Ashton Keynes Halls Close
Has been described as a Certain Timber Castle (Ringwork)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Ashton Keynes Halls Close |
Alternative Names | Kent End; South Cerney; The Battlefield; Cerne Cernei |
Historic Country | Wiltshire |
Modern Authority | Wiltshire |
1974 Authority | Wiltshire |
Civil Parish | Ashton Keynes |
Earthworks of a Medieval ringwork and bailey. During excavations in 1959 a large quantity of pottery dating to C12 - C13 was found. There is some debate as to whether this is the site of a castle captured by Stephen in 1139, or whether the latter was sited at South Cerney (SU047976).
A ringwork and bailey forming a rectangle 140m by 85m, known as Halls Close. Excavated by G M Knocker in 1959 revealing a puddled clay ditch and a dry stone wall in a bank. Many finds. (Wilts SMR)
The Hall's Close site survives well and has considerable potential for the recovery of archaeological remains. The importance of the monument is enhanced by the likelihood of the survival of below-ground waterlogged and organic remains, as a result of its location on level ground adjacent to a tributary of the River Thames. Such evidence will provide a detailed insight into the economy of the people who inhabited the site and the environment in which they lived.
The monument includes a ringwork and bailey set on level ground immediately north of a tributary of the River Thames. The ringwork comprises a raised platform 0.5m above ground level and 50m across defined by a low inner bank and a broad ditch 10m wide and 1m deep. To the west of the ringwork is a level bailey, again defined by bank and ditch, the bank standing to a maximum height of c.1m. Remains of an additional outer bank can be traced in fields immediately south of the southern arm of the ditch. East of the ringwork is a further extension of the bailey. This appears to have been reduced by cultivation although the ditch can still be traced as a low earthwork running NNW-SSE. It survives to a width of c.3m and is 0.2m deep. The moat surrounding the ringwork was fed by a channel linking the monument with a tributary of the River Thames. This can be traced in a field south of the ringwork as a linear feature c.4m wide and 0.3m deep
The site was partially excavated by a local, Gp Cpt Knocker, in 1959. This revealed a dry stone wall set in the bank of the ringwork and a clay-lined ditch. Finds of pottery and metalwork, believed to be contemporary with the monument, were recovered. (Scheduling Report)
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 | SU048945 |
Latitude | 51.6492805480957 |
Longitude | -1.93070995807648 |
Eastings | 404890 |
Northings | 194500 |