Studland Castle and battery
Has been described as a Certain Artillery Fort, and also as a Certain Fortified Manor House
There are no visible remains
Name | Studland Castle and battery |
Alternative Names | Handfast Point; Castell Leyes; castellum de Studlande |
Historic Country | Dorset |
Modern Authority | Dorset |
1974 Authority | Dorset |
Civil Parish | Studland |
The Foreland or Handfast Point (SZ 055825) is a high promontory shown on Ralph Treswell's map 1585-6 (see Hutchins p. 580) as partly occupied by Studland Wood, and by an 'enclosure' further inland called "Castell Leyes" (shown at circa SZ 047823). Coker in 1732 said of this place, "the land stretcheth forth a short promontory furnished with a blockhouse, for the more grace called Studland Castle" (Hutchin).
Mills adds that a "castellum de Studlande, the Castle of Studland" is mentioned in 1381 (PiH Papers in BM) (Mills).
Handfast (Point) is probably derived from 'rock' or 'high stronghold' with reference to Studland Castle or an earlier fort here. Battery or bulwark at Handfast Point. Between May 1584 and October 1586 a bulwark or battery was built at Handfast Point. A stone magazine was acquired and a new drawbridge called for. Of the battery, no trace remains (HKW). (PastScape)
Hutchins (1861, 644) records that "there was anciently a castle at Studland" and suggests that King John stayed there when he visited Studland in 1205 and 1213. There is a reference to the castle of Studland in 1381 (Mills 1986, 46). Ralph Treswell's map of 1586 shows a stalk of chalk at Old Harry linked at that time to the mainland by a narrow bridge of land. This stack is called "Studland Castle" or Hanfast (stronghold) Point. Also on the Treswell map is a nearby patch of woodland called "Castell Leyes". These place names are repeated on William Woodward's map of 1775 although the woodland at "Castle Leyes" had been cut down and replaced with three enclosures called "East, South-East and West Castle". The bridge of land to the stack called Studland Castle is shown as eroded to a thin line on the map. Coker (1732, 16) describes the castle as a "block-house, for the more grace called Studland Castle" and from this it appears that he knew something of the structure of the castle despite the fact that not even the c
1539 coastal defence map of the south coast shows a castle here (Cotton Collection, British Museum). In the medieval period Handfast Point would have been less eroded and offered a larger building site linked by a wider bridge of land. The site has good views across Studland Bay and the southern approach to Poole Harbour. Any building remains have probably been removed by coastal erosion. There is a possibility that structural evidence of the castle survives on the top of the stacks at Handfast. These chalk stacks are covered in rough grass. The site can only be seen from Old Nicks Ground. From this vantage point there are no structures visible eroding from the cliff line. (National Trust HBSMR)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SZ055825 |
Latitude | 50.6429710388184 |
Longitude | -1.92225003242493 |
Eastings | 405500 |
Northings | 82500 |