Cusworth Castle Hill, Sprotbrough
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Cusworth Castle Hill, Sprotbrough |
Alternative Names | Spotborough; Sprotborough |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Doncaster |
1974 Authority | South Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Sprotbrough And Cusworth |
Isolated motte stands in the south-west corner of Cusworth Park. Field investigations in 1964 found it to measure 16ft high, and 60ft by 70ft wide. The ditch which was about 20 ft wide had been filled in on the east. The counterscarp bank survived on the north side. Part of the circumference of the ditch surrounding the motte is visible as an earthwork on air photographs. (PastScape)
Cusworth motte castle lies in woodland adjacent the A1(M) at what was once the south-west edge of Cusworth Park. It comprises an oval motte, 20m wide west-east and 23.5m wide north-south. The motte stands c.5m above a dry ditch, c.2m deep and c.6m wide and partially filled in to the east. The castle was built in the eleventh century by either William de Warenne or Roger de Busli, both of whom were granted lands at Cusworth by William the Conqueror. In the later middle ages it was part of the Honour of Conisbrough, held by the de Warennes. In the eighteenth century, or some time earlier, the site was superseded by that of Cusworth Hall, 700m to the north-east. (Scheduling Report)
"Castle Mound' which is hidden by trees on a small plateau alongside the A1 motorway, is in fact the 'temple hill' which was constructed as a feature of Cusworth Park in 1762-3, complete with a fine slope and ha-ha" (South Yorkshire SMT ref. Hey, 1979)
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 | SE541033 |
Latitude | 53.5239410400391 |
Longitude | -1.18421995639801 |
Eastings | 454180 |
Northings | 403340 |