John of Gaunts Castle, Daventry
Has been described as a Questionable Masonry Castle, and also as a Questionable Fortified Manor House
There are cropmark/slight earthwork remains
Name | John of Gaunts Castle, Daventry |
Alternative Names | Daventry Wood |
Historic Country | Northamptonshire and the Soke of Peterborough |
Modern Authority | Northamptonshire |
1974 Authority | Northamptonshire |
Civil Parish | Daventry |
John O'Gaunt's Castle. A substantial building, with stone walls and a tower surrounded by a moat, known in later centuries as John o' Gaunt's Castle, formerly stood within the park, near its north side. An adjacent low mound may mark the site of an earlier building. It has been suggested that this may have been a medieval hunting lodge, although it is possible that the manor house was relocated to the park. In 1284 the prior had agreed that when the lord of Daventry and his wife were present 'in the mansion house taken by the lord out of his park at Daventry, then they might have mass and all other religious offices celebrated in a chapel within the said mansion house'. This suggests that the manor house was relocated in the 13th century by one of the fitz Walters. (Extensive Urban Survey)
Moated site (SP 581612; Fig. 57), known as John of Gaunt's Castle, lay in the S.E. corner of the parish within the deer park on almost flat ground at the base of a steep slope, on Upper Lias Clay at 15 m. above OD. It was probably a medieval moated hunting-lodge, but little is known of its history.
There are various records of Roman bricks and tiles having been found on the site; this may be a mis-identification of medieval materials. In 1816 the wood which then covered the area was removed and a 'double ditch was disclosed within which, just below the surface, was the foundation wall, varying from 4 ft. to 5 ft. in thickness, of a rectangular building 40 yards long and intersected with three cross walls' (G. Baker, Hist. of Northants., I (1822–30), 339).
The N. part of the site, including all but the S. side of the moat, was worked for clay for a brickyard from at least 1857 until 1904 and during this time massive foundation walls were exposed and then destroyed
A building, apparently the one described by Baker, is recorded and described as 'square' and occupying an area of about one third of an acre with 'three cross walls'. On the S.W. side the foundations of a detached round tower 8 m. in diam. were discovered and traces of another, similar one were noted on the E. side. Foundations of 'an entrance which had evidently been approached by a drawbridge' were found there apparently on the S.E. of the building (W. Edgar, Borough Hill and its History (1923), 49–51; Northants. N. and Q., 5 (1921–3), 212–3). Recently the whole site has been built over except for the S. side of the moat which remains as a long ditch 1.2 m. deep. In the field to the S. is a small roughly D-shaped enclosure, bounded by a low scarp 0.5 m. high, with traces of an outer ditch on its W. side; this enclosure has been completely overploughed in ridge-and-furrow. There are slight indications that there was once a further enclosure to the S. again. A medieval glazed roof tile, said to be from the site, survives (DS), but a stone mortar of the 14th or 15th-century date and found in about 1853 on the site is lost ( BNFAS, 3 (1969), 1; Northants. Archaeol., 8 (1973), 26; J. Morton, Nat. Hist. of Northants. (1712), 519). (RCHME)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SP581612 |
Latitude | 52.2459297180176 |
Longitude | -1.15043997764587 |
Eastings | 458100 |
Northings | 261200 |