Wotherton Castle Mound
Has been described as a Certain Timber Castle (Motte)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Wotherton Castle Mound |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Shropshire |
Modern Authority | Shropshire |
1974 Authority | Shropshire |
Civil Parish | Chirbury With Brompton |
The motte castle at Wotherton survives well and is a good example of its class. It will retain archaeological information relating to the materials and techniques used in its construction and to the period and nature of its occupation. Environmental evidence relating to the landscape in which it was constructed will survive on the old land surface sealed beneath the motte and in the ditch fill. Such motte castles provide valuable information concerning the settlement pattern and social organisation of the countryside during the medieval period. Wotherton motte is one of a series of such castles positioned along the main valley pass between Shrewsbury and Montgomery. Considered together they contribute valuable information concerning the management of this important routeway.
The monument includes the remains of a small motte castle situated towards the foot of a north west facing slope in the bend of a small stream to the north of the village of Wotherton. It includes an earthen mound or motte, circular in plan with a base diameter of 21m rising to a flat summit 10m in diameter and standing 1.2m above the surrounding ground surface. A ditch up to 4m wide and 0.4m deep is visible around all sides but the north west, where the stream valley drops steeply away from the motte. (EH scheduling report 1995)
The motte at Wotherton measures 27ft N/S by 30ft E/W and possibly was not more than 4ft high. It stands in a low and overlooked position in the bend of a small stream, the coombe of which makes a formidable obstacle on that side. The farm standing close to the motte obscures any bailey there may have been, apart from a shallow and ill-marked ditch on the SE side with a scarp of four feet and a counterscarp of two feet. It is claimed blocks of stone were struck when erecting a pole about 1965 (Spurgeon and King)
A circular mound, 20m in diameter and averaging 1m high, with a ditch up to 0.4m deep on all but the NW side
There is no evidence of a bailey. OS FI 1971 (1977. Ordnance Survey Record Card SJ20SE5). (Shropshire HER)
A small, grass-covered, earthen motte; 20.0m in diameter, and averaging 1.0m in height. A shallow ditch on all but the north-west side, directly above the stream, is some 4.0m in width, and up to 0.4m in depth. It is being filled in with farm rubbish on the south-west. There are no certain traces of a counterscarp bank, and no signs of a bailey (F2 ASP 11-JAN-80). (PastScape)
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 | SJ283006 |
Latitude | 52.5990791320801 |
Longitude | -3.0591299533844 |
Eastings | 328360 |
Northings | 300670 |