Warningcamp siege castle
Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Ringwork), and also as a Questionable Siege Work
There are earthwork remains
Name | Warningcamp siege castle |
Alternative Names | Batworth Park |
Historic Country | Sussex |
Modern Authority | West Sussex |
1974 Authority | West Sussex |
Civil Parish | Lyminster |
A small earthwork 300 yds from the river and just outside Batworth Park, consists of a raised mound surrounded by vallum and fosse which are preserved to the NE where the entrance is. Over a wide area to the west the bank and ditch have disappeared. Nothing has been found to indicate the date of the earthwork but it is suggested that it is one of Henry I's siege castles. (PastScape ref. Curwen)
The example near Batworthpark House survives comparatively well despite having been damaged for part of its circuit. It therefore retains considerable archaeological potential for the recovery of dating evidence, of evidence of structures in the interior and of evidence sealed beneath its banks of the land use prior to its construction.
The monument includes the ditch, bank and interior area of a circular earthwork situated just above the floodplain of the River Arun. The earthwork, which has an internal diameter of some 32m, survives best for a length of 60m on the north and east sides, where the bank is 8m wide and rises to 1.5m above the level of the interior. The bank is breached by an original entrance some 3m wide. Elsewhere it is still clearly visible, although often standing only 0.4m high, despite having been pushed both outwards into the surrounding ditch and inwards into the interior. The surrounding ditch is also best preserved on the north side, where its outer edge is marked by the curving field boundary. Here the ditch is 6m wide and some 2m deep, creating a total drop from bank top to ditch bottom of 3.5m to form an impressive barrier. Even on the south and south-east sides, where it has been largely infilled using earth from the bank, the ditch survives to a depth of 0.3m. The earthwork has been identified as a short-lived ringwork of the very early Norman period, dating from the period immediately after the Conquest and before the foundation of the nearby castle at Arundel in 1069/70
It is only coincidentally linked with the later chalk or flint quarry on the south side. (Scheduling Report)
On gently rising ground, it rises some 6-7 feet, with a diameter of 200 feet, with remains of a ditch and vallum on the NE side. (Purton)
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 | TQ030068 |
Latitude | 50.8515510559082 |
Longitude | -0.537869989871979 |
Eastings | 503020 |
Northings | 106800 |