The research project “Church Building as Industry in Early Medieval Western Europe [CHISEL]” intended to interrogate the early medieval ‘construction industry’ with a specific focus on the ecclesiastical workshops responsible for producing masonry buildings in the Early Middle Ages (8th-11th centuries) in Western Europe. Using state-of-the-art analyses of selected religious buildings that survive as standing structures in Spain (Santa María de Melque, Toledo), Portugal (São Frutuoso de Montélios, Braga) and England (St Peter’s Wearmouth, Durham; St Paul’s Jarrow, Durham; St John’s Escomb, Durham; and St Lawrence’s Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire) the overarching aims of the proposal were threefold:
- Firstly, to study the industry of construction of masonry churches through analysis of the building processes, technologies and the material and skills-based investment at selected churches.
- Secondly, to develop an understanding of the architecture as a product in its social and economic context, and to measure its contribution to the early medieval economy.
- Thirdly, to establish a suitable methodology for the analysis of the construction industry at this time across Western Europe.