Orwell Toot Hill
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte)
There are no visible remains
Name | Orwell Toot Hill |
Alternative Names | The Lordship |
Historic Country | Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely |
Modern Authority | Cambridgeshire |
1974 Authority | Cambridgeshire |
Civil Parish | Orwell |
There was said to be an earthwork on the hillside below Orwell church to the south of Fisher's Lane (Conybeare, Highways and Byways, 144.(sic)), where a mound named the Lordship stood in 1686 (estate map). (VCH)
Orwell itself lies, as usual, just off the road, on the southern slope of the hill. Half a century ago it was the prettiest of villages, with its eponymous "well," shaded by magnificent trees, gushing from the hill-side, in the midst of a prehistoric earthwork, just below the noble church. But, about 1870, the earthwork, unhappily, was found to contain "coprolites" (worth probably about £100 after the expenses of getting them had been paid). For this paltry sum the whole place was destroyed. Well, trees, earthwork, all are now gone; only the church is left, perched on its slope high above the village street. (Conybeare, 1910)
The village of Orwell takes its name from a spring about 150 yds. S.W. of the church at the foot of Toot Hill, a spur from a chalk ridge which runs parallel to and N. of the river Rhee. On an estate map of c. 1680 (now in C.U.L.) a mound is shown between the spring and the church on an approximately square parcel of some 1½ acres inscribed 'Lordship' (Plate 113). This mound, which may have been a small motte, was levelled c. 1883 to make way for a school. (RCHME)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | TL362504 |
Latitude | 52.1354217529297 |
Longitude | -0.0113500002771616 |
Eastings | 536200 |
Northings | 250400 |