Monument Class Description - Medieval Monuments

Medieval Monuments

  • Almshouses (multi-period)
  • Aqueducts (Medieval)
  • Archery Butts (multi-period)
  • Artillery Castles (multi-period)
  • Bastles (multi-period)
  • Beacons (multi-period)
  • Blockhouses (multi-period)
  • Brickworks (Medieval)
  • Camerae
  • Chain Towers (multi-period)
  • Charterhouses
  • Clapper Bridges (multi-period)
  • Cockpits (multi-period)
  • Coastal Fish Weirs (multi-period)
  • Colleges (multi-period)
  • Cottages (multi-period)
  • Coureries
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Decoy Ponds (multi-period)
  • Deerparks (multi-period)
  • Double Houses (Post-Conquest)
  • Dovecotes (multi-period)
  • Earthen Artillery Defences (multi-period)
  • Enclosure Castles
  • Field Barns (multi-period)
  • Field Works (multi-period)
  • Fishponds (multi-period)
  • Friaries
  • Frontier Works
  • Glassworks
  • Hermitages (multi-period)
  • Hospitals (multi-period)
  • Ironworks
  • Irregular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Limekilns
  • Magnates Residences
  • Moats
  • Motte and Bailey Castles
  • Motte Castles
  • Monasteries- male (Post-Conquest)
  • Monastic Granges (multi-period)
  • Moots (multi-period)
  • Multi-Span Bridges
  • Nuneries (multi-period)
  • Potteries (Medieval)
  • Parish Churches (multi-period)
  • Quadrangular Castles
  • Regular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Regular Open Field Systems
  • Ringworks
  • River Fisheries (multi-period)
  • Roads
  • Secular Cathedrals
  • Shell Keeps
  • Shielings
  • Single Span Bridges
  • Stockaded Enclosures
  • Shrines (Post-Roman) (multi-period)
  • Tower Keep Castles (multi-period)
  • Trackways
  • Vills
  • Vineyards (multi-period)
  • Warrens
  • Water Meadows
  • Watermills
  • Woods (multi-period)

Read more about this topic:  Monument Class Description

Famous quotes containing the words medieval and/or monuments:

    The Christos-image
    is most difficult to disentangle
    from its art-craft junk-shop
    paint-and-plaster medieval jumble
    of pain-worship and death-symbol.
    Hilda Doolittle (1886–1961)

    If the Revolution has the right to destroy bridges and art monuments whenever necessary, it will stop still less from laying its hand on any tendency in art which, no matter how great its achievement in form, threatens to disintegrate the revolutionary environment or to arouse the internal forces of the Revolution, that is, the proletariat, the peasantry and the intelligentsia, to a hostile opposition to one another. Our standard is, clearly, political, imperative and intolerant.
    Leon Trotsky (1879–1940)