Model longhouse version 1 a basic model of a viking longhouse can be made using stripwood techniques and card.
Viking longhouse roof.
The columns supported the roof and as a result the walls supported little weight.
This kind of building predates back to iron age sites around the same time the vikings existed.
The roof was supported with large posts that were dug into the ground.
Classroom ideas in this clip the presenter describes what living in a viking longhouse was like.
They were around 5 7 metres 15 25 feet wide in the middle and from 15 75 metres 50 250 feet long.
The walls were either made from clay or wood planks.
Vikings lived in a long narrow building called a longhouse.
They were built of wood and had stone walls around the base.
Most had timber frames with walls of wattle and daub and thatched roofs.
Houses were built by using wood from oak trees in the viking age.
See more ideas about vikings viking house viking age.
These buildings were used for farming the roofs were covered with earth and grass was planted in the soil.
These columns divided each interior room into three long aisles.
There would also be small three legged stools and perhaps larger boards and trestles stored in the roof beams and brought down for feasts and special occasions.
Two rows of high posts supported the roof and ran down the entire length of the building which could be up to 250 feet long.
This is very suitable as group project since separate frames can be made by different teams then brought together to assemble at the end.
They would make two wooden posts to support the roof that would then run over the whole structure.
From the outside they look like more complex forms of the ritual houses.
Ran down the length of the longhouse supporting the roof beams.
The roofs were often multi layered and they usually had a tower or spire in the middle of the highest layer of the roof.
The longhouse had curved walls that almost makes the roof look like a ship flipped on its head.
Where wood was scarce as in iceland longhouses were made of turf and sod.
Longhouses were usually made of wood stone or earth and turf which kept out the cold better.
Typically the walls bowed out at the center of the longhouse making it wider in the center.
Countryside buildings were built of wood and they were similar to log cabins.
The icelandic turf houses and the viking longhouse were general living buildings in medieval scandinavian architecture.
No matter the size the basic construction was the same.
Since wood was scarce for the most part the longhouses typically used turf or sod for their roofing purposes.