Dundon Beacon, Compton Dundon

Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Motte)

There are earthwork remains

NameDundon Beacon, Compton Dundon
Alternative Names
Historic CountrySomerset
Modern AuthoritySomerset
1974 AuthoritySomerset
Civil ParishCompton Dundon

The monument includes a slight univallate hillfort occupying the top of a hill which projects into and above the south east side of the Somerset Levels. The earthworks enclose the c.5ha of hill which is flat at the centre but rises at its north and south ends. The plan of the fort is determined by the natural contours of the hill. On the south east corner of the fort is a mound known as Dundon Beacon, and running north from this is a well defined lynchet.

Dundon Beacon at the south east corner of the fort is a mound on the highest part of the fort, c.3m high and c.18m in diameter with a flat oval top. There is a hollow to the west of the mound, 10m wide and 1.5m deep, which was one of the sources of material for the beacon's mound. This hollow continues as a shallow ditch 0.5m deep around the north side of the mound and cuts through the ramparts, indicating that Dundon Beacon is later than the ramparts of the fort.

Overlying the ditch is a sloping, flat topped, bank c.5m wide inclined towards the mound which would have given access to the mound from the interior of the fort. An excavation in c.1827 found an undated burial with tin rings and fragments of pottery. It has been suggested that the mound is a Norman motte constructed over a Bronze Age round barrow. The earthworks for the hillfort in the area of Dundon Beacon are c.2m high internally and appear to have been constructed from a 6m wide outer terrace. They are more substantial than the rest of the ramparts, and add weight to the suggestion of a Norman re-working of the defences in this area with the intention of creating a motte and bailey castle. (Scheduling Report)

The mound is ditched through the rampart on its N suggesting that it is of later date. It is possible that this is a Norman motte

The stretch of the hillfort immediately N of this is heightened to a 2m high bank apparently raised from a 6m wide terrace below, and this may represent a Norman reworking of defences with the intention of creating a motte and bailey castle (Preece).

Gatehouse Comments

Seems highly unlikely that this isolated site was a Norman motte, although could be compared with Castle Neroche, where a pre-historic site was used by the Norman in their initial conquest and later adapted into a castle. Other than the supposed later quality of the mound there is no evidence of Norman occupation although that might not exclude a short-lived and never completed intent to make a castle. However it is more probably that if the original bronze age barrow was altered at a date well after the Iron Age fort was constructed the alteration was done in late medieval/early modern times to produce a beacon (probably one more of celebratory function than military use).

- Philip Davis

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 ReferenceST485319
Latitude51.0849113464355
Longitude-2.73604989051819
Eastings348540
Northings131990
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Bothamley, 1911, in Page, Wm (ed), VCH Somerset Vol. 2 p. 490-1

Other

  • Prior, Stuart, 2004, "Winning Strategies" An Archaeological Study of Norman Castles in the Landscapes of Somerset, Monmouthshire and County Meath, 1066-1186 (PhD thesis; University of Bristol) Vol. 2 p. 126 (reject) Download via EThOS
  • Preece, A., 1993, Dundon Beacon, mound on Dundon Hillfort (Monuments Protection Programme fieldwork information)
  • Burrow, I.C.G., 1979, Aspects of Hillfort and Hill-top settlement in Somerset. In the first to eighth centuries A.D. (PhD Thesis University of Birmingham) p. 326-7 Download via EThOS