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See also: term given to those buildings in which the framework is of See also: timber with vertical studs and See also: cross pieces filled in between with See also: brickwork, See also: rubble See also: masonry or See also: plaster See also: work on See also: oak laths; in the first two, brick nogging or nogging are the terms occasionally employed (see See also: CARPENTRY)
.
Sometimes the timber structure is raised on a See also: stone or brick foundation, as at
See also: Ledbury See also: town See also: hall in
See also: Herefordshire, where the See also: lower storey is open on all sides; but more often it is raised on a ground storey, either in brick or stone, and in See also: order to give additional See also: size to the upper rooms projects forward, being carried on the floor joists
.
Sometimes the masonry or brickwork rises through two or three storeys and the See also: half-brick work is confined to the gables
.
There seems to be some difference of opinion as to whether the term applies to the mixture of solid walling with the timber structure or to the alternation of See also: wood posts and the filling in, but the latter definition is that which is generally understood
.
The half-timber throughout See also: England is of the most picturesque description, and the earliest examples date from towards the close of the 15th century
.
In the earliest example, Newgate See also: House, See also: York (c
.
1450), the timber framing is raised over the ground floor
.
The finest specimen is perhaps that of Moreton Old Hall, See also: Cheshire (1570), where there is only a stone foundation about 12 in. high, and the same applies to Bramall Hall, near Manchester, portions of which are very early
.
Among other examples are Speke Hall, See also: Lancashire; See also: Park Hall, See also: Shropshire (1553–1558); Hall i' th' Wood, Lancashire (1591); St See also: Peter's Hospital, See also: Bristol (1607); the See also: Ludlow Feather's See also: Inn (Oro); many of the streets at See also: Chester and See also: Shrewsbury; the Sparrowe's Home, See also: Ipswich; and See also: Staple Inn, See also: Holborn, from which in See also: recent years the plaster coat which was put on many years ago has been removed, displaying the See also: ancient woodwork
.
A similar See also: fate has overtaken a very large number of half-timber buildings to keep out the driving winds; thus in See also: Lewes nearly all the half-timbered houses have had slates hung on the timbers, others tiles, the greater number having been e.,vered with plaster or stucco
.
Although there are probably many more half-timber houses in England than on the continent of See also: Europe, in the See also: north of See also: France and in See also: Germany are examples in many of the See also: principal towns, and in some cases in better preservation than in England
.
They are also enriched with See also: carving of a purer and better type, especially in France; thus at See also: Chartres, See also: Angers, See also: Rouen, See also: Caen, See also: Lisieux, See also: Bayeux, St LS and See also: Beauvais, are many extremely See also: fine examples of See also: late Flamboyant and early Transitional examples
.
Again on the See also: borders of the Rhine in all the small towns most of the houses are in half-timber work, the best examples being at See also: Bacharach, Rhense and Boppart
.
Far more elaborate examples, however, are found in the vicinity of the Harz Mountains; the supply of timber from the forests there being very abundant; thus at See also: Goslar, See also: Wernigerode and Quedlingburg there is an endless variety, as also farther on at See also: Gelnhausen and See also: Hameln, the finest series of all being at See also: Hildesheim
.
In See also: Bavaria at See also: Nuremberg, Rothenburg and See also: Dinkelsbuhl, half-timber houses dating from the 16th century are still well preserved; and throughout See also: Switzerland the houses constructed in timber and plaster are the most characteristic features of the country
.
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