Leicester Town Wall
Has been described as a Certain Urban Defence
There are no visible remains
Name | Leicester Town Wall |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Leicestershire |
Modern Authority | Leicester; City of |
1974 Authority | Leicestershire |
Civil Parish | Leicester |
No remains of medieval town wall based on and extended from Roman wall. Said to be raised in 1174. (Bond)
The Medieval Town defences of Leicester were built in the 13th century, were ruinous by 1587 and are now entirely buried. The walls were built with some reused Roman masonry. (PastScape)
Murage grants in 1286, 1291 and 1316.
'Detailed accounts, as well as leases of gates and towers, suggest that building work was far more extensive than the (three) murage grants suggest.' (Turner)
Legecestria is a most wealthy city, and emcompast with an indissoluble wall, of which if the foundation were strong and good, the place would be inferiour to no city whatsever. That the walls, being faulty in the foundations, when they were undermind, and the props burnt that supported them, fell in great pieces, which remain to this day in the shape of rocks for bigness and solidity; such was the indissoluble tenacity of the morter. (Matthew Paris)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SK585040 |
Latitude | 52.6324501037598 |
Longitude | -1.13777005672455 |
Eastings | 458500 |
Northings | 304000 |