Description
Bar locks take various forms and can be made of different materials, but they all provide a means of locking a door by placing a bar behind it from the inside which is then secured onto the door frame or housings on adjacent walls. The most dramatic examples are provided by thick wooden bars slotted into recesses incorporated in the adjacent door jambs. The volume describes and lists all the examples identified by the author and also publishes his photographs of the evidence for the first time.
The recognition of the role of bar locks in securing churches led the author to consider further measures which may have been introduced to enhance church security; these measures could Have had major implications for structural change and design in the buildings. These supplementary protective requirements and methods for achieving them are many and various and are also considered in the volume.
About the Author
John F. Potter trained as a geologist specialising in lithostratigraphy (PhD London). He served as Principal of Farnborough College of Technology (1975-1997), was Hon. Secretary of the Institution of Environmental Sciences, and Editor for many years of the international journal, The Environmentalist. On retirement he was appointed Emeritus Professor at the University of Surrey and joined the University of Reading in order to continue with the church building fabric studies which he started in 1975.
Reviews
This posthumously published book serves as an advert, too, for the author's previous studies of the geology and constructional methods of early medieval churches in Britain and Ireland, which deserve more attention than they have yet received.
-- Helen Gittos * Current Archaeology *Book Information
ISBN 9781789693980
Author John F. Potter
Format Paperback
Page Count 170
Imprint Archaeopress
Publisher Archaeopress
Weight(grams) 576g