Graig Foel, Llanbadoc
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Ringwork)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Graig Foel, Llanbadoc |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Monmouthshire |
Modern Authority | Monmouthshire |
1974 Authority | Gwent |
Community | Llanbadoc |
A partial castle ringwork is located on a steep-sided spur projecting from high ground above the flood-plain of the Usk. A roughly semi-circular area measuring 16.5m (NW-SE) by 13m is bounded on the NE by the scarp edge, the top of a steep, wooded slope, and elsewhere by a bank 10m-12m wide and up to 3m high above an external rock-cut ditch 1.5m deep and 2m wide at base. Internally the bank is 1.5m high on the NW but only 0.4m on the SE where the slope of the nose of the ridge steepens markedly. A 4.5m gap on the SE between the end of the bank and the scarp edge is probably the site of the entrance. (Coflein)
The monument comprises the remains of a partial ringwork, a military stronghold probably dating to the post-Conquest 11th and 12th centuries. The ringwork forms a well defended compact enclosure, its central area bounded by a substantial crescentic rampart with external ditch and a steep natural escarpment on the NW side. The site is situated within woodland on the leading edge of a steeply-sided ridge above and to the W of the floodplain of the River Usk, overlooking the town of Usk. The interior is roughly D-shaped on plan and measures 16.5m from NW to SE by 13m transversely. The crescentic rampart measures about 6m in thickness and up to 3m in height. The rock-cut ditch measures about 1.5m in depth and about 2m in width at its base. A gap in the rampart in the NE side may represent the site of the entrance. Ringworks were defended medieval castle enclosures serving a similar function to motte and bailey castles. They usually had a strong gatehouse, which could serve as the keep. The principal buildings, such as the lord's hall, lay within the enclosure. The surrounding bank had an external ditch and was surmounted by a timber palisade. A bridge across the ditch would give access to the entrance to the enclosure. The timber structures were sometimes rebuilt at a later date in stone. (Scheduling Report)
This site is a scheduled monument protected by law
Not Listed
The National Monument Record (Coflein) number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SO369010 |
Latitude | 51.7043609619141 |
Longitude | -2.91423010826111 |
Eastings | 336950 |
Northings | 201020 |