Tidgrove Kings House

Has been described as a Certain Palace (Royal)

There are no visible remains

NameTidgrove Kings House
Alternative NamesTitegrove; Titegraua
Historic CountryHampshire and the Isle of Wight
Modern AuthorityHampshire
1974 AuthorityHampshire
Civil ParishHannington

In the 12th century there was a royal residence in Tidgrove, as appears from the Pipe Rolls. In 1176 wine was sent to Tidgrove by the king's orders. In 1177 £7 16s. was spent on repairing the king's chapel at Tidgrove, and in 1178 the king's houses at Tidgrove were repaired at a cost of £24 18s. 7d., probably in preparation for the royal visit of the following year. (VCH)

Bank and outer ditch of a roughly rectangular enclosure measuring 80m x 50m overall was revealed as crop - marks on AP in 1947. The enclosure is sited on the bottom of an eastern slope. Only the remains of part of the ditch c. 8m wide and 0. 3m deep on the south side can be seen (1956). No trace of this enclosure could be seen under young crop, (1967). Finds recovered range from the Roman to post-Medieval periods. Examination of this enclosure suggested strongly that this was the location of the King's Houses (domus regis) which Henry II caused to be built at Tidgrove, the discovery of an oyster shell suggests that the site was indeed high status. (Hampshire AHBR)

Possibly the location of a residence built for King Henry II for use on journeys between Windsor and either Winchester or Hamwych (Southampton) which was the customary port for travel to and from his French possessions. The Medieval site is a large enclosure probably the site of the King's Houses built for Henry II at Tidgrove. Evidence comes from the Pipe Rolls where the sheriff accounts for the building of the houses and a chapel, their repair, and supplies sent to Tidgrove for the king's use. The enclosure is close to a road identified as the King's Highway in medieval deeds. Evidence from the itinerary of King John suggests that this was a route much favoured by the Angevin kings, particularly when travelling from Normandy to London

An interesting medieval brooch, an iron arrowhead, and other metal artefacts have been found, also medieval pottery sherds, numerous brick and tile fragments, and some dressed stone. (?www.kingsclere.org.uk - original online source now lost)

It appears that the rectangular enclosure that showed up on the 1947 aerial photography was originally interpreted as a Roman site back in 1926 (due to finds of Roman pottery in the vicinity). This interpretation stuck until 2000, when some metal detecting, field walking and small-scale excavation resulted in a re-interpretation of the site, namely that it was not Romano-British but actually the site of a Medieval hunting lodge. Subsequently, a geophysical survey was undertaken of the area in 2002 by Southampton University, and the medieval hunting lodge interpretation is sticking. There were some excavations carried out at the site in summer 2005 by Southampton Uni, but these haven't been written up yet. Apparently, there is no evidence of any Roman structures at the site. There is, however, a Romano-British settlement to the west of Tidgrove Warren Farm identified by finds of pottery and the 2002 geophysical survey. (Alex Godden 2006))

Gatehouse Comments

The 2007 dig by Southampton University ended in September and found a large wine cellar and an aisled hall. Apparently building of at least two phases and the archaeologist believe the site was used much longer than the 10 years recorded in the King's Works. David Hinton tentatively suggests that this is the recorded Freemantle (the site changing name) rather than the site at SU526567. Gatehouse suspects both site may have coexisted for a while, under the same budget, with some parts of the court being housed in different buildings. In effect the two sites formed a palace complex, as at Woodstock, and that the complex changed name. Freemantle site as being the centre for this complex, at least after 1251, although this building could have been an earlier centre, or a Queen's house. See also Freemantle

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceSU526545
Latitude51.2879295349121
Longitude-1.24581003189087
Eastings452690
Northings154580
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Strutt, Kristian, 2006,'Tidgrove Warren Farm Archaeological Project: an integrated approach to the study of an archaeological landscape in Hampshire, UK' in Campana, S. and Forte, M. (Eds), From Space to Place: 2nd International Conference on Remote Sensing in Archaeology. Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop, CNR, Rome, Italy, December 4-7, 2006 p. 207-212
  • Colvin, H.M., Brown, R.Allen and Taylor, A.J., 1963, The history of the King's Works Vol. 2: the Middle Ages (London: HMSO) p. 1005
  • Page, Wm (ed), 1911, VCH Hampshire and the Isle of Wight Vol. 4 p. 249-67 online transcription

Journals

  • Strutt, K., 2011, 'Geophysical Survey and Excavation at Tidgrove Warren Farm, Hampshire. Some Preliminary Results from the 2011 Season' The Newsletter of the International Society for Archaeological Prospection 28 p. 11-12
  • Barker, D.S., Hinton, D.A. and Strutt, K.D., 2008, 'The Archaeological Excavation at Tidgrove Warren Farm 2007' CBA Wessex Newsletter p. 13-14
  • Briggs, Keith, 2008, 'Freemantle' Journal of the English Place-name Society Vol. 40 p. 97-111 online copy
  • Barker, D., Hinton, D. A. and Strutt, K.D., 2007, 'Tidgrove Warren Farm, Hampshire' CBA Wessex News p. 7
  • Pitts, Mike, 2007 Nov, 'Curlew care leads to lost royal residence find' British Archaeology Vol. 97 p. 6 (brief news report) online copy
  • Barker, D., Strutt, K. and Wheatley, D., 2006, 'Summary of the Archaeological Survey and Excavation at Tidgrove Warren Farm, Hampshire, 7th August – 27th September 2005' CBA Wessex News p. 16-18.

Primary Sources

  • 1904, The Great Roll of the Pipe for the twenty-second year of the reign of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1175-1176 (Pipe Roll Society Publications 25) p. 200
  • 1905, The Great Roll of the Pipe for the twenty-third year of the reign of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1176-1177 (Pipe Roll Society Publications 26) p. 166 online copy
  • 1906 The Great Roll of the Pipe for the twenty-fourth year of the reign of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1177-1178 (Pipe Roll Society Publications 27) p. 106 online copy
  • 1907 (reprinted 1930), The Great Roll of the Pipe for the twenty-fifth year of the reign of King Henry the Second, A.D. 1178-1179 (Pipe Roll Society Publications 28) p. 101 online copy

Other

  • Alex Godden, Assistant Archaeologist Archaeology & Historic Buildings Landscape, Planning & Heritage Environment Department Hampshire County Council pers. corr. Jan 2006