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1066
Long ago
Early Europeans built hearth houses from woven sticks packed with mud. The roofs were made of straw. When Vikings in France invaded England, they built castles. At first they used wood, but later they used stone. Stone could not burn down. In the Middle Ages many houses were stone. Two rooms held a family and servants. (Now the animals stayed in a barn.) Town houses had upstairs rooms where shopkeepers often lived.
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1200
Greece and Rome
In ancient Greece, houses were made from mud brick or stone. Rich people had brick floors, painted walls and porches with columns. The courtyard had a garden and a well. The Romans used some of the same ideas. They made a new type of house with a garden and more rooms behind the courtyard.
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Old England
While the Tudors (the family of Henry VIII) ruled England, people built “half-timbered” houses. The houses had white walls and wood beams coated with black tar. They had chimneys and glass windows. After a huge fire in 1666, builders started using brick. In Queen Victoria’s time, some houses had fancy brick patterns and stained glass. They had windows that stick out, called bay windows. City workers lived in two-story houses built together in a row.
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America
Native American tepees and wigwams were frames covered with hides or tree bark. Tribes following buffalo carried their tepee parts. Woodlands tribes found materials for new wigwams. Southwest tribes used sun-dried adobe, while Arctic tribes built igloos.
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Houses Today
In the 20th century, people invented many things. Some of these things made homes better. Houses got electricity and running water. Later, people could buy refrigerators and washing machines. Houses today are comfortable as well as strong, and they come in all shapes and sizes.
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