooden front doors in rural buildings from Austria / Sebastian Nemestothy, Andrea Klein, Michael Grabner. - The watertight integrity of window sills in western France : A simple system with a complex development history / Arnaud Tiercelin. - Window frame inventory number 3079 in the collections of the Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels (Belgium): Results of archaeological, historical and dendrochronological studies / Patrice Gautier, Pascale Fraiture, Valérie Montens. - Grand staircase and joinery work on the Lange Vijverberg, The Hague (The Netherlands) in light of documents / Ada de Wit. - Indoor joinery and furniture made for 18th-century houses in Liège (Belgium) / Isabelle Gilles.en_US
dc.languageengen_US
dc.publisherRoyal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA)en_US
dc.titleBetween carpentry and joinery : wood finishing work in European medieval and modern architectureen_US
dc.typeBooken_US
dc.subject.frascatiHistory and Archaeologyen_US
dc.audienceScientificen_US
Orfeo.peerreviewedNoen_US


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