Pirton Village Defences
Has been described as a Possible Urban Defence
There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains
Name | Pirton Village Defences |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Hertfordshire |
Modern Authority | Hertfordshire |
1974 Authority | Hertfordshire |
Civil Parish | Pirton |
To the south of the motte and bailey castle lies the remains of the part of the medieval village of Pirton, known as The Bury, and carefully planned in respect of the Castle. The centre of the modern village now lies further north. A deep well-defined roadway runs east to west across the site of the village and from this the remains of roads and tracks run north and south. Platforms indicate the location of houses and buildings of the village and some buildings survived here until earlier this century. Ditches and banks show the position of land boundaries, and drains and small ponds can be seen. (Scheduling Report)
Toot Hill is an interesting example of a mount and bailey castle, with attached 'burgess' or fortified village (RCHME; VCH 1908).
Beyond these again are traces of a fourth enclosure and the whole of the present village probably formed a defensive stronghold. Traces of ancient foundations are visible everywhere within the wards. It is possible that the fortified village enclosure is of pre-Conquest origin and was adapted for use as a motte and bailey castle at a later date (VCH 1912).
The earthworks in the churchyard and in the pasture field named "The Bury" to the S and E, cannot be identified with certainty as a bailey or series of baileys, as the field is pockmarked by minor quarrying, and modern features encroach. The surviving earthworks, generally in the form of dry depressions up to 1.5m deep, appear to tie in to the village pattern, and are almost certainly Md. At no point are they as deep as the motte ditch (F1 NKB 14-SEP-73). (PastScape)
New post-Conquest medieval village defences of no known urban significance. Pirton (Herts); Earthen bank and/or ditch; Fragmentary remains only; No documentary record of defences known; No archaeological excavtion on defences known. (Bond 1987)
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 | TL146316 |
Latitude | 51.9715194702148 |
Longitude | -0.331939995288849 |
Eastings | 514680 |
Northings | 231650 |