East Bridgford Pancake Hill
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte)
There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains
Name | East Bridgford Pancake Hill |
Alternative Names | Cuttle Hill |
Historic Country | Nottinghamshire |
Modern Authority | Nottinghamshire |
1974 Authority | Nottinghamshire |
Civil Parish | East Bridgford |
Earthworks with the appearance of a motte and bailey lie to the north of Bridgford Street, East Bridgford, near the ferry. (VCH) A flat topped mound surrounded by a ditch is visible at SK 68644339. Nothing resembling a bailey can be seen. (AP) A natural promontory on the Trent escarpment, accentuated by an old field road. Now ploughed over. No earthworks were noted adjacent to the former ferry. (Field Investigators Comments–F1 FDC 29-JAN-75) SK 687434. Motte and bailey castle 500 yds north-west of the church. (Scheduled Monument Notification–DOE (IAM) Anc Mons Eng 3 1978 77) (PastScape)
The earthworks are very slight and until October 2005 had been completely overgrown with trees, scrub and rank grasses. They are interpreted by the Nottinghamshire SMR as the earthwork remains of a small motte and bailey castle. The current project seeks to enquire whether this is the case or not. A motte sits on the edge of a river formed escarpment. It is broadly speaking a conical mound 13x18m in diameter at the summit which utilises the steep natural slopes to the north-west and is separated from the bailey to the south-east by a broad ditch. The motte ditch links to a well preserved curving holloway (and possible former defensive ditch) to the south-west, however on the north-east a slight causeway (which may in fact prove to be a later infilling) terminates this feature. To the north-east the site is defined by a slightly curving ditch 57m long which terminates in backfill from ploughing. Beyond the ditch further to the north-east is a spit of land before the topography dips into the exaggerated holloway (and probably natural feature) of Trent Lane. A small pond or groundwater spring stands 29m immediately south-east of the north-eastern ditch. The holloway and north-eastern ditch enclose a gently sloping bailey area 39x34m in dimension. Traces of a suspected rampart are particularly evident on the south-western perimeter. (J
Wright, 2008, Pancake Hill Archaeological Project online)
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 | SK686433 |
Latitude | 52.9836006164551 |
Longitude | -0.978649973869324 |
Eastings | 468640 |
Northings | 343390 |