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Cottage

A cottage, during England's feudal period, was the holding by a cottager (known as a cotter or bordar) of a small house with enough garden to feed a family and in return for the cottage, the cottager had to provide some form of service to the manorial lord.[2] However, in time cottage just became the general term for a small house. In modern usage, a cottage is usually a modest, often cosy dwelling, typically in a rural or semi-rural location and not necessarily in England. The cottage orné, often quite large and grand residences built by the nobility, dates back to a movement of "rustic" stylised cottages of the late 18th and early 19th century during the Romantic movement.

South Savonia is one of the largest summer cottage regions in Finland, with more than 50,000 holiday homes.[1] The picture was taken in Mäntyharju.

In British English the term now denotes a small, cosy dwelling of traditional build, although it can also be applied to modern construction designed to resemble traditional houses ("mock cottages"). Cottages may be detached houses, or terraced, such as those built to house workers in mining villages. The tied accommodation provided to farm workers was usually a cottage, see cottage garden. In England the term holiday cottage now denotes a specialised form of residential let property, attracting various tax benefits to the owner.

The holiday cottage exists in many cultures under different names. In Canadian English and American English, "cottage" is one term for such holiday homes, although they may also be called a "cabin", "chalet", or even "camp". In Australia, the term "cabin" is common, cottage usually referring to a smaller pre-modern period dwelling. In certain countries (e.g. Nordics, Baltics, and Russia) the term "cottage" has local synonyms: In Finnish mökki, in Estonian suvila, in Latvian vasarnīca, in Livonian sõvvõkuodā, in Swedish stuga, in Norwegian hytte (from the German word Hütte), in Czech or Slovak chata or chalupa, in Russian дача (dacha).[3]

In places such as Canada, "cottage" carries no connotations of size (compare with vicarage or hermitage).

Etymology edit

The word cottage (Medieval Latin cotagium) derives from Old English cot, cote "hut" and Old French cot "hut, cottage", from Old Norse kot "hut" and related to Middle Low German kotten (cottage, hut). Examples of this may be found in 15th century manor court rolls.[citation needed] The house of the cottage bore the Latin name: "domus",[4] while the barn of the cottage was termed "grangia".

England edit

Medieval edit

 
A typical cottage in Devon, with walls built of cob and a thatched roof.

The word originally referred to a humble rural detached dwelling of a cotter, a semi-independent resident of a manor who had certain residential rights from the lord of the manor, and who in the social hierarchy was a grade above the slave (mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086), who had no right of tenure and worked full-time to the orders of the lord. In the Domesday Book, they were referred to as Coterelli.[5] The cottage had a small amount of surrounding agricultural land, perhaps 2 or three acres, from which the resident gained his livelihood and sustenance. It was defined by its function of housing a cotter, rather than by its form, which varied, but it was certainly small and cheaply built and purely functional, with no non-essential architectural flourishes. It would have been built from the cheapest locally available materials and in the local style, thus in wheat-growing areas, it would be roofed in thatch, and in slate-rich locations, such as Cornwall, slates would be used for roofing. In stone-rich areas, its walls would be built of rubble stone, and in other areas, such as Devon, was commonly built from cob.[6]

Industrial Revolution edit

 
19th century coal miners' cottages rebuilt at the Beamish Museum.

In England from about the 18th century onwards, the development of industry led to the development of weavers' cottages and miners' cottages.[7] Friedrich Engels cites 'Cottages' as a poor quality dwelling in his 1845 work The Condition of the Working Class in England.

Enclosures Act edit

Over the years various English Acts of Parliament removed the right of the cottager to hold land. According to John Lawrence Hammond and Barbara Hammond in their book The Village Labourer, before the Enclosures Act the cottager was a farm labourer with land, and after the Enclosures Act the cottager was a farm labourer without land.[8]

Legal definition edit

In the law of England and Wales the definition of a cottage is "a small house or habitation without land".[5] However, originally under an Elizabethan statute, the cottage had to be built with at least 4 acres (0.02 km2; 0.01 sq mi) of land.[5]

Wales edit

 
The Ugly House (Welsh: Tŷ Hyll) near Betws-Y-Coed, a famous example of a tŷ unnos.

The Welsh Tŷ unnos or "house in a night", was built by squatters on a plot of land defined by the throw of an axe from each corner of the property. In Welsh a cottage is known as bwthyn and its inhabitant preswlydd.[9]

Scotland edit

In Scotland the equivalent to cottager would be the crofter and the term for the building and its land would be croft.[10]

Ireland edit

 
A common sight in the west of Ireland – a 19th-century stone teachín – in Carrigmanus, County Cork

Irish cottages, known as Irish: teachín, were historically the homes of farmworkers and labourers, but in recent years the term has assumed a romantic connotation especially when referring to cottages with thatched roofs (Irish: teach ceann tuí). These thatched cottages were once to be seen all over Ireland, but most have become dilapidated due to newer and modern developments. However, there has been a recent revival of restoring these old cottages, with people wanting a more traditional home. Today, thatched cottages are now mostly built for the tourist industry and many can be let out as accommodation.[11]

Modern usage in Britain and Ireland edit

In popular modern culture, the term cottage is used in a more general and romantic context and can date from any era but the term is usually applied to pre-modern dwellings. Older, pre-Victorian cottages tend to have restricted height, and often have construction timber exposed, sometimes intruding into the living space. Modern renovations of such dwellings often seek to re-expose timber purlins, rafters, posts, etc. which have been covered, in an attempt to establish perceived historical authenticity.

Older cottages are typically modest, often semi-detached or terraced, with only four basic rooms ("two up, two down"), although subsequent modifications can create more spacious accommodation. A labourer's or fisherman's one-roomed house, often attached to a larger property, is a particular type of cottage and is called a penty. The term cottage has also been used for a larger house that is practical rather than pretentious: see Chawton Cottage.

Outside Britain and Ireland edit

North America edit

 
Cottage built c. 1640, near Swedesboro, New Jersey
 
Wolters Filling Station in Davenport, Iowa; an example of an English Cottage-style gas station
 
A contemporary Australian cabin (cottage)

Although the Oxford English Dictionary states that the term cottage is used in North America to represent "a summer residence (often on a large and sumptuous scale) at a watering-place or a health or pleasure resort," most Americans expect a cottage, particularly a summer cottage, to be a relatively small, possibly unfinished house. Various editions of the quintessentially American Webster's Dictionary define it as "a small house; any modest country or suburban dwelling," (fifth edition) with the eleventh edition describing even a vacation cottage as "a usu. small house for vacation use."

In North America, most buildings known as cottages are used for weekend or summer getaways by city dwellers. Cottage owners often rent their properties to tourists as a source of revenue. In Saint John, U.S. Virgin Islands, most cottages are vacation rentals used for weekend or summer getaways. In Michigan, a cottage normally means a summer residence farther north near or on a lake. An example of a colonial era cottage in North America is a small fieldstone house called Boelson Cottage in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia—one of the oldest extant houses within the city (c.1678–84).

In the jargon of English-speaking Quebec's real-estate industry, a cottage is any two-storey house, as opposed to a bungalow. However, "cottages" in Eastern Canada are generally located next to lakes, rivers, or the ocean in forested areas. They are used as a place to spend holidays with friends and family; common activities include swimming, canoeing, waterskiing, fishing, hiking, and sailing. There are also many well-known summer colonies. Cottage living is one of the most popular tourist draws in Ontario, Canada, parts of which have come to be known as cottage country. This term typically refers to the north and south shores of Georgian Bay, Ontario; Muskoka, Ontario; Haliburton, Ontario; and the Kawartha Lakes, Ontario; but has also been used to describe several other Canadian regions. The practice of renting cottages has become widespread in these regions, especially with rising property taxes for waterfront property.

What Eastern Canadians refer to as "cottages" (seasonal-use dwellings), are generally referred to as "cabins" in most of North America. This is most notable in the Midwest and the Western United States, and Western Canada. In much of Northern Ontario, New England, and upstate New York, a summer house near a body of water is known as a camp.[citation needed] In the 1960s and 1970s, the A-Frame house became a popular cottage style in North America.

In the 1920s and 30s many gas stations were built in the style of Old World cottages. Comprising about a third of the stations built in the United States in those years, cottage-patterned facilities evoked a picturesque homeyness and were easier to gain approval for than the more stylized or attention-grabbing designs also commonly used at the dawn of the automobile era.[12]

Australia edit

In Australia, the term "cabin" or "shack" is commonly used for a small dwelling, the former more often for a place of residence or tourist accommodation and the latter for a simple recreational shelter, typically not continuously occupied. The term cottage usually refers to historic smaller residential buildings, commonly stone or brick, typically from Georgian or Victorian. More recently, cabins are often also referred to tiny houses, however, cabins are built at a permanent site on proper footings, while the term tiny house often implies that the dwelling is built on a trailer platform and can be relocated.

Nordic countries edit

Finland edit

 
A cottage in Vihti, southern Finland

Statistics Finland defines a cottage (Finnish: mökki, Finland Swedish: stuga or villa) as "a residential building that is used as a holiday or free-time dwelling and is permanently constructed or erected on its site".[13] Finnish cottages are traditionally built of logs but other wood constructions have become common. They are usually situated close to water and almost all have a sauna.

There are 474,277 cottages in Finland (2005), a country with 187,888 lakes and 179,584 islands, including rental holiday cottages owned by hospitality companies but excluding holiday villages and buildings on garden allotments. Reports have 4,172 new cottages built in 2005.[citation needed] Most cottages are situated in the municipalities of Kuusamo (6,196 cottages on 1 January 2006), Kuopio (5,194), Ekenäs (Tammisaari – 5,053), Mikkeli (4,649), and Mäntyharju (4,630).[citation needed]

Sweden edit

 
Swedish cottage in Ljusterö, Stockholm.

The formal Swedish term for cottages is fritidshus (vacation house) or stuga, of which there are 680.000 in Sweden (2007). According to Statistics Sweden, about 50% of the Swedish population has access to a vacation house.[14] In everyday talk, Swedes refer to their cottages as lantstället (the country house) or stugan (the cottage). Most vacation houses in Sweden are to be found along the coasts and around the major cities. Prices vary a lot depending on location; a modern seaside house near Stockholm may cost 100 times as much as a simple cottage in the inner regions of northern Sweden.

Until the end of World War II, only a small wealthy Swedish elite could afford vacation houses—often both a large seaside house and a hunting cabin up north. During the rapid urbanisation in the 1950s and 1960s, many families were able to retain their old farmhouses, village cottages, and fisherman cabins and convert them into vacation houses. In addition, economic growth made it possible even for low-income families to buy small lots in the countryside where they could erect simple houses. Former vacation houses near the large cities have gradually been converted into permanent homes as a result of urban sprawl.

The traditional Swedish cottage is a simple paneled house made of wood and painted in red. They may contain 1–3 small bedrooms and also a small bathroom. In the combined kitchen and living room (storstuga) there is usually a fireplace. Today, many cottages have been extended with "outdoor rooms" (semi-heated external rooms with glass walls and a thin roof) and large wood terraces. As a result of the friggebod reform in 1979, many cottage owners have built additional guesthouses on their lots.

Norway edit

The formal Norwegian term for cottages is hytte or fritidsbolig (vacation house). In Norway, cabins are often built near leisure activities such as hunting, fishing, and outdoor life / outdoor sports, or in areas with particularly beautiful nature, such as in the woods, in the mountains, or by the sea. In the most attractive areas, it has become increasingly common with regulated fields where the cabins are very close together, in so-called "cabin villages". Chained cabins and holiday apartments are also being built here, similar to a normal city.

Russia edit

 
A typical Soviet dacha (summer house) in Resheti.
 
Example of what now is called "a cottage" in Russia (Mikhaylovka, Volgograd Oblast).

The first known "cottages" were built in Russia in the 19th century,[15] when British culture was popular. Today many large cities in Russia are surrounded by cottage villages. So it is legitimate to talk about the appearance of the term "Russian cottage" – a house, comparable in size to a British villa or even a mansion, and includes a corresponding piece of land.[16]

South Africa edit

 
A traditional 'langhuis' (long cottage) cottage in Verloren Vlei Heritage Village in the Western Cape region of South Africa

Much like in the rest of the world, cottages in South Africa housed agricultural workers and their friends and families. A number of cottages were also constructed for fishermen along the West and South Coasts of the country throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. Most cottages are single-story two to four-room structures, sometimes with an attic for storing supplies. Most cottages in the Western Cape area of South Africa have thatched roofs and stone or adobe walls which were traditionally whitewashed. A large number of the remaining cottages in the country are listed heritage sites.[citation needed]

Notable cottages edit

Gallery edit

Thatched cottages in England edit

Other cottages edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ YLE: Jopa kymmenet tuhannet siirtyneet kesämökeilleen vetoomuksista huolimatta, suosittujen mökkikuntien ruokakaupoissa jopa 50 prosentin kasvuja (in Finnish)
  2. ^ Daniel D. McGarry, Medieval history and civilization (1976) p 242
  3. ^ "Разновидности коттеджей. Что лучше выбрать". vsekottedzhi.com.ua.
  4. ^ as in domum dicti cotagii "the house of the said cottage" (the "-um" being the accusative form)
  5. ^ a b c Elmes, James (1827). On Architectural Jurisprudence; in which the Constitutions, Canons, Laws and Customs etc. London: W.Benning. pp. 178–179. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  6. ^ Alcock, Nat; Miles, Dan (2012). The Medieval Peasant House in Midland England. Oxbow Books. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-842-17506-4.
  7. ^ King, Steven; Timmins, Geffrey (2001). Making Sense of the Industrial Revolution: English Economy and Society 1700-1850. Manchester University Press. p. 340. ISBN 978-0719-05022-0.
  8. ^ Hammond, J L; Barbara Hammond (1912). The Village Labourer 1760–1832. London: Longman Green & Co. p. 100.
  9. ^ Lewis, Henry, ed. (1985). Welsh Dictionary. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-433402-7. pp. 136, 178
  10. ^ Collyer, Adam (1953). The Crofting Problem. Cambridge: Cambridge University. p. 25.
  11. ^ . www.travelmania-ireland.com. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  12. ^ Granger, Susan (June 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form: Lundring Service Station". National Park Service. Retrieved 16 June 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ "Statistics Finland". www.stat.fi. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  14. ^ . scb.se. Archived from the original on 12 June 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  15. ^ Manaev, Georgy (15 June 2015). "The dacha: uniquely Russian country homes". Russia & India Report. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  16. ^ Харит М.Д. "Новый век российской усадьбы". Популярная энциклопедия архитектуры. т.1. 2001 г., Изд. АСТ (издательство), Москва, ISBN 5-17-008121-9

Further reading edit

Current editions:

  • Sayer, Karen. Country cottages: a cultural history (Manchester University Press, 2000).
  • Woodforde, John. The Truth About Cottages: A History and an Illustrated Guide to 50 Types of English Cottage (I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2007)

Out of copyright (free download):

  • Dawber, E. G. & Davie, W. G. Old cottages and farmhouses in Kent and Sussex (London, B. T. Batsford, 1900)
  • Ditchfield, P. H. & Quinton, A. R. The cottages and the village life of rural England (London, J.M. Dent & sons ltd., 1912).
  • Ditchfield, P. H. Picturesque English cottages and their doorway gardens (J.C. Winston Co., 1905).
  • Downing, A. J. Cottage Residences ( New York : J. Wiley & son, 1873).
  • Elder-Duncan, J. H. Country cottages and week-end homes (London, Cassell and co. ltd., 1912).
  • Green, W. C. & Davie, W. G. Old cottages & farm-houses in Surrey (London, B. T. Batsford, 1908).
  • Holme, Charles (Ed). The village homes of England ("The Studio Ltd.", London, New York, Paris, 1912).
  • Holme, Charles. Old English country cottages (Office of "The Studio", London, New York, Paris, 1906).
  • Kirby, J. H. Modern cottages (self pub. n.d).
  • Papworth, John B. Rural residences: a series of designs for cottages (London, R. Ackermann, 1818).

cottage, this, article, about, small, house, dwelling, other, uses, disambiguation, cottage, during, england, feudal, period, holding, cottager, known, cotter, bordar, small, house, with, enough, garden, feed, family, return, cottage, cottager, provide, some, . This article is about the small house or dwelling For other uses see Cottage disambiguation A cottage during England s feudal period was the holding by a cottager known as a cotter or bordar of a small house with enough garden to feed a family and in return for the cottage the cottager had to provide some form of service to the manorial lord 2 However in time cottage just became the general term for a small house In modern usage a cottage is usually a modest often cosy dwelling typically in a rural or semi rural location and not necessarily in England The cottage orne often quite large and grand residences built by the nobility dates back to a movement of rustic stylised cottages of the late 18th and early 19th century during the Romantic movement South Savonia is one of the largest summer cottage regions in Finland with more than 50 000 holiday homes 1 The picture was taken in Mantyharju In British English the term now denotes a small cosy dwelling of traditional build although it can also be applied to modern construction designed to resemble traditional houses mock cottages Cottages may be detached houses or terraced such as those built to house workers in mining villages The tied accommodation provided to farm workers was usually a cottage see cottage garden In England the term holiday cottage now denotes a specialised form of residential let property attracting various tax benefits to the owner The holiday cottage exists in many cultures under different names In Canadian English and American English cottage is one term for such holiday homes although they may also be called a cabin chalet or even camp In Australia the term cabin is common cottage usually referring to a smaller pre modern period dwelling In certain countries e g Nordics Baltics and Russia the term cottage has local synonyms In Finnish mokki in Estonian suvila in Latvian vasarnica in Livonian sovvokuoda in Swedish stuga in Norwegian hytte from the German word Hutte in Czech or Slovak chata or chalupa in Russian dacha dacha 3 In places such as Canada cottage carries no connotations of size compare with vicarage or hermitage Contents 1 Etymology 2 England 2 1 Medieval 2 2 Industrial Revolution 2 3 Enclosures Act 2 4 Legal definition 3 Wales 4 Scotland 5 Ireland 6 Modern usage in Britain and Ireland 7 Outside Britain and Ireland 7 1 North America 7 2 Australia 7 3 Nordic countries 7 3 1 Finland 7 3 2 Sweden 7 3 3 Norway 7 4 Russia 7 5 South Africa 8 Notable cottages 9 Gallery 9 1 Thatched cottages in England 9 2 Other cottages 10 See also 11 References 12 Further readingEtymology editThe word cottage Medieval Latin cotagium derives from Old English cot cote hut and Old French cot hut cottage from Old Norse kot hut and related to Middle Low German kotten cottage hut Examples of this may be found in 15th century manor court rolls citation needed The house of the cottage bore the Latin name domus 4 while the barn of the cottage was termed grangia England editMedieval edit nbsp A typical cottage in Devon with walls built of cob and a thatched roof The word originally referred to a humble rural detached dwelling of a cotter a semi independent resident of a manor who had certain residential rights from the lord of the manor and who in the social hierarchy was a grade above the slave mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 who had no right of tenure and worked full time to the orders of the lord In the Domesday Book they were referred to as Coterelli 5 The cottage had a small amount of surrounding agricultural land perhaps 2 or three acres from which the resident gained his livelihood and sustenance It was defined by its function of housing a cotter rather than by its form which varied but it was certainly small and cheaply built and purely functional with no non essential architectural flourishes It would have been built from the cheapest locally available materials and in the local style thus in wheat growing areas it would be roofed in thatch and in slate rich locations such as Cornwall slates would be used for roofing In stone rich areas its walls would be built of rubble stone and in other areas such as Devon was commonly built from cob 6 Industrial Revolution edit nbsp 19th century coal miners cottages rebuilt at the Beamish Museum In England from about the 18th century onwards the development of industry led to the development of weavers cottages and miners cottages 7 Friedrich Engels cites Cottages as a poor quality dwelling in his 1845 work The Condition of the Working Class in England Enclosures Act edit See also Enclosure Over the years various English Acts of Parliament removed the right of the cottager to hold land According to John Lawrence Hammond and Barbara Hammond in their book The Village Labourer before the Enclosures Act the cottager was a farm labourer with land and after the Enclosures Act the cottager was a farm labourer without land 8 Legal definition edit In the law of England and Wales the definition of a cottage is a small house or habitation without land 5 However originally under an Elizabethan statute the cottage had to be built with at least 4 acres 0 02 km2 0 01 sq mi of land 5 Wales edit nbsp The Ugly House Welsh Tŷ Hyll near Betws Y Coed a famous example of a tŷ unnos The Welsh Tŷ unnos or house in a night was built by squatters on a plot of land defined by the throw of an axe from each corner of the property In Welsh a cottage is known as bwthyn and its inhabitant preswlydd 9 Scotland editIn Scotland the equivalent to cottager would be the crofter and the term for the building and its land would be croft 10 Ireland edit nbsp A common sight in the west of Ireland a 19th century stone teachin in Carrigmanus County Cork Irish cottages known as Irish teachin were historically the homes of farmworkers and labourers but in recent years the term has assumed a romantic connotation especially when referring to cottages with thatched roofs Irish teach ceann tui These thatched cottages were once to be seen all over Ireland but most have become dilapidated due to newer and modern developments However there has been a recent revival of restoring these old cottages with people wanting a more traditional home Today thatched cottages are now mostly built for the tourist industry and many can be let out as accommodation 11 Modern usage in Britain and Ireland editIn popular modern culture the term cottage is used in a more general and romantic context and can date from any era but the term is usually applied to pre modern dwellings Older pre Victorian cottages tend to have restricted height and often have construction timber exposed sometimes intruding into the living space Modern renovations of such dwellings often seek to re expose timber purlins rafters posts etc which have been covered in an attempt to establish perceived historical authenticity Older cottages are typically modest often semi detached or terraced with only four basic rooms two up two down although subsequent modifications can create more spacious accommodation A labourer s or fisherman s one roomed house often attached to a larger property is a particular type of cottage and is called a penty The term cottage has also been used for a larger house that is practical rather than pretentious see Chawton Cottage Outside Britain and Ireland editNorth America edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Cottage built c 1640 near Swedesboro New Jersey nbsp Wolters Filling Station in Davenport Iowa an example of an English Cottage style gas station nbsp A contemporary Australian cabin cottage Although the Oxford English Dictionary states that the term cottage is used in North America to represent a summer residence often on a large and sumptuous scale at a watering place or a health or pleasure resort most Americans expect a cottage particularly a summer cottage to be a relatively small possibly unfinished house Various editions of the quintessentially American Webster s Dictionary define it as a small house any modest country or suburban dwelling fifth edition with the eleventh edition describing even a vacation cottage as a usu small house for vacation use In North America most buildings known as cottages are used for weekend or summer getaways by city dwellers Cottage owners often rent their properties to tourists as a source of revenue In Saint John U S Virgin Islands most cottages are vacation rentals used for weekend or summer getaways In Michigan a cottage normally means a summer residence farther north near or on a lake An example of a colonial era cottage in North America is a small fieldstone house called Boelson Cottage in Fairmount Park Philadelphia one of the oldest extant houses within the city c 1678 84 In the jargon of English speaking Quebec s real estate industry a cottage is any two storey house as opposed to a bungalow However cottages in Eastern Canada are generally located next to lakes rivers or the ocean in forested areas They are used as a place to spend holidays with friends and family common activities include swimming canoeing waterskiing fishing hiking and sailing There are also many well known summer colonies Cottage living is one of the most popular tourist draws in Ontario Canada parts of which have come to be known as cottage country This term typically refers to the north and south shores of Georgian Bay Ontario Muskoka Ontario Haliburton Ontario and the Kawartha Lakes Ontario but has also been used to describe several other Canadian regions The practice of renting cottages has become widespread in these regions especially with rising property taxes for waterfront property What Eastern Canadians refer to as cottages seasonal use dwellings are generally referred to as cabins in most of North America This is most notable in the Midwest and the Western United States and Western Canada In much of Northern Ontario New England and upstate New York a summer house near a body of water is known as a camp citation needed In the 1960s and 1970s the A Frame house became a popular cottage style in North America In the 1920s and 30s many gas stations were built in the style of Old World cottages Comprising about a third of the stations built in the United States in those years cottage patterned facilities evoked a picturesque homeyness and were easier to gain approval for than the more stylized or attention grabbing designs also commonly used at the dawn of the automobile era 12 Australia edit In Australia the term cabin or shack is commonly used for a small dwelling the former more often for a place of residence or tourist accommodation and the latter for a simple recreational shelter typically not continuously occupied The term cottage usually refers to historic smaller residential buildings commonly stone or brick typically from Georgian or Victorian More recently cabins are often also referred to tiny houses however cabins are built at a permanent site on proper footings while the term tiny house often implies that the dwelling is built on a trailer platform and can be relocated Nordic countries edit See also Summer house In Nordic countries This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Finland edit nbsp A cottage in Vihti southern Finland Statistics Finland defines a cottage Finnish mokki Finland Swedish stuga or villa as a residential building that is used as a holiday or free time dwelling and is permanently constructed or erected on its site 13 Finnish cottages are traditionally built of logs but other wood constructions have become common They are usually situated close to water and almost all have a sauna There are 474 277 cottages in Finland 2005 a country with 187 888 lakes and 179 584 islands including rental holiday cottages owned by hospitality companies but excluding holiday villages and buildings on garden allotments Reports have 4 172 new cottages built in 2005 citation needed Most cottages are situated in the municipalities of Kuusamo 6 196 cottages on 1 January 2006 Kuopio 5 194 Ekenas Tammisaari 5 053 Mikkeli 4 649 and Mantyharju 4 630 citation needed Sweden edit nbsp Swedish cottage in Ljustero Stockholm The formal Swedish term for cottages is fritidshus vacation house or stuga of which there are 680 000 in Sweden 2007 According to Statistics Sweden about 50 of the Swedish population has access to a vacation house 14 In everyday talk Swedes refer to their cottages as lantstallet the country house or stugan the cottage Most vacation houses in Sweden are to be found along the coasts and around the major cities Prices vary a lot depending on location a modern seaside house near Stockholm may cost 100 times as much as a simple cottage in the inner regions of northern Sweden Until the end of World War II only a small wealthy Swedish elite could afford vacation houses often both a large seaside house and a hunting cabin up north During the rapid urbanisation in the 1950s and 1960s many families were able to retain their old farmhouses village cottages and fisherman cabins and convert them into vacation houses In addition economic growth made it possible even for low income families to buy small lots in the countryside where they could erect simple houses Former vacation houses near the large cities have gradually been converted into permanent homes as a result of urban sprawl The traditional Swedish cottage is a simple paneled house made of wood and painted in red They may contain 1 3 small bedrooms and also a small bathroom In the combined kitchen and living room storstuga there is usually a fireplace Today many cottages have been extended with outdoor rooms semi heated external rooms with glass walls and a thin roof and large wood terraces As a result of the friggebod reform in 1979 many cottage owners have built additional guesthouses on their lots Norway edit The formal Norwegian term for cottages is hytte or fritidsbolig vacation house In Norway cabins are often built near leisure activities such as hunting fishing and outdoor life outdoor sports or in areas with particularly beautiful nature such as in the woods in the mountains or by the sea In the most attractive areas it has become increasingly common with regulated fields where the cabins are very close together in so called cabin villages Chained cabins and holiday apartments are also being built here similar to a normal city Russia edit nbsp A typical Soviet dacha summer house in Resheti nbsp Example of what now is called a cottage in Russia Mikhaylovka Volgograd Oblast The first known cottages were built in Russia in the 19th century 15 when British culture was popular Today many large cities in Russia are surrounded by cottage villages So it is legitimate to talk about the appearance of the term Russian cottage a house comparable in size to a British villa or even a mansion and includes a corresponding piece of land 16 South Africa edit nbsp A traditional langhuis long cottage cottage in Verloren Vlei Heritage Village in the Western Cape region of South Africa Much like in the rest of the world cottages in South Africa housed agricultural workers and their friends and families A number of cottages were also constructed for fishermen along the West and South Coasts of the country throughout the 18th and 19th centuries Most cottages are single story two to four room structures sometimes with an attic for storing supplies Most cottages in the Western Cape area of South Africa have thatched roofs and stone or adobe walls which were traditionally whitewashed A large number of the remaining cottages in the country are listed heritage sites citation needed Notable cottages editAndrew Carnegie Birthplace Museum Fife Scotland weaver s cottage birthplace of philanthropist Andrew Carnegie Anne Hathaway s Cottage Warwickshire England childhood home of Anne Hathaway wife of Shakespeare Arthur Cottage County Antrim Northern Ireland the ancestral home of US President Chester A Arthur Bishop Asbury Cottage Staffordshire England boyhood home of Methodist Episcopal Bishop Francis Asbury Bron Yr Aur Powys Wales holiday cottage used by rock band Led Zeppelin Burns Cottage Ayrshire Scotland home of poet Robert Burns Cook s Cottage Melbourne Australia birthplace of James Cook taken from Yorkshire to Victoria in 1934 Clouds Hill Dorset England home of soldier T E Lawrence Lawrence of Arabia Dove Cottage Cumbria England home of the poet William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy Wordsworth Elgar Birthplace Museum Worcestershire England cottage birthplace of composer Edward Elgar Ernest Hemingway Cottage Michigan USA boyhood summer home of author Ernest Hemingway Herbert Hoover National Historic Site Iowa USA cottage birthplace of President Herbert Hoover Hill Top Cumbria England home of children s author Beatrix Potter Ivy Green Alabama USA birthplace of deaf blind author Helen Keller La Trobe s Cottage Melbourne Australia home of Charles La Trobe founder of the colony of Victoria Michael Collins Birthplace County Cork Ireland cottage birthplace of Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins Oakhurst Cottage Surrey England preserved 17th century agricultural worker s cottage Swiss Cottage Cahir County Tipperary Ireland ornamental cottage designed by John Nash Thomas Hardy s Cottage Dorset England home of author Thomas Hardy Willy Lott s Cottage Suffolk England featured in several paintings by John Constable York Cottage Norfolk England favourite home of King George V and Mary of TeckGallery editThatched cottages in England edit nbsp Church Cottage Stretton Grandison Herefordshire nbsp Cottage with thatched roof Simpson Milton Keynes nbsp Ashton under Hill Worcestershire nbsp Cottage designed by John Nash at Blaise Hamlet Bristol nbsp Anne Hathaway s Cottage Shottery Warwickshire nbsp Thatched cottage Brigsley Lincolnshire nbsp Cottage Selworthy Somerset nbsp Pump Cottage Harpford Devon Other cottages edit nbsp Circular cottage in Veryan Cornwall nbsp Cottage amongst sand dunes in Denmark nbsp The Hansel and Gretel cottage at the Efteling theme park the Netherlands nbsp Snow covered cottages near Curarrehue Chile nbsp A cotter house Kotten or Katen near Solingen Germany used as a vacation cottage today nbsp A wooden cottage in Međimurje County CroatiaSee also edit nbsp Housing portal Bothy simple shelter Bungalow a type of single storey house But and ben a simple cottage having only an inner and outer room Chalet an alpine style building Cottagecore an aesthetic popularized on the Internet in the 2010s Cottage garden Cottage industry Dacha seasonal or year round second homes located in the exurbs of Soviet and Russian cities Garden real estate property with gardens Log cabin small house built from logs Mar del Plata style a small living unit located in and around the resort city of Mar del Plata Argentina Mobile home Mountain hut a building located in the mountains intended to provide food and shelter to mountaineers and hikers Pied a terre small living unit typically located in a large city Summer house a term used in the Scandinavian countries to describe the popular holiday homes or summer cottages Vacation rental term in the travel industry meaning renting out a furnished apartment or house on a temporary basis to tourists as an alternative to a hotel Vernacular architecture traditional architecture in a particular area Wilderness hut a rent free open dwelling place for temporary accommodationReferences edit YLE Jopa kymmenet tuhannet siirtyneet kesamokeilleen vetoomuksista huolimatta suosittujen mokkikuntien ruokakaupoissa jopa 50 prosentin kasvuja in Finnish Daniel D McGarry Medieval history and civilization 1976 p 242 Raznovidnosti kottedzhej Chto luchshe vybrat vsekottedzhi com ua as in domum dicti cotagii the house of the said cottage the um being the accusative form a b c Elmes James 1827 On Architectural Jurisprudence in which the Constitutions Canons Laws and Customs etc London W Benning pp 178 179 Retrieved 5 December 2013 Alcock Nat Miles Dan 2012 The Medieval Peasant House in Midland England Oxbow Books p 107 ISBN 978 1 842 17506 4 King Steven Timmins Geffrey 2001 Making Sense of the Industrial Revolution English Economy and Society 1700 1850 Manchester University Press p 340 ISBN 978 0719 05022 0 Hammond J L Barbara Hammond 1912 The Village Labourer 1760 1832 London Longman Green amp Co p 100 Lewis Henry ed 1985 Welsh Dictionary London Collins ISBN 0 00 433402 7 pp 136 178 Collyer Adam 1953 The Crofting Problem Cambridge Cambridge University p 25 Travelmania ireland com www travelmania ireland com Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Granger Susan June 1985 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Lundring Service Station National Park Service Retrieved 16 June 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Statistics Finland www stat fi Retrieved 14 March 2018 Statistics Sweden scb se Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Manaev Georgy 15 June 2015 The dacha uniquely Russian country homes Russia amp India Report Retrieved 16 March 2017 Harit M D Novyj vek rossijskoj usadby Populyarnaya enciklopediya arhitektury t 1 2001 g Izd AST izdatelstvo Moskva ISBN 5 17 008121 9Further reading editCurrent editions Sayer Karen Country cottages a cultural history Manchester University Press 2000 Woodforde John The Truth About Cottages A History and an Illustrated Guide to 50 Types of English Cottage I B Tauris amp Co Ltd 2007 Out of copyright free download Dawber E G amp Davie W G Old cottages and farmhouses in Kent and Sussex London B T Batsford 1900 Ditchfield P H amp Quinton A R The cottages and the village life of rural England London J M Dent amp sons ltd 1912 Ditchfield P H Picturesque English cottages and their doorway gardens J C Winston Co 1905 Downing A J Cottage Residences New York J Wiley amp son 1873 Elder Duncan J H Country cottages and week end homes London Cassell and co ltd 1912 Green W C amp Davie W G Old cottages amp farm houses in Surrey London B T Batsford 1908 Holme Charles Ed The village homes of England The Studio Ltd London New York Paris 1912 Holme Charles Old English country cottages Office of The Studio London New York Paris 1906 Kirby J H Modern cottages self pub n d Papworth John B Rural residences a series of designs for cottages London R Ackermann 1818 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cottage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cottage amp oldid 1220890282, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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