Tetbury Town Defences

Has been described as a Questionable Urban Defence

There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains

NameTetbury Town Defences
Alternative Names
Historic CountryGloucestershire
Modern AuthorityGloucestershire
1974 AuthorityGloucestershire
Civil ParishTetbury

Early Medieval settlement first documented in 681, and Medieval town. In the early C13 Tetbury was established as a borough and by 1306 it was recognised as a market for wool. There were earthen defences of post conquest date. (PastScape)

Tetbury is first mentioned in a charter of AD 681 making a grant of land "next to the monasterium of Tetbury" (see ST 89 SE 10). A priest was present in the settlement by 1086. In the early 13th Century a borough was established by William de Breuse who had been granted the manor in about 1197. By 1306 it was a recognised market for wool. The large rectangular open pace called "The Chipping" was the market place until the 16th century (See ST 89 SE 213) when it was moved to its present position at the junction of long and Church Streets. The earliest recorded street is Gumstool Hill, which was called Cirencester Street in the early 13th Century: other streets are not mentioned until the 14th century but a rental of 1296 indicates that there were already about 100 burgage plots and that several streets were built up by then. Long Street was the most important street by the late Medieval period (Leech 1981).

Gatehouse Comments

The evidence that there were post-Conquest defences at Tetbury is not given in Barley although Tetbury is cited as a C12 seigneurial initiative of the construction of an earthen defence. Bond lists Tetbury as a new post-Conquest medieval defence of earthen banks of unknown form known from circumstantial or secondary evidence only with archaeological excavation; no source is cited. The VCH does not mention any such defences; there do not seem to be any 'defensive' street names. There does not seem to be any actual evidence of de novo post-Conquest urban defences at Tetbury. The town name first securely recorded in 903 as Tettanbyrig is suggestive of a defensive enclosure of some form here well before the Conquest and an Iron Age hill fort is suggested as a possible origin of the slight earthworks that have also been assumed to be earthworks of the supposed Tetbury Castle. It is possible that Tetbury had, at least in parts, its civic boundary marked by old earthworks but it seems most unlikely these were defensive in the medieval period.

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceST890929
Latitude51.6352691650391
Longitude-2.15973997116089
Eastings389000
Northings192900
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Creighton, O.H. and Higham, R.A., 2005, Medieval Town Walls (Stroud: Tempus) p. 257
  • Bond, C.J., 1987, 'Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Defences' in Schofield, J. and Leech, R. (eds) Urban Archaeology in Britain (CBA Research Report 61) p. 92-116 online copy
  • Roger Leech, 1981, Historic towns in Gloucestershire: Archaeology and planning (Committee for Rescue Archaeology in Avon, Gloucestershire and Somerset surveys 3) p. 86
  • Herbert, N.M.,1976, VCH Gloucestershire Vol. 11 p. 260-1 online transcription
  • Barley, M.W., 1975, 'Town Defences in England and Wales after 1066' in Barley (ed) The plans and topography of medieval towns in England and Wales (CBA Research Report 14) p. 57-71 download/view online

Journals

  • Creighton, Oliver, 2006, ''Castles of Communities': Medieval Town Defences in England; Wales and Gascony' Château Gaillard Vol. 22 p. 75-86

Other

  • Matthew Tilley, Tim Grubb, 2008, Extensive Urban Survey - Gloucestershire Download copy