Bakewell Burh

Has been described as a Questionable Urban Defence

There are no visible remains

NameBakewell Burh
Alternative Names
Historic CountryDerbyshire
Modern AuthorityDerbyshire
1974 AuthorityDerbyshire
Civil ParishBakewell

In the year 920, Edward the Elder marched the English army Northwards and founded a burh at Bakewell (PastScape ref Whitchurch).

A.D. 924 . This year, before midsummer, went King Edward with an army to Nottingham; and ordered the town to be repaired on the south side of the river, opposite the other, and the bridge over the Trent betwixt the two towns. Thence he went to Bakewell in Peakland; and ordered a fort to be built as near as possible to it, and manned. (ASC - Ingram Everyman edn)

Bond puts in list of Burghal forts of no later urban significance.

Clive Hart, in 'The North Derbyshire Archaeological Survey' of 1981, page 121, identified a possible earthwork on the east bank of the river Wye which he suggested could be the burh. He described it as an earthen bank 6-7m wide with a ditch up to 4m across, forming a wide arc with the open end towards the Wye floodplain. This suggestion was taken up by Stetka, who carried out further documentary work and survey. This was published in 1997 as 'King Edward the Elder's Burh - the Lost Village of Burton by Bakewell', an Occasional Paper of the Bakewell and District Historical Society. In this, he suggests that Hart's earthwork actually formed just one corner of a much larger entrenchment and he uses documentary and place-name evidence to support the identification of the site as the Edwardian fort. However, archaeological work carried out by Trent & Peak Archaeological Unit (TPAU) in 1997 on the southern and south-western boundary did not produce any evidence of a bank and ditch. TPAU also pointed out that the line of the burh that Stetka posits on the south and west sides follows a boundary which first appears on the 1810 enclosure plan and is therefore of no antiquity

(Gill Stroud, 2010)

There has been considerable speculation as to the exact location of this fortified site (see section 5.3.3 above), one being Castle Hill on the east side of the River Wye crossing, another being an earthwork further south-east on the east bank of the river (Hart 1981, Stetka 1997), and the third being 'Upper Bakewell, in the area to the north and west of the church and churchyard, to include the church itself (Penny 2002). (Extensive Urban Survey)

Gatehouse Comments

There is little physical evidence of an urban defence at Bakewell and that physical evidence and the historic evidence is open to much debate. Authors may have assumed this fort to be an urban burh like Wareham or Wallingford, but it could have been a thegnal burh on the site later occupied by the Norman motte of Bakewell Castle Hill. Ingham's translation of 'as near as possible to it' does suggest outside of the village. Gatehouse suspects that Edward granted the Danish town to a Saxon theng with instructions to build himself a fortified house, thus putting a Saxon warrior leader and a few armed men, in occupied Danish territory. Davies-Pyrce's 1904 critic of Ella Armitage's work makes much the same point. (Philip Davis 20-9-2010) The map reference given in PastScape, and used here, is rather arbitrary. It is within Bakewell but isn't the site of an archaeological feature.

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceSK217686
Latitude53.214038848877
Longitude-1.6764999628067
Eastings421700
Northings368600
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • Stetka, Jan, 2001, From Fort to Field - The Shaping of the Landscape of Bakewell in the 10th Century
  • Bond, C.J., 1987, 'Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Defences' in Schofield, J. and Leech, R. (eds) Urban Archaeology in Britain (CBA Research Report 61) p. 92-116 online copy
  • Hart, C.R., 1981, The North Derbyshire Archaeological Survey to AD1500 (Derbyshire Archaeological Trust)
  • Humble, R., 1980, The Anglo-Saxon Kings p. 79

Antiquarian

Journals

  • Stetka, Jan, 1997, 'King Edward the Elder's Burh - the Lost Village of Burton by Bakewell' Bakewell and District Historical Society
  • Swanton, M.J., 1972, 'Castle Hill, Bakewell' Derbyshire Archaeological Journal Vol. 92 p. 16-26 online copy
  • 1970, Medieval Archaeology Vol. 14 p. 175 download copy
  • Davies Pyrce, T., 1905, 'The Alleged Norman Origin of 'Castles' in England' English Historical Review Vol. 20 p. 707 online copy
  • Armitage, Ella, 1905, 'The Alleged Norman Origin of 'Castles' in England' English Historical Review Vol. 20 p. 714 online copy

Primary Sources

  • Ingram, James, (ed) 1912, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (Everyman Press, London) AD924 view online transcription (Ingram's translation and notes date from 1823. More recent translations of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles should be consulted for serious study)

Other

  • Gill Stroud Derbyshire HER Officer, 20-9-2010, pers.corr.
  • Dave Barrett, Gill Stroud, 2009, Extensive Urban Survey - Derbyshire (English Heritage) Download copy
  • Gill Stroud, 2003, Derbyshire extensive urban survey archaeological assessment report Bakewell download copy
  • Penny, S., 2002, Bakewell and its Burgh Unpublished note held on file at County SMR
  • Priest, V. and Garton, D., 1997, The Bakewell Project, Derbyshire. Report on the Archaeological Investigations of Sites 1-5 at the Bakewell Showground (TPAU unpublished report)