Ripon Ailey Hill and All-hallows Hill
Has been described as a Rejected Timber Castle (Motte)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Ripon Ailey Hill and All-hallows Hill |
Alternative Names | Ailcy Hill; Hilshow; Ilshow; Helsey Hill |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | North Yorkshire |
1974 Authority | North Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Ripon |
Ailey Hill is a large mound, which has been identified as a barrow or a motte. It is the subject of a number of local traditions, linking it with a Dark Age monastery or a Dark Age battle. Trial excavations by B.W.J.Kent and H.J.Stickland, in 1937, indicated that the mound is of morainic origin - undisturbed gravel was found three feet below its surface. Anglian and Md. burials found on the slopes are perhaps reburials of charnel-house bones from the Minster (Wood; Allcroft).
There are no artificial earthworks associated with this natural hillock and no evidence of its possible use as a motte (F1 RWE 17-MAY-62).
Listed as a Civil War site on the basis of the morphology of the East side of the hill. Allcroft has suggested that the East side of the hill is a later modification with bastion-like platforms. However, the 1986-7 excavations included those areas and no trace of Civil War activity was noted (Fort, 1987). (PastScape)
Situation: The earthwork lies immediately east of Ripon Minster, on the eastern fringe of the town.
Preservation: The feature comprises a substantial, tree-covered earthwork; its amorphous profile is attributable to post-medieval quarrying.
Description: Ailcy Hill is a large circular mound rising a maximum of c. 11m above the surrounding terrain and with a base diameter of c. 60m. Although it has been alleged by Allcroft that the mound is a motte, it appears to have peri-glacial origins (see below). Whilst evidently utilised as an early-medieval burial mound there is no positive evidence of re-usage as an early castle.
Excavation: Trial excavation by B. Kent and H. Strickland in 1937 indicated that the mound was morainic in origin, as undisturbed gravel was found c. 0.9m below the surface, and a number of Anglian and medieval burials were found on the slopes of the feature. In 1965 a number of 9th-century Northumbrian brass coins were found on the mound
Six further zones of the earthwork were sampled by R. Hall in 1986-87, revealing two clear groups of inhumations inserted into the natural gravel feature, associated with nails and 7th to 11th-century iron coffin/chest fittings; on the basis of this evidence, the excavators suggest a buried population of c. 2000 individuals. (Creighton 1998)
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 | SE317711 |
Latitude | 54.1350402832031 |
Longitude | -1.5161600112915 |
Eastings | 431710 |
Northings | 471130 |