Portbury Mound
Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Motte)
There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains
Name | Portbury Mound |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Somerset |
Modern Authority | North Somerset |
1974 Authority | Avon |
Civil Parish | Portbury |
Prior writes "Between 1134 and 1154, Fitzharding erected a motte at Portbury in order to exploit the possibility of trade with Bristol, its port, and the River Avon." he gives the above map reference which is a hill top on the edge of the parish. Prior gives no other citation. In his PhD thesis he gives the following additional description 'Low Motte (8.00m in dia. x 0.80m high) with a flat top, situated atop a plateau, with naturally steep slopes on E, S, and W sides. Possible bailey and outworks (60.00m of a bank orientated ESE-WNW, centred at ST 5097 7470, 5.00m wide x 7.00m high). Poorly defined earthworks'.
"A second camp is half a mile to the east-south-east' of Portbury Camp, Conygar Hill (Dobson).
The area concerned is a plateau-like hilltop with fairly steep natural slopes on all sides except the north. The only earthwork of any significance comprises 60.0m of a bank orientated ESE-WNW, centred at ST 5097 7470. It is 5.0m wide overall, and up to 0.7m high, with a strong content of stones. There is no outer ditch. No southerly turn can be traced, but if it formerly did so it would result in a rectangular enclosure bounded on the S. and W. by natural slopes.
Except for its breadth the bank could be the remains of an old field boundary.
At the highest point on the plateau at ST 5094 7467, there is an artificial mound of earth, 8.0m in diameter and 0.8m. high, with a flat top. From its position it could be a barrow or a windmill mound, but it is ditchless, and there is no trace of a cross-tree depression.
At ST 5095 7467 there is a circular pit 7.5m. in diameter, 0.5m deep on the E. and 0.3m deep on the W. It is grass covered, and would seem unlikely to be a pond or a quarry pit.
The origin and purpose of all these earthworks is obscure. The bank may be that accepted on the OS 1" 1830 as part of a camp, and it may be that this publication has given rise to the further acceptance in Dobson (F1 NVQ 12-FEB-62)
(PastScape)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | ST509746 |
Latitude | 51.4688606262207 |
Longitude | -2.70766997337341 |
Eastings | 350940 |
Northings | 174670 |