Bothamsall Castle Hill
Has been described as a Certain Timber Castle (Ringwork)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Bothamsall Castle Hill |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Nottinghamshire |
Modern Authority | Nottinghamshire |
1974 Authority | Nottinghamshire |
Civil Parish | Bothamsall |
Medieval motte and bailey castle, thought possibly to be of adulterine origin, motte is in quite poor condition having been quarried away in places, there is no trace of the former bailey. The mound is about 150 yards in circumference, with a parapet at the top, 70 yards in circumference. The motte is 4.8 metres high. (PastScape)
A motte situated in an outstanding position with excellent all round visibility; the feature has a maximum height of 4.8m and is in relatively poor condition, quarrying having in part disturbed the profile. The top is saucered to a maximum depth of 1.8m and now supports a small copse of bush and oak, no building remains are evident. The immediate adjacent areas south, east and west have been extensively quarried for gravel - not agriculture as suggested by Blagg - and a former bailey cannot now be traced; however the situation of the mound, together with local topography, leaves no doubt that a bailey or court formerly existed. To the north a modern E-W road grazes the motte, north of the road extensive cultivation has destroyed any feature that might have formerly existed. The name "Bothamsall Castle" is still in local use. The lack of early recorded history suggests a possibly Adulterine origin. (PastScape ref. Field Investigators Comments–F1 FDC 01-APR-74)
Castle Hill, Bothamsall is but one of around one thousand castles built prior to the thirteenth century. Castle construction afforded an almost limitless variety of design form and there is no site which exactly mirrors the morphology of Castle Hill. However, the similarity of landscape context and purpose of establishment between East Bridgford and Bothamsall is stark. Both castles seem to have been created as part of a deliberate royal policy to dominate river crossings by a major arterial road into the royal forest of Sherwood, or at the perimeter of the jurisdiction of a possible castlery of Nottingham
This is the raw power of the Norman Conquest writ large in both military and symbolic terms upon the very landscape of Nottinghamshire. This expression of power was also played out by physically claiming the former manor of one of late Saxon England's most important figures – Earl Tostig. The establishment of a castle in what was potentially Tostig's own aristocratic enclosure is another instance of both the physical and symbolic demonstration of the Conquest. (Gaunt and Wright, 2012)
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 | SK670732 |
Latitude | 53.2516403198242 |
Longitude | -0.995779991149902 |
Eastings | 467090 |
Northings | 373200 |