Cashtal Lager

Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (), and also as a Questionable Fortified Manor House, and also as a Possible Uncertain

There are earthwork remains

NameCashtal Lager
Alternative NamesBallagawne
Historic CountryMan
Modern AuthorityMan
1974 AuthorityA
Civil ParishLonan

'The Cashtal' - Alleged IA promontory fort or Viking or later defended house or granary

(SC 42708169) Fort (NR) (OS record).

Protected Monument. A small peninsular fort about 15ft by 42ft. Walls 2ft high and 3-4ft wide (Kermode).

The Cashtal, Ballagawne. A small promontory fort, defended on one side by a ditch (now filled in). Most of the fortified area is occupied by the ruins of a large rectangular stone-faced building, though this was not the earliest building on the site. Excavation by Bersu in 1941 revealed four parallel rows of posts to support a raised floor. He concluded that it was probably a defended house site or possibly a fortified granary, of late Norse or early medieval times (Bersu)

The situation is typical of a Manx promontory fort but there is a lackof ground evidence to support this classification. The main element is a steep natural rocky bluff extending from a pasture field into a small valley. As a defensive site, no protective earthworks are necessary except on the NE side to protect the landward approach. There is now no trace of earthworks, but a sloping field surface around the bluff could indicate the former existence of defences now ploughed or silted up. The summit of the bluff is almost entirely occupied by the footings of a building measuring 7.0m wide and 15.0m in length NE-SW. The wall is approx 1.6m wide and is overgrown with turf and shrubs but occasional rough rubble walling is discernible. A gap in the centre of the NE end is probably an original entrance. The sides of the building are almost co-incident with the sides of the bluff and no rampart or other feature that might antedate the building are evident. Below the bluff are the remains of a dam and traces of a silted-up mill race. A water-mill exists some 200m to the SE and it seems likely that the stream has served a succession of mills

If such is the case, Bersu's suggestion of a fortified granary occupying the site seem feasible (F1 ECW 10.12.76). (PastScape)

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceSC427816
Latitude54.2067489624023
Longitude-4.41331005096436
Eastings242700
Northings481690
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

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Books

  • King, D.J.C., 1983, Castellarium Anglicanum (London: Kraus) Vol. 2 p. 550 (possible)
  • 1967, Ancient and Historic Monuments of the Isle of Man 1967 (Manx Museum & NT) p. 43
  • Kermode, P.M.C., 1930, List of Manx Antiquities (Douglas) p. 54 online transcription

Guide Books

  • Man