Pontefract Town Defences
Has been described as a Questionable Urban Defence
There are no visible remains
Name | Pontefract Town Defences |
Alternative Names | Tanshelf |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Wakefield |
1974 Authority | West Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Pontefract |
No remains of earthen ramparts. (Bond)
Beresford suggested an original presence of a line of defences around the town, but there is little firm evidence for this (Anon, draft town survey)
Beresford (1967, 525) proposed a larger primary borough, defined by Back Northgate and Walkergate. There is no denying the symmetry of this arrangement, but it
does not take into account the topography of this part of Pontefract. Beresford further proposed a walled borough, built integrally with the castle (1967, 160, fig. 37), a notion perpetuated by Aston and Bond (1987, 126), but one which can not be sustained on documentary or archaeological grounds. There are more persuasive reasons to suppose that the new borough might once have had earthwork defences, and there are parallels for earthwork defences at other similar towns of the period (Barley 1975, 60; Beresford 1967, 504). Beresford's supposition that the defining streets to the north-west and south-east reflected the course of a defensive circuit is reasonable, but not for Back Northgate and Walkergate, particularly as the latter extends far to the south-east of the scarp top which is represented by the line of Southgate, topographically the more likely south-eastern edge of the new borough. Southgate and Northgate are much more likely candidates for streets reflecting the course of any earthwork defences and could, with Baxtergate and Finkle Street, meeting at the western end of Micklegate, represent an intervallum road, or back lane.
There are some thirteenth-century documentary references to ditches, but these are more readily construed as references to the castle ditch (the hopedic or upper dike) at the eastern end of Micklegate (Holmes 1899, 144–46). A reference to the 'town dike' to the north of Walkergate in 1322 (Ellis 1893, 302) may well, however, be an allusion to the borough defences. (Roberts and Whittick 2013)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SE453220 |
Latitude | 53.6932182312012 |
Longitude | -1.30736005306244 |
Eastings | 445800 |
Northings | 422000 |