The phenomenon of settlements moving away from their churches, towards the edges of surrounding commons is known as ‘common-edge drift’. Despite common perceptions, the isolated church is not the only indication of common-edge drift – an embedded church will often have been constructed after drift, within the new settlement. Using an assortment of historic maps, documents, archaeological surveys and environmental datasets this paper discusses the causes of ‘common-edge drift’ in Norfolk, addressing an issue that has gone largely ignored for the past thirty years. By creating a set of categories and applying them to all churches marked on Faden’s 1797 map of Norfolk it is possible to apply new GIS techniques to the data. The findings show that six individual primary factors were in play across the county, with different combinations resulting in the isolated or embedded landscapes familiar to us today. The only factor affecting every category of settlement was access to common land, and regional differences in population and land-use dictated how a settlement would respond when faced with common-land shortages.
History
Publication title
Norfolk Archaeology
Volume
XLVII
Pagination
356-373
ISSN
0142-7962
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
Norfolk and Norwich Archaeology Society
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Rights statement
Copyright 2016 Norfolk and Norwich Archaeology Society
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in history, heritage and archaeology