Abstract

The archaeological excavations carried out during the last fifteen years in the city centre have provided new data concerning Rouen medieval dwellings, hitherto known to us essentially through archives and elevation studies. The most important results from the excavations concern the Norman period, with the discovery of impressive remains of stone houses. Revealed first of all by buried structures, this architecture (the importance of which as part of the medieval town had been quite underestimated) is illustrated by spectacular elevations which allow us, for the first time, to make a restitution of the volume of two of these houses.

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