25th May 2012, 08:58 AM
Windows are an interesting point. I have often wondered about whether some (or all) or the occasional roundhouse had windows.
But without a time machine its very difficult to be sure.
But.........and its a big but..........living in a reconstructed roundhouse for a weekend really opened my eyes to some of the practicalities.
1) as long as you know what your doing with wood and fire-lighting there is no need to ventilate the smoke.
2) At night with a good fire its really really toasty warm and light inside.
3) During the day, with a large doorway pointing towards the sunniest bit of the sky (SE) there is plenty of light (except at the back (opposite the door).
4) In heavy rain you really really really don't want any holes in the roof............one of the other roundhouses had a leaky roof making it damp, dank, soggy underfoot and not a nice place to live.
5) Drip gullies aren't always necessary...........it depends on the ground surface topography.
So as for windows...............I'd would (on the available evidence).............lean towards no windows.
But, that's not to say that there wasn't any. But functionally there is no need.
I wonder about the practical problems of adding a window to that kind of structure.............and the structural integrity problems.
Need to get some woodsman to try and build one....
Actually I know a few woodsman...............and we did build a big rectangular lean-to structure based on just three big postholes in a row once. Its still perfectly live-in-able after 6 years. And archaeologically, even with minimal ground truncation you'd only see three big postholes in a row on a flattened bit of ground at the bottom of a slope.
I wonder if I can convince them to build a roundhouse with windows next!
But without a time machine its very difficult to be sure.
But.........and its a big but..........living in a reconstructed roundhouse for a weekend really opened my eyes to some of the practicalities.
1) as long as you know what your doing with wood and fire-lighting there is no need to ventilate the smoke.
2) At night with a good fire its really really toasty warm and light inside.
3) During the day, with a large doorway pointing towards the sunniest bit of the sky (SE) there is plenty of light (except at the back (opposite the door).
4) In heavy rain you really really really don't want any holes in the roof............one of the other roundhouses had a leaky roof making it damp, dank, soggy underfoot and not a nice place to live.
5) Drip gullies aren't always necessary...........it depends on the ground surface topography.
So as for windows...............I'd would (on the available evidence).............lean towards no windows.
But, that's not to say that there wasn't any. But functionally there is no need.
I wonder about the practical problems of adding a window to that kind of structure.............and the structural integrity problems.
Need to get some woodsman to try and build one....
Actually I know a few woodsman...............and we did build a big rectangular lean-to structure based on just three big postholes in a row once. Its still perfectly live-in-able after 6 years. And archaeologically, even with minimal ground truncation you'd only see three big postholes in a row on a flattened bit of ground at the bottom of a slope.
I wonder if I can convince them to build a roundhouse with windows next!