How Saxon Peasants Built Buried Pit Houses That Stayed Warm At -30°F Without A Stove
February 19th, 2005. At an open-air archaeological museum in Suffolk, England, an accidental fire takes hold in a thatched timber house. By the time firefighters arrive, the structure is gone. Oak posts, plank floor, thatched roof, all of it. What remains is a sub-rectangular hole in the ground, about thirteen feet (four meters) long and ten feet (three meters) wide, with the charred outline of every original timber traced precisely into the sandy soil. The house was a reconstruction, built between 1992 and 1998 over the foundations of a real Anglo-Saxon pit house excavated decades earlier on the same site. Its destruction was not a tragedy. It was the most detailed forensic record of an Anglo-Saxon pit house ever produced. Archaeologist Jess Tipper led the post-fire investigation and published the findings in a 2012 monograph for East Anglian Archaeology, and what he described was not a hut. It was a system. A pit dug more than five feet (1.6 meters) deep into sandy heath. Six oak posts taller than a modern bus. A suspended plank floor laid over a storage cavity. A thatched roof rising sixteen feet (five meters) to an oak ridge beam. No nails. No iron fixings. Just oak, sand, straw, and clay, built by people who did not own a stove, did not have a chimney, and did not know the word insulation.

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