2020
DOI: 10.1080/01433768.2020.1835183
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The development of historic field systems in northern England: a case study at Wallington, Northumberland

Abstract: Wallington in central Northumberland is a late seventeenth-and early eighteenth-century country house with associated pleasure grounds. Much of the surrounding estate is agricultural land, though there are also expanses of moorland and conifer plantation. The character of Wallington's landscape, now divided into fifteen separate farm holdings, was to a large extent shaped by estate management practices and improvements in the eighteenthnineteenth centuries. Today's settlement pattern is made up largely of disp… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In-depth understanding of their methods of construction could cast further light on their important role in social, economic and political negotiations over access to land and management of resources through time (eg Holst 2013; Kupiec & Milek 2015). More broadly, our combination of micromorpho logy with macroscopic field recording of building processes informed by geotechnical analysis resonates with other interdisciplinary projects on linear earthen boundaries (eg Arnoldussen & van der Linden 2017;Arnoldussen 2018;Vervust et al 2020a;, adding a Roman period case study and its construction context to wider research portfolios into past agricultural environments and practices. We hope that our work has shown the potential that such a combined approach with micromorpho logy at its core can offer, to pro vide…”
Section: Conclusion: 'Another Wall Of Turf'mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…In-depth understanding of their methods of construction could cast further light on their important role in social, economic and political negotiations over access to land and management of resources through time (eg Holst 2013; Kupiec & Milek 2015). More broadly, our combination of micromorpho logy with macroscopic field recording of building processes informed by geotechnical analysis resonates with other interdisciplinary projects on linear earthen boundaries (eg Arnoldussen & van der Linden 2017;Arnoldussen 2018;Vervust et al 2020a;, adding a Roman period case study and its construction context to wider research portfolios into past agricultural environments and practices. We hope that our work has shown the potential that such a combined approach with micromorpho logy at its core can offer, to pro vide…”
Section: Conclusion: 'Another Wall Of Turf'mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Jobey & Tait 1966;Topping 1989). Well-dated prehistoric field systems include the Dartmoor Reaves (Fleming 2008) and Wallington, Northumberland (Vervust et al 2020), though many more are poorly dated (Historic England 2018; for an exception, see Ford et al 1990). Many terrace systems on slopes are recorded as 'lynchets', a term encompassing forms from all periods, including strip lynchets (i.e.…”
Section: Prehistoric Cultivation Terraces In Britainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jobey & Tait 1966; Topping 1989). Well-dated prehistoric field systems include the Dartmoor Reaves (Fleming 2008) and Wallington, Northumberland (Vervust et al 2020), though many more are poorly dated (Historic England 2018; for an exception, see Ford et al . 1990).…”
Section: Prehistoric Cultivation Terraces In Britainmentioning
confidence: 99%