Malmesbury siege castles

Has been described as a Certain Siege Work

There are uncertain remains

NameMalmesbury siege castles
Alternative NamesMalmesbiriae
Historic CountryWiltshire
Modern AuthorityWiltshire
1974 AuthorityWiltshire
Civil ParishMalmesbury

Three siege works erected rapidly against Malmesbury Castle by Robert, Earl of Gloucester in 1144 in response to raids by the garrison.

Comes quoque Glaornensis, erectis in brevi prope Malmesbiriam tribus castellis, dum rex in sedandis belli tumultibus alibi detineretur, non solum consuetos eorum per patriam caute praepedivit excursus, verum usque ad impudentem famis inediam jugiter eos, et constanter coercuit.

Ceterum, ubi rex de tanta suorum afflictione vera percepit, immensa protinus militariae multitudinis copia convocata, Malmesbiriam subitus, et insperatus advenit, escisque ad plurimi temporis sufficientiam impositis, circa castella, quae comes extruxerat, depraedatione, igne, et gladio, atrocissime ubique invaluit: fixisque circa Tetebiriam tentoriis, castellum duntaxat tribus a Malmesbiria distans miliariis, viribus, et armis ad capiendum constantissime desudavit; ulteriore quoque castelli propugnaculo virtuose tandem adquisito, militibusque nonis captis, et interemptis. aliis autem spississime vulneratis, et intra interiorem recessum in angustum locellum catervatim redactis, machinas instantissime undique applicuit, et obsidione eos claudere proposuit. Comes autem Glaornensis, cum regis primum comperisset adventum, immensam quantocius militum sibi ascivit frequentiam, quippe qui plurima e proximo, alia proprii juris, alia fidissime sibi parentia habebat castella, crudelemque, et indomitum pedestris multitudinis, Walensium, videlicet et Bristoensium, aliarumque, quae e vicino aderant, civitatum, quasi cum rege comimissurus, aggregavit exercitum

Comes etiam Herefordiae, Rogerius, sed et alii, robustissimae virtutis, in auxilium suum unanimiter conspirantes, contractis in unum viribus, citissime affuerunt, regiumque, duobus tantum interpositis miliariis, ambientes exercitum, a longe expectarunt, usque dum alii, qui adesse maturabant, in suffragium suum pariter convenissent.

Barones itaque, qui cum rege convenerant, tam copiosum adversariorum examen in suum audientes penculum panter confluxisse, effrenemque Walensium barbariem, sed et incompositum Bristoensium vulgus exhorrescentes, quos comes Glaorniae, mirae multitudinis conserto agmine, ad se conturbandos ductabat, sanum regis auribus instillarunt consilium, ut, obsidione ad tempus soluta, alio, quo necessitas vocaret, admoveret suos; vel quia inconsultum erat, et discrimini proximum, inter tot pedestris multitudinis lanistas longe imparem militiae suae cuneum obviam exponere; maxime, cum sui et a propriis sedibus procul elongati, et ab itineris labore essent defatigati, illi, e converso, de suis e vicino prodientes urbibus, et castellis, tanto constantiores ad dimicandum concurrerent, quanto,a itineris vexatione detriti, e patria sua tunc demum prorupissent: iccirco sanum esse ab obsidione ad praesens desistere, ne a feroci hostium circumventus concursu, suorum, sinistra impediente fortuna, pateretur detrimentum. (Gesta Stephani)_

Gatehouse Comments

Possible sites are Great Somerford and Cams Hill. Also suggested as a possibility is moated site in Easton Grey. Given map reference is for Malmesbury Castle. Cam's Hill is clearly one of the siege castles, it is within sight of Malmesbury and it is a small ringwork like other known and undisputed siege works of the era (Danes Castle, Exeter and The Rings at Corfe both also close to the castles they are besieging) (Distances – Cam's Hill 1670m; Danes Castle 320m; The Rings 400m). Great Somerford, 5.25km from Malmesbury, was, in the view of Gatehouse, an ordinary motte castle that may have had some use as back camp of the siege but wasn't a siege castle. Jerry Ollis, on the bases that Great Somerfield was a siege castle, examined the local area and suggested a roughly square earthwork at Easton Grey writing "The site would be easy to construct given that it would be using pre existing roman earthworks. It is ideal for defending land to the south and west of Malmesbury, controlling access into Malmesbury via the adjacent Foss Way, and to command control of the main river into Malmesbury – the Avon" The suggestion the site had a Roman origin comes from antiquarian assumptions and is not supported by modern archaeological observation, where it seems to be considered a medieval moated site (these generally being of C13-C15 date). At 4.5km from Malmesbury the site is readily bypassed

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceST932873
Latitude51.5848808288574
Longitude-2.09924006462097
Eastings393220
Northings187340
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Purton, P.F., 2009, A History of the Early Medieval Siege c. 450-1220 (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press) p. 270-
  • King, D.J.C., 1983, Castellarium Anglicanum (London: Kraus) Vol. 2 p. 499
  • Davis, R.H.C., 1977, King Stephen (London: Longman) passim
  • Mackenzie, J.D., 1896, Castles of England; their story and structure (New York: Macmillan) Vol. 1 p. 228 online copy

Journals

  • Creighton, O.H., 2000, 'Early Castles in the Medieval Landscape of Wiltshire' Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine Vol. 93 p. 114 online copy
  • Rees, Henry, 1945, 'Malmesbury, its castle and walls' Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine Vol. 51 p. 184-7 online copy

Primary Sources

  • Sewell, R.C. (ed), 1846, Gesta Stephani, Regis Anglorum et Ducis Normannorum p. 107 online copy (The newer edition and translation by Potter, K.R. (ed), 1976 (2edn), Gesta Stephani (Oxford University Press) should be consulted for serious study. See also Speight, S., 2000, 'Castle Warfare in the Gesta Stephani' , Château Gaillard Vol. 19 [see online transcription > http://web.archive.org/web/20101229213751/http://www.deremilitari.org/resources/articles/speight.htm])
  • Brooke, Morey and Brooke (eds), 1967, The letters and charters of Gilbert Foliot, Abbot of Gloucester (1139-48), Bishop of Hereford (1148-63), and London (1163-87) (Cambridge University Press) p. 74

Other

  • Jerry Ollis pers corr 3 May 2013