BBC - Fred Dibnah's Building of Britain (2002) Part 3 The Age of the Carpenter

BBC - Fred Dibnah's Building of Britain (2002) Part 3 The Age of the Carpenter

Fred Dibnah travels across Britain to uncover the craft and engineering skills that form the nation's architectural heritage.

Part 3: The Age of the Carpenter

Fred looks to the Middle Ages and the transformation of an Englishman's castle into his home. Carpenters were the great engineers of this time, and Fred visits Stokesey Castle, the oldest moated and fortified house in England, to scale the walls and examine the technique of 'jettying' - making the bedroom a bit bigger. Fred also discovers how massive arched timber roofs were constructed. At Little Moreton Hall in Cheshire, Fred explores one of the finest examples of timber-framed architecture in England and demonstrates how carpenters of the 15th and 16th century actually constructed these chocolate-box buildings. Fred's journey ends at Harvington Hall near Kidderminster, home to some of finest priest holes in the country, devised by master carpenter Nicholas Owen during the reign of Elizabeth I.

See Also
Trailer

Full Version Available Upon Request

Full Version

Click to see Full Version

Click to Close



The availability of this link might be uncertain!
Full version is available upon request.




Recent changes RSS feed Debian Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki