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30 August 2018
File:Woad.gif
Woad (used for dying, producing a blue colour). By Colin Levick.
File:Madder.gif
Madder (produces many hues of red, brown and orange). By Colin Levick.
File:Bilberry.gif
Bilberries. By Colin Levick.
File:Apple.gif
Apples By Colin Levick.
Fauna
images and spelling corrections
+350
File:Oxcartwb.gif
To pull heavy loads oxen were employed. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
File:Plover.gif
Plover. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
File:Hare.gif
Hare. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
File:Animals.gif
Many of animals kept domestically are the same as today. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
File:Deer.gif
Deer. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
File:Goose.gif
Goose. By Roland Williamson or Colin Levick.
Food and Drink
images
+271
File:Butch02.jpg
Pork in the process of being made into joints
File:Butch01a.jpg
A deer being skinned prior to being butchered
File:Fish1.gif
Top to Bottom herring, salmon, eel and perch
File:Fish2.gif
Top: pike Bottom: plaice
Food and Drink
Fruit and Vegetables: Images
+92
File:Carrot.gif
Carrot
File:Cabbage.gif
Cabbage
File:Sloe.gif
Sloe
File:Garlic.gif
Garlic
Pottery
images
+588
File:WinchesterPottery1.gif
A selection of Winchester ware. By Colin Levick.
File:TorkseyPottery1.gif
Typically stout Torksey ware. By Colin Levick.
File:ThetfordPottery2.gif
A Thetford ware storage jar. By Colin Levick.
File:ThetfordPottery1.gif
A typical Thetford ware pot. By Colin Levick.
File:StamfordPottery1.gif
Typical Stamford ware pottery styles. By Colin Levick.
File:Kiln.gif
A cross section of an idealised turf covered pottery kiln before it was sealed or through the flue/door opening. By Colin Levick.
File:Potterswheel1.gif
A manuscript image of a potters wheel. By Colin Levick.
File:Potterystamp.gif
An antler decorative stamp. By Colin Levick.
Template:Nav Crafts and Everyday Life
link and title correction
Template:Nav Crafts and Everyday Life
link and title correction
m+3
Houses and Furniture
images
+846
File:Manu083.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Manu082.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Manu081.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Manu080.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Manu079.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Manu078.gif
Tents as the Anglo-Saxons saw them
File:Walls.gif
Various types and methods of cladding and infill of Anglo-Saxon wooden buildings By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Sfb03.gif
The 'sunken featured building' clad and thatched. By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Sfb02.gif
The frames and floor in the sunken featured building By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Sfb01.gif
A cross-section through a house with a void beneath the floor, known as a 'sunken featured building' By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Hall03.gif
The same building as Hall02.gif now clad and roofed with thatch By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Hall02.gif
A three-quarter view through an idealised Saxon home built using simple frame construction. By Ben Levick 1993.
File:Hall01.gif
A typical cross-section through a standard Saxon house. By Ben Levick 1993.
Glass and Amber Working
images
+253
File:Glass.gif
Early Viking glass drinking vessels were largely conical, and about 120mm or 5 inches high, developing into the bag-beaker style later on.
File:Glasbead.gif
A graphic of some of the more common bead styles
Fishing
images
+986