Wambrook Castle
Has been described as a Rejected Timber Castle (Other/Unknown)
There are no visible remains
Name | Wambrook Castle |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Somerset |
Modern Authority | Somerset |
1974 Authority | Somerset |
Civil Parish | Wambrook |
The best candidate for the 'castle' in Castle Hill Wood is an enclosure on sloping pasture, the N side being a field boundary removed in the C19. The whole can be seen faintly on the ground and on aerial photographs. (Somerset HER)
ST 29400706. An enclosure in sloping pastureland, faintly visible on the ground and on an A.P. Its north side, a hedgerow, was removed in the 19th century. It is possibly the castle inferred by the name Castle Wood (Carter).
No enclosure is visible in the pasture field. A drainage ditch parallels the western boundary of the field. The ground is uneven and of a poor nature. The combination of the ditch and the general ground condition might have led to the supposition of an earthwork here (F1 NJA 28-JUL-82). (PastScape)
In the extreme south of the parish Castle wood is recorded in 1422, probably the home of Laurence du Chastel in 1311. (VCH)
Very poorly defined earthworks and place name evidence. (Prior 2004. reject)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | ST294070 |
Latitude | 50.8587303161621 |
Longitude | -3.00443005561829 |
Eastings | 329400 |
Northings | 107060 |