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Pit-house

A pit-house (or pit house, pithouse) is a house built in the ground and used for shelter.[1] Besides providing shelter from the most extreme of weather conditions, these structures may also be used to store food (just like a pantry, a larder, or a root cellar) and for cultural activities like the telling of stories, dancing, singing and celebrations. General dictionaries also describe a pit-house as a dugout,[2] and it has similarities to a half-dugout.[3]

Reconstruction of a pit-house in Chotěbuz, Czechia

In archaeology, a pit-house is frequently called a sunken-featured building[4][5] and occasionally (grub-) hut[6] or grubhouse, after the German name Grubenhaus[7] They are found in numerous cultures around the world, including the people of the Southwestern United States, the ancestral Pueblo, the ancient Fremont and Mogollon cultures, the Cherokee, the Inuit, the people of the Plateau, and archaic residents of Wyoming (Smith 2003) in North America; Archaic residents of the Lake Titicaca Basin (Craig 2005) in South America; Anglo-Saxons in Europe; and the Jōmon people in Japan. Some Anglo-Saxon pit-houses may have not been dwellings, but served other purposes.

Usually, all that remains of the ancient pit-house is a dug-out hollow in the ground and any postholes used to support the roof. In the nineteenth century, it was believed that most prehistoric peoples lived in pit-houses, although it has since been proved that many of the features thought of as houses were in fact food prehistoric storage pits or served another purpose.[citation needed]

Mammoth bone dwellings edit

 
Mammoth bone dwelling

The oldest pit dwellings were discovered in Mezhyrich, Central Ukraine. Dating back 15,000 years to the Upper Paleolithic age, the houses were made of mammoth bones. The base is circular or oval in shape, 12 to 14 feet (3.7 to 4.3 metres) in diameter, with limb bones used for walls and lighter, flat bones used for the roof. Presumably, animal hide was stretched around the exterior for insulation. Each dwelling had a hearth. Groups of houses were arranged around a base camp layout, occupied by families or relatives for weeks or months.[8]

Early medieval Europe edit

 
 
A reconstruction

Pit-houses were built in many parts of northern Europe between the 5th and 12th centuries AD. In Germany they are known as Grubenhäuser, and in the United Kingdom, they are also known as grubhuts, grubhouses or sunken featured buildings.

Archaeological evidence indicates they were built in a shallow sub-rectangular pit and vary in depth (often relating to the preservation of the site). Some may measure 0.25m by around 2m by 1.5m, whilst examples from excavations from the 1950s onwards at West Stow in the United Kingdom are 3.7m-4.44m long x 2.72m-3.5m wide x 0.58m-0.97m deep. Within this pit were placed two (but sometimes 0, 4, or 6) substantial wooden posts in postholes at either end of the long axis. Some archaeologists have suggested that a suspended wooden floor lay over the pit and that the cavity beneath was used for storage or to control dampness, although others have disputed this, suggesting that grubenhäuser did not have suspended floors at all. A gabled roof supported by the timber posts covered the hut, which likely had no windows and had a single entrance at one end. Excavations at West Stow (UK) in the 1970s found preserved evidence of charred planks, suggestive of suspended floors. Hearths were also found, which sat partially over the edge of the sunken pits and appeared to have collapsed downwards when the structure supporting their overhanging sections (possibly a suspended floor) was removed.[9]

Grubenhäuser are often understood to have been domestic dwellings. However, their use may have varied, especially on a regional basis. In Western Europe their small size and the fact that they can be found near other buildings and associated finds of loom weights has led to theories that they had a specialised purpose such as for weaving sheds. In the Slavonic regions of Eastern Europe, Grubenhäuser are larger and often have a fireplace. In most settlements there have been no features of buildings at ground level.

There are reconstructions of pit-houses in several open-air museums, e.g. in the Hitzacker Archaeological Centre, the Kalkriese Museum and Park, the Oerlinghausen Archaeological Open Air Museum, and the Hochdorf Chieftain's Grave.

To compare with the Swedish Backstuga that were very poor peoples homes until the middle of the 20th century.

 
Backstuga i Småland, ca 1925

In North America edit

 
A reconstruction of a pit-house at the Step House ruins in Mesa Verde National Park, United States, shows the pit dug below grade, four supporting posts, roof structure as layers of wood and mud, and the entry through the roof.
 
Pit-house replicas at the Pueblo Grande Ruins in Phoenix, Arizona, represent what the Hohokam pit-houses looked like 1000 years prior.

Throughout the inland Pacific Northwest, indigenous people were nomadic during the summer and gathered resources at different spots according to the season and tradition, but overwintered in permanent semi-subterranean pit houses at lower elevations. The winter was often the only time families saw others—even if they were from the same village and tribe—and congregated in any numbers before the arrival of trading posts. Often these houses were located along major rivers and tributaries like the Columbia and Fraser. The houses could vary in shape but were typically round, with wooden frames roofed over with thatch and earth, and ranged in size from a few to greater than twenty meters. A common design featured a central hole in the roof that provided ladder access and ventilation, including for the smoke of an interior fire.[10]

In the northwestern Great Plains and the Plateau region located nearby, climate changes and extreme temperature and weather conditions made it difficult to live year-round. Hot summers led to the building of simple tent-like structures that were portable and could be packed up to move. For cold winter months, pit-houses provided the warm, protected shelter necessary for survival.[11]

Cross-cultural patterning edit

 
Barn on a wooden cellar in Gluringen, Valais, Switzerland. Traces in the ground would appear as a "pit-house".

A cross-cultural middle range model of pit-house architecture using George Murdock's 1967 Ethnographic Atlas[12] found that 82 of the 862 societies in the sample occupy pit structures as either their primary or secondary dwellings.[13]

All but six of the 82 societies live above 32° north latitude, and four of the six cases in this sample that are below 32° north latitude are from "high mountain" regions in east Africa, Paraguay, and eastern Brazil.[14] The last example is from the Yami[15] who occupied a small island south of Formosa.

Three conditions were always present among groups in the sample: 1) non-tropical climate during the season of pit structure habitation; 2) minimally a biseasonal settlement pattern; 3) reliance on stored food during the period of pit structure occupation. These conditions may be related to other factors of society and the presence of any or all of these three elements in society does not pre-condition occupation of pit structures. Nonetheless, these three conditions were present in all cases of pit structure occupation present in the Ethnographic Atlas. Other cultural patterns were common, but not universal across the sample. These commonalities include: cold season of occupation, low population estimates, and simple political and economic systems.

The ethnographic sample is based almost entirely on case studies from societies located in northern latitudes. The period of pit structure occupation is generally during the cold season, probably due to their thermal efficiency. Dug into the ground, pit structures take advantage to the insulating properties of soil, as well as having a low profile, protecting them from exposure to wind-induced heat loss.[16] Since less heat is lost by transmission than is in above ground structures, less energy is required to maintain stable temperatures inside the structure.[17]

Out of the 82 ethnographic cases in the Ethnographic Atlas, 50 societies had population estimates. Of these, 64% had fewer than 100 people per settlement.[18] In only 6% of cases were there more than 400 persons per settlement. The cases with the highest population densities were the Arikara and Hidatsa of the North American Great Plains and the Konso of Ethiopia. Gilman attributes high population densities among the Arikara to the availability of buffalo.

Pit structure occupations are generally associated with simple political and economic systems. For 86% of the sample, class stratification or social distinctions based on non-hereditary wealth were reported as absent.[19] However, some pit-dwelling societies are characterized by chiefdom level complexity. In terms of economic organization, 77% of the societies who occupy pit structures had a hunting and gathering economy.[20] This is a large fraction of the sample, but is not considered a universally consistent feature like biseasonal settlement and a reliance on stored foods during pit structure occupation.

During the part of the year when people are not living in pit structures, activities should be focused on acquiring foods to store.[18] Based on the sample from the Ethnographic Atlas, this may be through either hunting and gathering or agricultural activity.

Many different prehistoric groups used pit houses. Although generally associated with the American southwest cultures, such as Fremont, Pueblo, Hohokam, and Mogollon, pit houses were used by a wide variety of people in a wide variety of places over the past 12,000 years. Large pit house formations have been excavated in British Columbia, Canada, such as at Keatley Creek Archaeological Site.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Pit house" in the online Merriam Webster's Dictionary
  2. ^ Harris, C. M. (1998). "Dugout". American architecture: An illustrated encyclopedia (p. 104). New York: W.W. Norton.
  3. ^ Whitney, W. D. (1889). "Dugout" def. 2. The Century dictionary: An encyclopedic lexicon of the English language (Vol. 3, p. 1793). New York: The Century Co.
  4. ^ Hidden Treasure Fact Files By Neil Faulkner Last updated 2011-02-17 http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/archaeology/fact_files_08.shtml accessed 2/14/2013
  5. ^ Crabtree, Pam J.. Medieval archaeology: an encyclopedia. New York: Garland Pub., 2001. 533. ISBN 0815312865
  6. ^ G.L. Brook Symposium, C., & Kay, C. (2000). Lexicology, semantics, and lexicography: Selected papers from the fourth G.L. Brook Symposium, Manchester, August 1998. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins.
  7. ^ Hourihane, C., Strickland, D. H., & Simonetta, M. (n.d.). Anglo-Saxon Architecture. In The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture (Vol. 2, p. 80). (2012) New York, NY. ISBN 9780195395365
  8. ^ Hoffecker, John A Prehistory of the North: Human Settlement of the Higher Latitudes Rutgers, 2005, ISBN 0-8135-3468-2|url=[1]
  9. ^ West 2001, West Stow Revisited, St Edmundsbury Borough Council
  10. ^ Mattes, Matthew (2014). Lithic Design and Technological Organization in Housepit 1 of the S7istken Site, Middle Fraser Canyon, British Columbia (MA thesis). University of Montana.
  11. ^ Snow, Dean (2010). Archaeology of Native North America. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. p. 261. ISBN 978-0136156864.
  12. ^ George Peter Murdock (1967). Ethnographic Atlas. University of Pittsburgh Press.
  13. ^ (Gilman 1987:540)
  14. ^ (Gonzalez 1953)
  15. ^ Kano and Segawa (1956)
  16. ^ Gilman (1987:542)
  17. ^ Farwell (1981)
  18. ^ a b Gilman (1987:544)
  19. ^ Gilman (1987:547)
  20. ^ Gilman (1987:545)

References edit

  • Farwell, R. Y. (1981), "Pit Houses: Prehistoric Energy Conservation?", El Palacio, vol. 87, pp. 43–47
  • Gilman, P. (1987), "Architecture as Artifact: Pit Structures and Pueblos in the American Southwest", American Antiquity, vol. 52, no. 3, pp. 538–564, doi:10.2307/281598, JSTOR 281598, S2CID 161823882
  • Gonzalez, A. R. (1953), "Concerning the Existence of the Pit House in South America", American Antiquity, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 271–272, doi:10.2307/277052, JSTOR 277052, S2CID 163581274
  • Kano, T. & Segawa, K. (1956), An Illustrative Ethnography of Formosan Aborigines, Tokyo: Maruzen
  • Smith, C. S. (2003), "Hunter-gatherer Mobility, Storage, and Houses in a Marginal Environment: an Example from the mid-Holocene of Wyoming", Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 162–189, doi:10.1016/s0278-4165(03)00017-5

External links edit

  •   Media related to Category:Pit houses at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Media related to Category:Post in ground construction at Wikimedia Commons

house, house, house, pithouse, house, built, ground, used, shelter, besides, providing, shelter, from, most, extreme, weather, conditions, these, structures, also, used, store, food, just, like, pantry, larder, root, cellar, cultural, activities, like, telling. A pit house or pit house pithouse is a house built in the ground and used for shelter 1 Besides providing shelter from the most extreme of weather conditions these structures may also be used to store food just like a pantry a larder or a root cellar and for cultural activities like the telling of stories dancing singing and celebrations General dictionaries also describe a pit house as a dugout 2 and it has similarities to a half dugout 3 Reconstruction of a pit house in Chotebuz CzechiaIn archaeology a pit house is frequently called a sunken featured building 4 5 and occasionally grub hut 6 or grubhouse after the German name Grubenhaus 7 They are found in numerous cultures around the world including the people of the Southwestern United States the ancestral Pueblo the ancient Fremont and Mogollon cultures the Cherokee the Inuit the people of the Plateau and archaic residents of Wyoming Smith 2003 in North America Archaic residents of the Lake Titicaca Basin Craig 2005 in South America Anglo Saxons in Europe and the Jōmon people in Japan Some Anglo Saxon pit houses may have not been dwellings but served other purposes Usually all that remains of the ancient pit house is a dug out hollow in the ground and any postholes used to support the roof In the nineteenth century it was believed that most prehistoric peoples lived in pit houses although it has since been proved that many of the features thought of as houses were in fact food prehistoric storage pits or served another purpose citation needed Contents 1 Mammoth bone dwellings 2 Early medieval Europe 3 In North America 4 Cross cultural patterning 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksMammoth bone dwellings edit nbsp Mammoth bone dwellingThe oldest pit dwellings were discovered in Mezhyrich Central Ukraine Dating back 15 000 years to the Upper Paleolithic age the houses were made of mammoth bones The base is circular or oval in shape 12 to 14 feet 3 7 to 4 3 metres in diameter with limb bones used for walls and lighter flat bones used for the roof Presumably animal hide was stretched around the exterior for insulation Each dwelling had a hearth Groups of houses were arranged around a base camp layout occupied by families or relatives for weeks or months 8 Early medieval Europe edit nbsp nbsp A reconstructionPit houses were built in many parts of northern Europe between the 5th and 12th centuries AD In Germany they are known as Grubenhauser and in the United Kingdom they are also known as grubhuts grubhouses or sunken featured buildings Archaeological evidence indicates they were built in a shallow sub rectangular pit and vary in depth often relating to the preservation of the site Some may measure 0 25m by around 2m by 1 5m whilst examples from excavations from the 1950s onwards at West Stow in the United Kingdom are 3 7m 4 44m long x 2 72m 3 5m wide x 0 58m 0 97m deep Within this pit were placed two but sometimes 0 4 or 6 substantial wooden posts in postholes at either end of the long axis Some archaeologists have suggested that a suspended wooden floor lay over the pit and that the cavity beneath was used for storage or to control dampness although others have disputed this suggesting that grubenhauser did not have suspended floors at all A gabled roof supported by the timber posts covered the hut which likely had no windows and had a single entrance at one end Excavations at West Stow UK in the 1970s found preserved evidence of charred planks suggestive of suspended floors Hearths were also found which sat partially over the edge of the sunken pits and appeared to have collapsed downwards when the structure supporting their overhanging sections possibly a suspended floor was removed 9 Grubenhauser are often understood to have been domestic dwellings However their use may have varied especially on a regional basis In Western Europe their small size and the fact that they can be found near other buildings and associated finds of loom weights has led to theories that they had a specialised purpose such as for weaving sheds In the Slavonic regions of Eastern Europe Grubenhauser are larger and often have a fireplace In most settlements there have been no features of buildings at ground level There are reconstructions of pit houses in several open air museums e g in the Hitzacker Archaeological Centre the Kalkriese Museum and Park the Oerlinghausen Archaeological Open Air Museum and the Hochdorf Chieftain s Grave To compare with the Swedish Backstuga that were very poor peoples homes until the middle of the 20th century nbsp Backstuga i Smaland ca 1925In North America edit nbsp A reconstruction of a pit house at the Step House ruins in Mesa Verde National Park United States shows the pit dug below grade four supporting posts roof structure as layers of wood and mud and the entry through the roof nbsp Pit house replicas at the Pueblo Grande Ruins in Phoenix Arizona represent what the Hohokam pit houses looked like 1000 years prior Further information Quiggly hole Throughout the inland Pacific Northwest indigenous people were nomadic during the summer and gathered resources at different spots according to the season and tradition but overwintered in permanent semi subterranean pit houses at lower elevations The winter was often the only time families saw others even if they were from the same village and tribe and congregated in any numbers before the arrival of trading posts Often these houses were located along major rivers and tributaries like the Columbia and Fraser The houses could vary in shape but were typically round with wooden frames roofed over with thatch and earth and ranged in size from a few to greater than twenty meters A common design featured a central hole in the roof that provided ladder access and ventilation including for the smoke of an interior fire 10 In the northwestern Great Plains and the Plateau region located nearby climate changes and extreme temperature and weather conditions made it difficult to live year round Hot summers led to the building of simple tent like structures that were portable and could be packed up to move For cold winter months pit houses provided the warm protected shelter necessary for survival 11 Cross cultural patterning edit nbsp Barn on a wooden cellar in Gluringen Valais Switzerland Traces in the ground would appear as a pit house A cross cultural middle range model of pit house architecture using George Murdock s 1967 Ethnographic Atlas 12 found that 82 of the 862 societies in the sample occupy pit structures as either their primary or secondary dwellings 13 All but six of the 82 societies live above 32 north latitude and four of the six cases in this sample that are below 32 north latitude are from high mountain regions in east Africa Paraguay and eastern Brazil 14 The last example is from the Yami 15 who occupied a small island south of Formosa Three conditions were always present among groups in the sample 1 non tropical climate during the season of pit structure habitation 2 minimally a biseasonal settlement pattern 3 reliance on stored food during the period of pit structure occupation These conditions may be related to other factors of society and the presence of any or all of these three elements in society does not pre condition occupation of pit structures Nonetheless these three conditions were present in all cases of pit structure occupation present in the Ethnographic Atlas Other cultural patterns were common but not universal across the sample These commonalities include cold season of occupation low population estimates and simple political and economic systems The ethnographic sample is based almost entirely on case studies from societies located in northern latitudes The period of pit structure occupation is generally during the cold season probably due to their thermal efficiency Dug into the ground pit structures take advantage to the insulating properties of soil as well as having a low profile protecting them from exposure to wind induced heat loss 16 Since less heat is lost by transmission than is in above ground structures less energy is required to maintain stable temperatures inside the structure 17 Out of the 82 ethnographic cases in the Ethnographic Atlas 50 societies had population estimates Of these 64 had fewer than 100 people per settlement 18 In only 6 of cases were there more than 400 persons per settlement The cases with the highest population densities were the Arikara and Hidatsa of the North American Great Plains and the Konso of Ethiopia Gilman attributes high population densities among the Arikara to the availability of buffalo Pit structure occupations are generally associated with simple political and economic systems For 86 of the sample class stratification or social distinctions based on non hereditary wealth were reported as absent 19 However some pit dwelling societies are characterized by chiefdom level complexity In terms of economic organization 77 of the societies who occupy pit structures had a hunting and gathering economy 20 This is a large fraction of the sample but is not considered a universally consistent feature like biseasonal settlement and a reliance on stored foods during pit structure occupation During the part of the year when people are not living in pit structures activities should be focused on acquiring foods to store 18 Based on the sample from the Ethnographic Atlas this may be through either hunting and gathering or agricultural activity Many different prehistoric groups used pit houses Although generally associated with the American southwest cultures such as Fremont Pueblo Hohokam and Mogollon pit houses were used by a wide variety of people in a wide variety of places over the past 12 000 years Large pit house formations have been excavated in British Columbia Canada such as at Keatley Creek Archaeological Site See also editBurdei Dugout shelter Earth shelter Earth lodge Kekuli Kiva Larder Pantry Quiggly hole Root cellar Sinagua Zemlyanka Timber framing nbsp Housing portalNotes edit Pit house in the online Merriam Webster s Dictionary Harris C M 1998 Dugout American architecture An illustrated encyclopedia p 104 New York W W Norton Whitney W D 1889 Dugout def 2 The Century dictionary An encyclopedic lexicon of the English language Vol 3 p 1793 New York The Century Co Hidden Treasure Fact Files By Neil Faulkner Last updated 2011 02 17 http www bbc co uk history ancient archaeology fact files 08 shtml accessed 2 14 2013 Crabtree Pam J Medieval archaeology an encyclopedia New York Garland Pub 2001 533 ISBN 0815312865 G L Brook Symposium C amp Kay C 2000 Lexicology semantics and lexicography Selected papers from the fourth G L Brook Symposium Manchester August 1998 Amsterdam J Benjamins Hourihane C Strickland D H amp Simonetta M n d Anglo Saxon Architecture In The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture Vol 2 p 80 2012 New York NY ISBN 9780195395365 Hoffecker John A Prehistory of the North Human Settlement of the Higher Latitudes Rutgers 2005 ISBN 0 8135 3468 2 url 1 West 2001 West Stow Revisited St Edmundsbury Borough Council Mattes Matthew 2014 Lithic Design and Technological Organization in Housepit 1 of the S7istken Site Middle Fraser Canyon British Columbia MA thesis University of Montana Snow Dean 2010 Archaeology of Native North America Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall p 261 ISBN 978 0136156864 George Peter Murdock 1967 Ethnographic Atlas University of Pittsburgh Press Gilman 1987 540 Gonzalez 1953 Kano and Segawa 1956 Gilman 1987 542 Farwell 1981 a b Gilman 1987 544 Gilman 1987 547 Gilman 1987 545 References editFarwell R Y 1981 Pit Houses Prehistoric Energy Conservation El Palacio vol 87 pp 43 47 Gilman P 1987 Architecture as Artifact Pit Structures and Pueblos in the American Southwest American Antiquity vol 52 no 3 pp 538 564 doi 10 2307 281598 JSTOR 281598 S2CID 161823882 Gonzalez A R 1953 Concerning the Existence of the Pit House in South America American Antiquity vol 18 no 3 pp 271 272 doi 10 2307 277052 JSTOR 277052 S2CID 163581274 Kano T amp Segawa K 1956 An Illustrative Ethnography of Formosan Aborigines Tokyo Maruzen Smith C S 2003 Hunter gatherer Mobility Storage and Houses in a Marginal Environment an Example from the mid Holocene of Wyoming Journal of Anthropological Archaeology vol 22 no 2 pp 162 189 doi 10 1016 s0278 4165 03 00017 5External links edit nbsp Media related to Category Pit houses at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Media related to Category Post in ground construction at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pit house amp oldid 1185486652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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