Periwinkle Hill, Barkway
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte)
There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains
Name | Periwinkle Hill, Barkway |
Alternative Names | Periwinkle Hall; Reed |
Historic Country | Hertfordshire |
Modern Authority | Hertfordshire |
1974 Authority | Hertfordshire |
Civil Parish | Barkway |
At Periwinkle Hill, opposite Rokey Wood, is a moated mound with two small baileys, rapidly becoming level through constant ploughing. (VCH 1914)
Ploughed-out site beside footpath east of Reed; the cropmark resembles a small motte-and-bailey. (Renn 1971)
A small moated mound with a bailey on the NE, partly sub-divided by a branch from the ditch which surrounds the whole. No traces of ramparts remain. The eastern arm of the moat is wet. Oval in shape,it measures 280 ft in length and 230 ft in width. In poor condition through ploughing and the erection of farm buildings on its western half (RCHME; VCH 1908).
Periwinkle Hill, a low broad ridge, is ploughed annually, reducing the "motte" to a height of 1.5m, and spreading it to a vague oval shape, 36.0m WNW-ESE by 24.0m. All that remains of the so called "bailey" is the outer scarp of the ditch, 0.5m maximum height, in the W arc.
The classification of the earthwork as a motte and bailey can be neither confirmed nor denied by ground inspection. AP's suggest small enclosures, possible building steadings and a track occupying the E side of the "bailey". The ditch around the "motte" to the N and E has squarish corners unlike a motte. According to farmworkers much pottery has been found on the site, though none of it was retained. No buildings or earthworks shown on Enclosure Map (1808) (F1 NKB 23-FEB-73). (PastScape)
Cropmarks/earthworks of a possible motte and bailey type earthwork. APs show cropmarks and slight earthworks comprising two parallel linear ditches (possibly trackways) leading to a D-shaped enclosure ditch (approx. 80m x 70m) and a vague oval mound (approx. 35m in diameter). Within the enclosure are rectangular subdivisions which could be building steadings. Ploughed annually, the mound survives to a mere 1m high and the enclosure ditch to approx. 30cms deep in 1984. This is supposed to be the castle belonging to the chief manor of Reed
(Hertfordshire HER)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | TL373360 |
Latitude | 52.0056304931641 |
Longitude | 0.000530000019352883 |
Eastings | 537300 |
Northings | 236000 |