Seagrave Manor
Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Other/Unknown), and also as a Questionable Fortified Manor House
There are earthwork remains
Name | Seagrave Manor |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Leicestershire |
Modern Authority | Leicestershire |
1974 Authority | Leicestershire |
Civil Parish | Seagrave |
Stephen de Segrave, in the early C13 purchased land at Seagrave and built a Manor house there. (Nichols) "Extensive entrenchments defend a manorial site in this village. On the N is a low vallum and a fosse 4' 9" deep and 9' wide. At the turn of the NE corner and on the E side facing the Fosse Way is a double vallum and double fosse. The outer is 4' deep and 16' wide, the inner 9' deep and 22' wide, but the ramparts have been almost destroyed. At the E the works turn at an obtuse angle and the fosse becomes 11' deep". (VCH). The Manor house of probably stood on or near the site now occupied by the Hall Farm, the occupier of which told of a farmyard cave-in in the mid. C19 which revealed what might have been a cellar with shackles attached to the walls. The earthworks are a complex of three fishponds, with remains of an adjacent enclosure ditch, the centre pond containing a spring at its western extremity. The bank running N - S from SK 6217 1733 - SK 6217 1724 was, according to the owner, removed c.1936 and used in the construction of the dual carriageway on Foss Way to the east. (Field Investigators Comments-F1 BHS 25-JAN-61). (PastScape)
Earthworks, probably representing the medieval hall mentioned in the early C13th. Slate and tile found in the area are probably from this building. The manor house was burned down by Siward in 1232 during a revolt led by Richard Marshal. (Leicestershire and Rutland HER)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SK620173 |
Latitude | 52.7504806518555 |
Longitude | -1.08145999908447 |
Eastings | 462000 |
Northings | 317350 |