, printed from the Looking at Buildings website on Saturday 15th March 2025
The Cruck [5] was an alternative form, often used to span the shorter widths of domestic buildings. Pairs of stout curved timbers rising from the baseGlossary Term [6] or lower part of the wall provide the main framework for the roof in a series of bays.
Timber roofs achieved great sophistication in the C14 and C15, using a variety of techniques to cover wide spans. The centrally braced Crown Post [7] roof was developed, and from the 14th century the Hammerbeam [8] roof provided the means for a spectacular timber covering for wider spaces. More common in the 15th century was the Arch-Brace [9] roof, often used as an elegant means of spanning an open hall. Because of later alterations, and especially the insertion of floors and ceilings in former hall houses, medieval timber roofs can now only rarely be appreciated in the form they were intended to be seen. In spaces intended for public show the different elements were often emphasised by mouldings or carved detail; curved bracing between the raftersGlossary Term [10] could add to the decorative effect.
Last updated: Monday, 26th January 2009