Shackerstone Motte
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Shackerstone Motte |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Leicestershire |
Modern Authority | Leicestershire |
1974 Authority | Leicestershire |
Civil Parish | Shackerstone |
Medieval motte with a fishpond and later formal garden surviving as earthworks. The motte measures 40m in diameter at the base and has a flat area 20m across on the top and is approximately 4.5m high from the bottom of the ditch. The ditch encircles the mound with the exception of a 12m stretch on the south west and is up to 2m deep and 6m wide on the south east side and 1m deep and 8m wide on the north side. A water filled fishpond 70m long and 12m wide is also present along with formal garden earthworks relating to a hall which stood on the site. (PastScape)
The key element of the site is a large flat-topped mound. This has a base diameter of c . 75m and summit of c . 35m diameter, characterised by a prominent ‘step’ or terrace on its southern face. A former associated ditch survives as a minor depression encircling the feature. A complex of linear and curvilinear scarps and banks in the immediate environs of the mound can be rationalised as a large, low platform of irregular profile immediately south (max. dimensions c . 160 x 90m), and a smaller, more regular terrace to the north ( c .110 x 45m). A further series of weak scarps and terraces further north form a sub-regular pattern of closes. Although traditionally ascribed as an early castle earthwork, archaeological and landscape evidence combines to suggest that it is rather a formal garden feature erected in the immediate vicinity of Shackerstone Hall.
Excavation: A trench through the mound, c . lm in width was dug by ARP men in 1940, showing the feature to comprise of a central dome-shaped core of soil. The remains of a central ‘post’ c . 0.4m in diameter were uncovered, in addition to a ‘rectangular chamber’ within the mound; artefacts recovered include dark brown wares of probable 18th-century date found within the topsoil and considerable deposits of charcoal from within the body of the mound
(Creighton 1998)
A large, flat topped mound c.40m in diameter, with rectilinear ditches running at right angles to the north and east lies north of the church. Page (1907, 261) records a surrounding ditch 22 feet wide and describes a much destroyed but well fortified bailey. Hoskins (1946, 9) describes it as a good example of a 12th century castle. In 1940 Frank Cotterill visited the site after a 3 1/2 foot trench and square chamber were dug through the mound for an anti-aircraft position. No finds were made but the remains of a central wooden post 1 foot 2 inches in diameter were recorded. Cantor (1978, 39) knew of no records for a castle here and Creighton (1997, 27) although originally identifying the earthwork as a post-medieval prospect mound changed his attribution to a castle on the basis of cartographic evidence from Peter Foss, including a map of 1785 associated with the construction of the Ashby Canal making this site more likely to be a motte and bailey castle (Creighton 1998, 154) {sic This ref. is incorrect}. (Leicestershire and Rutland HER citing Knox 2015)
This site is a scheduled monument protected by law
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SK374068 |
Latitude | 52.6581192016602 |
Longitude | -1.44720995426178 |
Eastings | 437480 |
Northings | 306850 |