Owls, Rusper
Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Other/Unknown)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Owls, Rusper |
Alternative Names | The Castle; Owlscastle Farm; Hawkesbourne Farm; Kingsfold; Kyngesfold |
Historic Country | Sussex |
Modern Authority | West Sussex |
1974 Authority | West Sussex |
Civil Parish | Rusper |
Moat and small square earthwork. Probably the site of an Adulterine castle. (PastScape)
Near Horsehead Gill, at the foot of Hurst Hill the Ordnance Map shows a small square earthwork enclosure called "The Castle", and the remains of a moat. Nothing appears to be known of any fortification here. and it is probably the site of a small moated house (SAC 1902).
A sub-rectangular earthwork with a V-shaped ditch and strong inner earthen rampart which rises to a maximum height of 1.4m above the interior. The original entrance is probably a break midway in the S side. There are a number of minor mutilations in the rampart with two major breaks at the centre of the N side and at the SE corner, but there is no evidence to show if these are original or not. The work is situated upon a gentle southerly wooded slope above a stream. Not a homestead moat, this earthwork is probably an adulterine castle site. (PastScape ref. Field Investigators Comments–F1 ASP 05-APR-67)
The moated site 500m ESE of Hawkesbourne Farm survives well with the interior of the island largely undisturbed by later activity. The large internal earthen banks are an unusual feature for a moated site in south-east England. The monument contains archaeological remains and environmental evidence relating to the economy of the site and the landscape in which it was constructed.
The monument includes a rectangular moated site situated adjacent to Channells Brook on a gentle south-facing slope. The site has a rectangular island measuring 72m north-south by 48m east-west with an internal earthwork bank on all four sides. The bank is c.1.5m high and c.7m wide around most of the island, with an entrance in the eastern end of the south side. In the south-eastern corner the bank survives to a height of 2.2m. The moat surrounding the island is now dry but was originally waterfilled
It was fed via a leat which ran into the north-western corner of the moat from a stream to the west and then out in the south-western corner. The ditch, although having become partially infilled over the years, measures up to 10m wide and 2m deep. (Scheduling Report)
From the Records we gather that the family of Kingsfold occupied the chief position in the parish in the 13th and 14th centuries. Their residence seems to have been, where the remains of a moat may still be traced, about a quarter of a mile east of the present road from Rusper to Horsham. (Elwas)
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 | TQ197341 |
Latitude | 51.0938987731934 |
Longitude | -0.291469991207123 |
Eastings | 519740 |
Northings | 134120 |