From Friary Ground to Public House
Uitgelicht
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26,66 |
Naar shop
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44,79 |
Naar shop
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44,79 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
From Friary Ground to Public House: The Bell Inn, 1432-2026 traces the long and layered history of one of Nottingham's most compelling surviving buildings. Standing on Angel Row beneath the sandstone escarpment of Nottingham Castle, the Bell Inn is far more than a familiar public house. Behind its later frontage survives a medieval timber-framed core, while beneath its floors lie rock-hewn cellars and the physical traces of centuries of adaptation, commerce, ownership, and civic life.Drawing on wills, court rolls, licensing records, deeds, newspapers, structural evidence, and statutory descriptions, Patrick Fleckney reconstructs the Bell's history from the fifteenth century to the present day. The book begins with the building's medieval origins and its place within the former Whitefriars precinct, then follows its emergence into the documentary record, its development as a regulated public house, and its Georgian, Victorian, and modern transformations within Nottingham's changing urban landscape.Rather than repeating legend, this study is grounded in what can be demonstrated. It distinguishes carefully between tradition and evidence, between the antiquity of the site and the history of the inn itself, and between heritage claims and documentary proof. The result is a serious and accessible reconstruction of a remarkable building whose significance lies not only in its age, but in its demonstrable continuity across nearly six centuries.For readers interested in Nottingham history, old inns, medieval buildings, urban change, and the disciplined recovery of the past, this book offers the most detailed account yet written of the Bell Inn and the ground on which it stands.
From Friary Ground to Public House: The Bell Inn, 1432-2026 traces the long and layered history of one of Nottingham's most compelling surviving buildings. Standing on Angel Row beneath the sandstone escarpment of Nottingham Castle, the Bell Inn is far more than a familiar public house. Behind its later frontage survives a medieval timber-framed core, while beneath its floors lie rock-hewn cellars and the physical traces of centuries of adaptation, commerce, ownership, and civic life.Drawing on wills, court rolls, licensing records, deeds, newspapers, structural evidence, and statutory descriptions, Patrick Fleckney reconstructs the Bell's history from the fifteenth century to the present day. The book begins with the building's medieval origins and its place within the former Whitefriars precinct, then follows its emergence into the documentary record, its development as a regulated public house, and its Georgian, Victorian, and modern transformations within Nottingham's changing urban landscape.Rather than repeating legend, this study is grounded in what can be demonstrated. It distinguishes carefully between tradition and evidence, between the antiquity of the site and the history of the inn itself, and between heritage claims and documentary proof. The result is a serious and accessible reconstruction of a remarkable building whose significance lies not only in its age, but in its demonstrable continuity across nearly six centuries.For readers interested in Nottingham history, old inns, medieval buildings, urban change, and the disciplined recovery of the past, this book offers the most detailed account yet written of the Bell Inn and the ground on which it stands.
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