Castle Steads, Rowley Farm, Esh Winning
Has been described as a Certain Fortified Manor House
There are earthwork remains
Name | Castle Steads, Rowley Farm, Esh Winning |
Alternative Names | Castlesteads; Lanchester; Hamsteels; Rowley Gillet |
Historic Country | Durham |
Modern Authority | Durham |
1974 Authority | County Durham |
Civil Parish | Cornsay |
Situated at about 152 m OD on a NE facing slope are the remains of a rectangular enclosure measuring about 190 m. NW/SE by 114 m. Transversely between the centres of a well formed ditch with inner and outer banks. The ditch, now mainly dry, (4 m maximum depth and 10 m average width) is of unusual construction as it is not a complete unit but is formed by four separate watertight arms. The breaks in the centre of the NW side and at the S end of the SE side are deliberate in order to form dams to retain the water. Water had drained along a natural channel to a low-lying depression at the NE corner which appears to have been utilized as a pond, strengthened by a retaining bank. The inner bank, where best preserved to the W of the entrance at (1.3 m maximum height spread to about 5 m) shows traces of walling. The outer bank of similar dimensions is predominantly earth. Although there is no ditch at there are traces of the outer bank continuing. The turf covered footings of a probably contemporary wall survive parallel to the outer bank to the SE of the entrance at. Outside the outer bank at the N end of the W side are traces of a possibly secondary bank. The entrance in the centre of the S wall at appears to have been the only one. The gently sloping, marsh, interior contains the remains of buildings, the main block at and others against the inner bank. They are now too ill-defined for accurate measurement but appear as turf-covered stony banks (1 m maximum height spread to about 3 m) with occasional facing stones. Attempts to excavate have left large robber trenches which confuse their outlines. To the N of both of these groups of buildings are the remains of contemporary wall footings. The whole area is now wooded and traces of ridge and furrow can be seen as delineated. The site is probably the remains of a fortified manor house with ancillary buildings inside a wall and protective ditch. (PastScape ref. Field Investigators Comments F3 ISS 27-AUG-80)
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 | NZ179427 |
Latitude | 54.7794418334961 |
Longitude | -1.72290003299713 |
Eastings | 417920 |
Northings | 542760 |