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Show 36. Glassie, Folk Housing in Middle Virginia, 25. 37. Whiffen, The Eighteenth Century Houses of Williamsburg, 56. 38. Ibid., 56. A geometrical system of designing house plans is found in J. Marshall Jenkins, ''The Ground Rules of Welsh Houses--A Primary Analysis," Folk Life, 5 (1967), 65-91. 39. The two-room wide Anglo-American building tradition is illustrated in most of the published field collections of folk architecture in the United States, see for example Glassie, Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States; William Lynwood Montell and Michael Lynn Morse, Kentucky Folk Architecture (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1976); Marshall, Folk Architecture in Little Dixie; Richard Pillsbury and Andrew Kardos, A Field Guide to the Folk Architecture of the Northeastern United States, Geography Publications at Dartmouth, 8 (Hanover, N.H.: Dartmouth College, Dept. of Geography, 1970); and Eugene M. Wilson, Alabama Folk Houses (Montgomery: Alabama Historical Commission, 1975). 40. See Jahn, B eskikker Pa Den Norske Landsb d, 5-25, and Sigurd Erixon, Svensk Byggna s Kultur 19 7; reprint ed., Stockholm: Walter Ekstrand, 1982), 286-575. 41. The move toward the symmetrical tripartite house in Denmark occurred during the middle years of the nineteenth century and is not well documented in the traditional Danish architectural texts. Most studies deal either with the folk buildings of the seventeenth and eighteeenth centuries or the high style, academic architecture of the nineteenth century. There have been no systematic studies dealing with the sweeping architectural changes of the 1800s. The best description of life in the Danish countryside during this period is found in Christiansen, "Peasant Adaptation,'' 98-152. 42. Glassie, Folk Housing in Middle Virginia, 21-24. 43. Jens Christian Andersen Weibye, Diary, Holograph, LOS Church Archives, 99. 44. Glassie, "Structure and Function,'' 330. 45. Talbot Hamlin, Greek Revival Architecture in America (1944; reprint ed., New York: Dover, 1965), 260, 266, 293, Pierson, American Buildings and Their Architects, 444-452, and Glassie, Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States, 129-133. 46. See Deetz, Invitation to Archaeology, 51, and Upton, "The Power of Things," 272-273. For a full discussion of the type concept in archaeology, see the articles gathered in James Deetz, Man's Imprint from the Past (Boston: Little Brown, 1965). 47. Deetz, Invitation to Archaeology, 45-49. 48. Glassie, Folk Housing in Middle Virginia, 114. 119 |