The sacred landscapes of medieval monasteries: an inter-disciplinary study of meaning embedded in space and production

Lead Research Organisation: University of Wales Trinity Saint David
Department Name: Archaeology, History and Anthropology

Abstract

The architectural sacred space of medieval monastic buildings is well studied, but little work has been done taking such interpretations out into the wider landscapes within which these structures sit. Indeed, the attention of historians and archaeologists working on such landscapes has been focussed on estate economies or on patterns of patronage represented by grants of land. It is clear from medieval literature and church dogma, however, that the created world was regarded as a reflection of the human relationship with the divine. This project seeks to identify appropriate data and to develop methodologies which will reveal how the makers of individual monasteries, including the orders themselves, their patrons, artists and their wider communities, designed these institutions into the fabric of the world around them and how the world itself was adjusted physically to reflect the metaphysical. The project will seek both to understand the ways in which the monastery was laid out in relation to existing topographies and to explore the background and motivation for these actions. Such analyses will be set alongside the history, archaeology and geography of estate economy and political patronage. The project has selected two British regions for comparative purposes where work has already been initiated, Wales and central Lincolnshire, and has chosen a small number of monasteries within them for detailed attention. The methodologies deployed arise from two existing major projects: one in an upland and resistant Welsh culture at Strata Florida in Ceredigion, Wales, where the Cistercian monastery of 1184 was designed into an existing sacred landscape dating back to the later Neolithic or early Bronze Age; and the other in a lowland and English feudal culture at Barlings in Lincolnshire, where similar long-term trajectories have been identified. Both these projects have identified an intimate and consciously designed relationship between monastic houses and pre-existing landscapes of sacred significance. Alterations have been noted that created space conforming with the practices, needs, cosmologies and dogmas of the contemporary orders, as well as local with social structures and agencies. Previous research has involved field survey, buildings recording, remote sensing, geophysics and small-scale excavation, along with document analysis. This methodology will be applied to the selected monasteries comparatively, to establish how universally such principles of design were used and how they varied in different orders, cultures and polities. Although we will explore economic drivers in these landscapes, we will focus on cultural modes of production and reproduction in which these monasteries were engaged. Thereby the relationship between the written word and its manuscripts, its imagery and its meaning on the one hand and the spatial design and political contexts of the monasteries, on the other, can be explored. We will also compare sculpture and architecture, as forms of symbolic expression, and consider their respective landscape settings, as vehicles for communicating both metaphysical and emotional relationships to the sacred landscape. Although this research will pay attention to the antecedents and origins of these monasteries and their landscapes, we will also be exploring the extent to which these preoccupations were sustained as they encountered the major shifts of ideology, social, political and economic changes of the later Middle Ages and the early modern era. Finally, both the pilot projects have engaged extensively with community interaction and the development of heritage within the tourist economy, promoting both intellectual and physical access to the sites and their sacred landscapes by deploying research insights. We aim to expand on this success by stimulating access to our wider range of sites.

Planned Impact

Four of the primary research projects at the core of this proposal have extensive records of public engagement beyond the academic community. This research will seek to enhance this impact by applying their methodologies to the sites and landscapes being studied.
Of major impact will be the work with the Strata Florida Project where an internationally important heritage project is being developed with its primary narratives based on research over the last 18 years. The Trust has an extensive range of international, national, regional and local partners and these will assist in the conservation of an important complex of historic buildings and creation of a Centre based on historical and cultural knowledge.
The project will build on long-established expertise and networks which have characterised the output of the antecedent projects. We will deploy the project within our parent universities' teaching and training programmes to influence the next generation of workers in heritage and cultural tourism within the British and global economies. Our particular contribution will offer an holistic approach to landscape heritage, both natural and cultural, both tangible and intangible, in line with recommendations of the World Heritage Organisation and the European Union's Landscape Convention.
To date, we have fostered the involvement of individuals in a variety of communities. We are also fully engaged with international networks of heritage organisations. For this project, we have identified additional beneficiaries at various levels: local voluntary community groups; schools; tourism businesses; arts-production businesses; local authorities.
Relevance: the research will generate knowledge about a number of sites and landscapes and will create a diverse range of narratives which can be deployed within cultural tourism, local enterprise and arts production.
How: by extending the range and quality of known heritage, conducting information exchange to raise awareness, capacity and knowledge, enriching the current archaeological practice, creating spiritually and emotionally enhanced landscape experiences, offering ideas for artists to use in their work, broadening understanding of regional and national distinctiveness and identity, and providing relevant training and information exchange.
Health and well-being: the project will support and engage people's health and well-being through encouraging exploration of countryside and discovery of emotional and spiritual experiences in sacred landscapes. Heritage footpaths, to facilitate informed access, will be developed further in conjunction with partner organisations and individuals and drawing on additional funding sources. The project will thus help enhance community identity and the quality of life, through shared heritage, for local communities and visitors alike.
Wealth: both of the regions identified for this study are economically in need of development and a principal strategy for impact relates to regeneration through heritage and cultural tourism. At the regional level we have worked with local authorities in their economic and strategic planning departments. We have worked with NGOs on regional programmes and initiatives which engage with landscape and heritage. At the national level we have worked with government agencies engaged with the promotion and development of the specific sites and landscapes on which we are conducting research. We will thus be assisting in the delivery of local and regional economic strategies to increase effectiveness in the global tourism industry.
Culture: all the antecedent projects have inspired and supported installations and performances by individual artists and groups. Such creative activity has enhanced awareness of key monuments and extended the value of sacred landscapes. The proposed project builds on this success and seeks to encourage larger projects by local schools and communities and those interested in the subject matter.
 
Description Significant changes in the narratives of Welsh Landscape History over the period of the Holocene. This emphasises the early establishment of 'ancient farms' as the foundations of agricultural practice and social existence. These remain the bedrock (now often characterised as 'family farms') of present practice and expectation in the fabric of the upland countryside. The project has coherently articulated a narrative to assist in the debate on the future of farming, supporting the bottom-up engagement with top-down policy initiatives which too often are felt by farmers and local communities to have little regard for time-honoured practice and custom.
research has also underpinned the development of heritage amenities, notably the Strata Florida Centre.
Exploitation Route In the policy debate on the future of countrysides in the Welsh uplands
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description For development of Heritage facilities and content in collaboration with the Strata Florida Trust Output with local communities for providing information on the parish church and churchyard Information for support of Abbey Cwm-hir Heritage Trust
First Year Of Impact 2019
Sector Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Abbey Cwm-hir Trust Project 
Organisation Abbeycwmhir Heritage Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Academic support and advice. Formal incorporation of the Trust programmes on this Welsh Abbey site into the Sacred Landscapes Project. One of our PDRAs (Dr Jemma Bezant) will be co-ordinating the historic landscape mapping with local volunteers. We are funding new photogrammetric and geophysics work at the Abbey for comparison with Strata Florida as identified in the approved research design for Valle Crucis (where access has become impossible). Data incorporation onto the project GIS. Active collaboration with the Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust in data exchange through the Abbey Cwm-hir Trust.
Collaborator Contribution Discussion and access to the site and landscapes. Applications (pending) for grants to undertake small-scale excavations at Abbey Cwm-hir (NHLF). Volunteer time for organisation of fieldwork and documentary research.
Impact Formation of a research group and adoption of the Sacred LAndscapes research design
Start Year 2019
 
Description Strata Florida Project (RCAHMW) 
Organisation Royal Commission on Ancient and Historic Monuments of Wales
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Input of data to National Monument Record and Archaeological Data Service - discussions on structure Collaboration on field survey and reporting on results
Collaborator Contribution Aerial Photography (£1500) - provision of current air photographs of relevance to the project Data Structure and Transfer (£3000) - discussions on the nature and content the project data files and the final deposition Field Survey (£7000) - several specific programmes of survey to produce raw data.
Impact Data structure; data transfer; survey field data ready for publication; new aerial photographs. There have been publications prior to the project
Start Year 2019
 
Description Strata Florida Project (Strata Florida Trust) 
Organisation The Strata Florida Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Academic direction and field supervision of a major excavation at Strata Florida. Some administrative support. Data collection and record; Publication outcomes in process of production. Guided tours and talks for the general public. Preparation of leaflets and publicity. Interaction with the press, local and national. Television and radio news items. Two television programmes and media for web-site (www.stratafloridatrust.org.uk). All through the 'Strata Florida Archaeology Field School'. P.I. was the Trust Chairman until September 2019 and is now its Academic Director as well as Trustee.
Collaborator Contribution Winning of major grant for excavation (£75,000 in 2019 from the Allchurches Foundation). Grant funding also for excavation and survey pre-conservation, as well as conservation of one major Grade II building on site of Strata Florida Abbey (£160,000 EC and matched funding). Detailed digital survey of 5 listed buildings and their surroundings (£55,000 from the Prince's Foundation). Main administration, including contributions to costs by paying volunteers on the 'Strata Florida Archaeology Field School'. Payment of additional field staff. Post-excavation analysis and conservation; Data collection. Public interaction through site visits and open days. Organisation of media interaction. Development and implementation of programmes of support and activity for participation by deprived and challenged people, including rehabilitating military and special needs students. Work here with Breaking Ground Heritage through contacts with Operation Nightingale.
Impact Data which will lead to publication in the following years of the Sacred Landscapes Project. Temporary employment of 6 staff. Sustaining the economy through use of local catering and heritage building companies, as well as other individuals. Disciplines engaged: Archaeology, local history, architectural history,
Start Year 2019
 
Description Strata Florida Project Community Liaison Group 
Organisation The Strata Florida Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Support for community and voluntary activities related to the Project, including talks, guided tours and training. Help with organisation and delivery of events, e.g. a festival of flowers in the parish church (on the site of the monastery) to celebrate the traditions of sacredness on the site.
Collaborator Contribution Organisation of events. Holding liaison meetings to discuss activities and support mechanisms. Volunteers to assist with site open days and other activities.
Impact Creation of a project to install a major artwork (the Pilgrim) adjacent to the site to celebrate the traditions of sacredness and religious meaning. Liaison wioth a wide range of community groups and societies working withe the Strata Florida Trust and its Community Officer.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Lincolnshire Interaction Group 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact To support the fieldwork programmes of the Witham Valley element of this project, a group was formed which would channel access to regional professionals and a cohort of interested and experienced volunteers for their advice and practical assistance. This meets quarterly and formally submits its reports to the PI. It consists of people from: Lincolnshire County Council Planning Department (County Archaeologist, Historic Buildings and Portable Antiquities Officer); National Trust; Heritage Trust for Lincolnshire; Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology; Lincolnshire Record Society; Historic England; Bishop Grosseteste University; University of Lincoln. The group co-ordinates and organises access for the geophysics and other survey of the project. It provides people for field-walking programmes on a number of sites and other people for relevant historic building survey. There are about 65 people in all engaged.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020
 
Description Lincolnshire public lectures 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact A small number of public lectures to people interested in history and arcaheology.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020
 
Description Media interaction (Wales) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact In co-operation with the Strata Florida Trust, a number of media activities happened: local press reports; articles in the Guardian and the Times (notably on our work with former military people); items on Welsh televsion curetn affairs programmes; a full (one-hour) programme on one aspect of the Strata Florida Project (a listed building) on S4C
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020
 
Description Policy discussions (Mid-Wales Growth Initiative) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact The P.I. addressed, met and devised policy with Ceredigion County Council senior officers and councillors (in plenary session) with regard to Strata Florida and its heritage developments within its regional historic landscapes. This was in regard to a UK and Welsh Government planned funding initiative in economic regeneration in the Mid-Wales region. The P.I. organised a display and engaged in political and other interaction at an event promoting this initiative in the Senedd in Cardiff. As a result the project was adopted as a component element of the bid for National Funding
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020
 
Description Public lectures (Wales) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Series of lectures to a variety of audiences including history and heritage groups, book launch events, Ceredigion W.I., and others
In all cases, the lectures raised awareness of the historic, political and cultural importance of Strata Florida and its sacred landscapes. All generated engagement with issues including the uses of the heritage in the regional economy and the future of farming.
A series of zoom talks which are now downloadable podcasts of both the Strata Florida and Abbey Cwm-hir Heritage Trusts
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020,2021,2022
 
Description Workshop (Future of farming in upland Wales) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Workshop on the future of farming in Wales, based on sustainability principles, organised by the Sustainable Food Trust. Engaged with senior policy officials from the Welsh Government, UK-wide practitioners (e.g. the Eden Project), farmers and their national organisations and third-sector interest groups. The P.I. addressed the group on the history, legacy and meaning of landscapes and their long-term evolution. There was much interest in how the past can inform the future at both local and regional level.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019