Chippenham Motte
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte), and also as a Possible Masonry Castle, and also as a Possible Palace (Royal)
There are no visible remains
Name | Chippenham Motte |
Alternative Names | King Arthur's Palace |
Historic Country | Wiltshire |
Modern Authority | Wiltshire |
1974 Authority | Wiltshire |
Civil Parish | Chippenham |
There is evidence for an undocumented motte immediately west of the Market Place. A large earthen mound was found there in the 19th century, found in conjunction with masonry including a Romanesque doorway. However there is lack of corroboration that this was a motte. (PastScape ref. Creighton)
By unbroken tradition the actual site of the King's residence in the Manor was that high ground now occupied by the houses above the Angel Hotel, Chippenham. The area in front of them has borne always the name of the PALACE SQUARE. Foundations of very old buildings have been discovered, and a decayed spiral stair case, cut in steps out of a solid trunk of a huge oak (forming originally the ascent to a turret,) was removed from that site about 1820, and left to perish by exposure to weather in a timber yard. In the garden behind the Square is a mound of earth of considerable height, which no doubt at one time bore a watch-tower, from which for ten miles around, might be observed the movements of an invading host. (Daniell 1894)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | ST920731 |
Latitude | 51.4571495056152 |
Longitude | -2.1152400970459 |
Eastings | 390900 |
Northings | 173130 |