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Image: Photo of people sat around a fire in a recreated Neolithic house at Stonehenge

10 ways of keeping warm through history

As winter bites and we start putting on those extra layers, you might wonder how our ancestors coped before the modern invention of central heating. From Roman bath houses to draughty medieval castles, here’s the story of keeping of warm over the past 4,500 years!

Image: Photo of a fireplace in the middle of a recreated Neolithic house at Stonehenge in WIltshire
A fireplace in the middle of a recreated Neolithic house at Stonehenge in WIltshire

1. STONEHENGE: ALL FIRED UP

For the builders of Stonehenge some four and a half thousand years ago, a well-stoked fire would have been an essential part of the home. Today the recreated Neolithic houses at Stonehenge are kept warm and dry by a fire at the heart of each house.

In an inspired design feature, white chalk walls and floors reflect sunlight and capture the heat from the fire. The type of wood burned makes the difference between a smoky, uninhabitable space and a lovely, cosy glamping-like experience. For an instant heat boost, the houses’ Neolithic inhabitants would also have made the most of animal fur and hides.

Image: Cut-away illustration of Lullingstone Roman Villa showing the hypocaust heating several rooms
Cut-away illustration of Lullingstone Roman Villa showing the hypocaust heating several rooms

2. LULLINGSTONE ROMAN VILLA: UNDER-FLOOR HEATING

Faced with the chilly conditions of ancient Brittania, wealthy Romans did their best to keep warm and cosy. Perhaps their greatest innovation was the hypocaust – an early form of central heating.

A fire blazing in a furnace heated warm air which moved around the building through spaces under the floors and between walls. Hugely demanding of both labour and fuel, such modern luxuries were available only to the most prosperous of homeowners. Lullingstone Roman Villa in Kent boasted three heated rooms – with a specially installed furnace to warm the suite.

Image: Photo of remains of the undressing room at Chesters Roman Fort on Hadrian's Wall
Remains of the undressing room at Chesters Roman Fort on Hadrian's Wall

3. CHESTERS ROMAN FORT: A TRIP TO THE BATHS

For the less-well-off, public baths were at the heart of the social scene in Roman Britain. These benefitted more extensively from the installation of hypocausts to heat caldaria (or hot rooms) to ensure a sauna-like hit of heat. At Chesters Roman Fort on Hadrian’s Wall, Roman visitors would have gone from warm room to hot room and back to cold room as the water and air were intricately heated and cooled throughout the space.

The undressing room at Chesters is the most impressive, with a series of arched niches remaining along the wall. Adjacent is one of the best-preserved rooms – a sudatorium, or sweating room, where there would have been hot dry heat, rather like a modern Turkish bath.

Image: Photo of the ruins of Rochester Castle in Kent
The ruins of Rochester Castle in Kent

4. ROCHESTER CASTLE: NOT SUCH A FAIRY-TALE CASTLE

Although beautiful to look at, life in a medieval castle wasn’t always a fairy tale. Thick stone walls, tiny unglazed windows and inefficient open fires made the classic castle something of a challenge to keep warm. The heavy woven tapestries which adorned chamber walls were not purely decorative, adding much-needed insulation to these chilly rooms.

Thankfully castle-dwellers had it better than most in the period. At Rochester Castle in Kent, which dates back to the 12th century, you can still see fireplaces which display the ornate decoration of the rest of the keep. By heating the stones as well as the chamber, these fireplaces made life in a medieval castle a considerably more comfortable affair.

Image: Photo of the ruins of the warming house at Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire
The ruins of the warming house at Rievaulx Abbey in North Yorkshire. © Historic England Archive

5. RIEVAULX ABBEY: THE WARMING HOUSE

As in many medieval abbeys, the Warming House at Rievaulx was the only place monks could find warmth in the winter. At Rievaulx this contains a very large double fireplace which was kept lit from 1 November to Good Friday.

The monks would gather here and no doubt gossip illicitly, as recorded in other monasteries of the period. The piers to support the stone roof have been strengthened with an outer layer of stone, suggesting that the original timber roof (a possible fire risk) was replaced with a stone vault which needed stronger support.

Image: Photo of the alabaster fireplace at Kenilworth Castle
Alabaster fireplace, salvaged from the ruins of Kenilworth and reinstated inside the surviving gatehouse

6. KENILWORTH CASTLE: IMPRESSING THE QUEEN

In the 16th century heating the home wasn’t just about necessity – it was a question of fashion. As the newest technology of the day, chimney stacks and elaborate fireplaces were something of a status symbol in Tudor England.

It’s no surprise then that several enormous fireplaces were a must-have when Robert Dudley remodelled Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire to impress Queen Elizabeth I. The ruins of the queen’s private chambers display huge recesses in the architecture where once-ornate fireplaces have long since been removed.

Image: Photo of an intricately carved brick chimney at Framlingham Castle
An intricately carved brick chimney at Framlingham Castle

7. FRAMLINGHAM CASTLE: CHIMNEYS ARE IN THIS SEASON

Framlingham Castle in Suffolk has passed through many hands and seen numerous architectual modifications during its long history.

In the Tudor period, the appearance of warmth was even more important than the real thing. In the 16th century, many intricately carved chimneys were added to Framlingham Castle to replicate the fashionable royal palaces of the period, but only two of these actually connect to fireplaces.

Image: The coal gallery at Audley End House in Essex
The coal gallery at Audley End House in Essex

8. AUDLEY END: RUNNING ON HOT COALS

Audley End House and Gardens in Essex was once one of the greatest houses in England, a spectacular early 17th-century mansion set in an outstanding landscaped park. 

Coal was the fuel of choice for warming the cockles of the Victorian gentry. So important was it to the residents of Audley End that an entire ‘coal gallery’ was installed. After being delivered to the second-floor gallery by an innovative crane system, the coal was used to heat hot water for baths and to power Audley’s many fireplaces.

 

Image: Photo of the ruins of Witley Court in Worcestershire
The ruins of Witley Court in Worcestershire

9. WITLEY COURT: FUELLING A VICTORIAN PARTY HOUSE

At Witley Court and Gardens in Worcestershire, the elaborate heating system guzzled up around 30 tonnes of coal a day. Thankfully the family could well afford the extravagance as they owed their fortune to the production of coal.

The house boasted an innovative hot-air heating system and a bespoke way of transporting all that coal – it was brought on barges from the Black Country then delivered to the estate on carts before being loaded onto Witley’s own underground trolley system. The coal would finally be delivered to the boiler room under the south portico, powering five hot-water boilers and dozens of fireplaces.

Image: Photo of the lemur cage at Eltham Palace in London
The lemur cage at Eltham Palace in London. © Historic England Archive

10. ELTHAM PALACE: HEATING FOR THE PET LEMUR

For the fashionable Courtaulds of Eltham Palace in Greenwich, only the most ‘mod’ of ‘cons’ would do! By the mid-1930s Britain had one of the most advanced systems of electricity supply in the world – and the Courtaulds took full advantage. Alongside a centralised vacuum cleaner, electric refrigerator and their own private telephone exchange, Eltham also boasted some of the earliest electric heaters.

Gas was used for central heating, which fed pipes embedded in the ceilings. The entrance hall, great hall and bathrooms also enjoyed the luxury of under-floor heating. Even the Courtaulds’ beloved pet lemur Mah-Jongg had the luxury of his very own centrally heated chambers!

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