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Historic Landscape Analysis: Deciphering the countryside

book
posted on 2025-07-30, 14:57 authored by Stephen Rippon
[SUMMARY] The British landscape is remarkably varied in its character. To a considerable extent this results from the different ways that successive generations of human communities have created regionally distinctive patterns of agriculture and industry. Our 'historic landscape' - the patterns of settlement, roads, fields, and other land-uses that make up the physical fabric of our present countryside - was described by Hoskins as the 'richest historical record we possess'. This handbook introduces some of the techniques that archaeologists, historians, historical geographers and planners can use to unravel the complex history of the countryside. A series of case studies demonstrate practical applications of historic landscape analysis for a broad range of uses and at a variety of national and regional levels. The well-illustrated and clear guide will be essential reading for anyone trying to understand the origins and development of regional variation in historic landscape character.

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Notes

Reproduced with permission of the publisher. All of the images and illustrations have been reproduced with permission of the copyright holders. This is the author's final post-print version of a book as accepted for publication by the Council for British Archaeology. Copyright © 2004 Author and Council for British Archaeology. The definitive publication is available at: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/pubs/

Publisher

Council for British Archaeology, York

Language

en

Department

  • Archaeology and History

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