The Iron Age: At home with the Celts

Bucks Back in Time Buckinghamshire has a number of Iron Age Hillforts along the line of the Chiltern Hills. Iron Age people lived on farmsteads or small settlements, keeping animals and growing crops. Sheep would be kept for wool as well as for meat. Weaving was important to the Celts and not only did they […]

Bucks Back in Time

Buckinghamshire has a number of Iron Age Hillforts along the line of the Chiltern Hills.

Iron Age people lived on farmsteads or small settlements, keeping animals and growing crops. Sheep would be kept for wool as well as for meat. Weaving was important to the Celts and not only did they weave fabric for clothing, they also wove their houses. Families lived in roundhouses made of woven natural materials, such as flexible tree branches. Rooves were thatched with grasses, rushes and straw. These circular dwellings were larger versions of the houses lived in by Stone Age and Bronze Age people but they were built in similar ways.

 

Create your own woven roundhouse

This project probably has a difficulty factor of 10 out of 10. It is good to have someone to help hold things in place AND it is very important to be careful and patient when building your model or you risk it breaking!

 

You will need:

 

Instructions

1.Make your base for weaving:

Take your box and draw a circle where your roundhouse will be

Around the outside of the circle, make small holes for your stakes to sit in setting them 2 or 3 centimetres apart. I left a space for an entrance at one end.

 

 

Add glue into the holes and push your stakes through, letting them rest on the bottom of the box beneath. These stakes will become your ‘uprights’ or posts. Trim to the height you want with secateurs – ask an adult to do this for you. Leave to dry completely. I left mine overnight.

 

 

2. When your base is dry, you can start building your ‘wattle’ walls, weaving between the stakes, just like you are building a basket. To do this:

 

 

When your weaving gets to the doorway, you can loop back around the stake and carry on in the other direction (depending on how bendy your weavers are).

 

Try to keep your weaving nice and tight as this will help to hold your stakes in place

 

 

3. When you reach about a centimetre from the top of your walls, it is time to do your roof structure:

 

 

Continue with your weaving, but include the roof rafters alongside your stakes

 

 

Your rafters will need extra support and so add some smaller horizontal rods between them. I have tied mine on with thread

 

4. Thatching time!

 

 

Once finished, you can trim your rafters if needed and thatch.

 

5. If you want to, you can cover the walls in clay or mud (called ‘daub’) for a completed roundhouse look. I have kept mine bare because I like to see the basket construction

6. Now decorate the box so that it becomes part of the prehistoric landscape. You could also add strip of card inside to line the walls, featuring celtic-inspired art patterns, or make some simple furniture or a hearth in the centre!