Basingwerk Manor
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Other/Unknown)
There are no visible remains
Name | Basingwerk Manor |
Alternative Names | Basiwerch |
Historic Country | Flintshire |
Modern Authority | Flintshire |
1974 Authority | Clwyd |
Community | Bagillt |
Manor held by (unknown) in Domesday book at 1086. The evidence for any fortification on or near the site of Basingwerk itself is unsatisfactory and inconclusive. Coenwulf, King of Murcia (r. 796-821) is believed to have died at Basingwerk while campaigning against the Welsh (Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, 60-61; Stenton 1998, 230), which highlights the possibility of a pre-existing Mercian fortification at Basingwerk. In 1157 Basingwerk and Rhuddlan were fortified by Henry II (r. 1154 - 89): rex Henricus et Basiwerch firmavit (Annales Cestrienses, 21). The Latin verb firmare frequently meant refortification (Coulson 1994, 70), and so this phrase in the Annals Cestrienses or the Chronicle of the Abbey of St Werburgh (Annales Cestrienses, 21) is open to interpretation. Fortifications at Basingwerk therefore probably existing prior to 1157. (Swallow 2016)
This site is a scheduled monument protected by law
Not Listed
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SJ195774 |
Latitude | 53.2881393432617 |
Longitude | -3.20760011672974 |
Eastings | 319590 |
Northings | 377470 |