24th June 2019, Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 5.

It is not known whether the mudflat that was to become Sunk Island was established by the early-mid 14th century when Ravenser was functioning as a port (s.p.b.s). Certainly two centuries later when Lord Burleigh commissioned the first navigational map of the Humber Estuary (c. 1560) the mudflat on which, at its western end, the […]

24th June 2019, Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 5. Read More »

23rd June, 2019 Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 4.

The picture above is taken from a book about Romano-British buildings, this reconstruction compiled from evidence found in an archaeological dig in central London in the 1990s. It shows that the style of wall-building known generally as wattle-and-daub had a very long history stretching from the Romano-British era to the  18th century. The timber skeleton of

23rd June, 2019 Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 4. Read More »

20th June, 2019 Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 3.

It is intriguing to try to imagine what Raverser Odd (s.p.b.) looked like in its heyday, 1320s. Were there streets or just waterside warehouses with associated staithes and merchants houses and counting rooms, much like medieval High St. (originally Hull St.), Kingston upon Hull? What building materials and styles/size of buildings existed on Ravenser Odd?

20th June, 2019 Reed’s Island, Ravenser (Odd), Sunk Island 3. Read More »

8th June, 2019 Churchyards as places of resort 3.

Two essential elements to making churchyards ‘places of resort’ are benches (seating) and a hard-surface perimeter path around the church building, this latter to facilitate a visual taking-in/study of the external features of the building – building stone/brick, roofing material, architectural style (often varying in one part from another), curious features etc. It is almost certain

8th June, 2019 Churchyards as places of resort 3. Read More »