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Thursday 17 May 2012
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Nonsuch Palace 2, Domestic Materialby Martin BiddleNonsuch in Surrey was Henry VIII's last and most fantastic palace. Begun in 1538, at the start of the 30th year of Henry's reign, the palace was intended as a triumphal celebration of the power and the grandeur of Henry VIII and the Tudor dynasty. The site was chosen for its fine countryside and hunting potential. Although the layout was fairly typical for a house of this period, arranged around two main courtyards, there its 'ordinariness' ends. The palace was ornately decorated with intricate Renaissance designs in carved and gilded slate and plasterwork, with two great octagonal towers, five storeys high at either end. The king wanted people to be astonished at his new palace, and to say that they had never seen such a fine palace before, hence its name - 'Nonsuch.' Excavations in 1959-60 uncovered a large amount of material from all periods, from occupation to demolition (1538-1684). The finds fall into two categories: architectural and domestic. This volume, the second in the series, publishes the domestic finds, including a large amount of complete or reconstructible glass, ceramics (such as tin-glazed wares, stoneware and earthenware), coins and tokens, clay pipes, pewter vessels, objects of iron, bone, ivory and leather, and a wooden pocket sundial. 544p, 229 b/w illus, 81 tbs (Oxbow Books 2005) Review Quotes"extremely thorough" Geoff Egan "[a] very well produced volume [which] relates to a single site, it will serve a much wider purpose as a valuable reference work for material, however slight, from the Tudor period." Peter A Clayton "Nonsuch was a large operation carried out with great skill and it is now lavishly published; it is a work of inestimable value to all students. The considerable costs have been justified and the reviewer would certainly commend it to the readers of Antiquity." Michael Thompson "fascinating and detailed" Tom Beaumont James "essentially a conventional finds report. And a fine thing it is too, with high scholarship, wonderful production standards..." Paul Stamper "unquestionably the most important contribution to 17th-century archaeology on either side of the Atlantic" Ivor Noël Hume Table of ContentsIntroduction Related TitlesBrowse other Tudors and Stuarts books Browse other Post Medieval Studies books |
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