Leeds Castle Hill
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Motte), and also as a Possible Fortified Manor House
There are no visible remains
Name | Leeds Castle Hill |
Alternative Names | Castell Hyll |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Leeds |
1974 Authority | West Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Leeds |
Leeds Manor House is said to have occupied the site of Scarborough's Hotel in Bishopgate St. near the west end of Boar Lane. The site of a moat was found in excavations for the late Commercial Buildings in 1828 and this is traditionally the site of a castle (Lumb, 1919), but this is a confusion for Leeds Castle in Kent. There was no castle at Leeds, Yorks (Thompson, 1925).
The manor house of the manor of Leeds lay just north of the river and mill leat and west of the new borough of 1207 on the land now bounded approx. by Mill Hill, Bishopgate Street, Queens Hotel and Boar Lane. Although fallen into disuse in the first half of the fourteenth century, there was a subsequent capital messuage there, depicted as a timber framed house on map of c.1560. A fine house continued on the site until the late nineteenth century but with many changes in its last 100 years. It was said to be ditched around in fourteenth century; woodcut of 1728 shows a possible moat surrounding the (then) house; observation during building works on ?three occasions in nineteenth century found remnants of foundations and the moat on the site of the Queens Hotel, on the south side of West Bar (which was on Boar Lane) and on the site of the late Commercial Buildings (see detailed newspaper reports). Although the area is much developed now, some of the present buildings of nineteenth century date are likely to be redeveloped and remains have been observed at such a depth that it is quite possible that archaeological levels are preserved beneath them. The manor was abutted by the park to its north-west and by the mill leat and manorial mills immediately to the south and south-east
The whole complex was quite distant from the parish church and supposed original settlement area around the church and on Kirkgate; it is conjectured that the present Swinegate and The Calls represent an original route between manor and church area and that Boar Lane developed with the creation of the intervening borough in 1207. The conjectured importance of Leeds in the pre-Conquest period and the location of this major manorial complex have led to speculation that the manor may perpetuate an important pre-Conquest site. Archaeological watching brief in 1991 found no evidence to suggest that the area examined formed part of the site of the medieval manor. However it might be speculated that as the development area covered part of the interior of the moated area (thus explaining the absence of the moat itself) lowering of the ground level around the turn of the century could have removed all trace of the manorial buildings. Features observed did however include the remains of Victorian/early 20th century buildings, a circular brick-lined well and a large undated square-cut timber containing two mortise slots. (West Yorkshire Archaeology Advisory Service)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SE299333 |
Latitude | 53.7953300476074 |
Longitude | -1.5463399887085 |
Eastings | 429980 |
Northings | 433320 |