Bincknoll Castle

Bincknoll Castle

Bincknoll Castle, Wiltshire
Shown within Wiltshire
Alternate name Bincknoll Camp
Location Wiltshire
Coordinates 51°30′46″N 1°50′48″W / 51.5128°N 1.8467°W / 51.5128; -1.8467
Area 23.5 acres
History
Periods Bronze Age, Iron Age
Site notes
Condition good
Public access yes

Bincknol Castle' or Bincknoll Camp, is the site of a possible Iron Age univallate hillfort located in Wiltshire. The site lies on the end of a triangular promentary on the escarpment beneath the Ridgeway to the South. The steeply contoured sides offer excellent natural defences with only the level lands to the south offering easy access. The suggestion that the site originates in the Iron Age are currently unproven.Pottery found on site has been Roman or later in date. Geophysical fieldwork is planned in the near future, hopefully that will inform the chronological debate. Pronounced ‘Bynol’ Castle, the current earthworks appear to demonstrate a Norman motte and bailey castle of considerable natural strength. It is likely that Gilbert of Breteuil, who after the Norman conquest acquired a block of manors centred on Broad Hinton, built the castle to oversee them. The 'motte', now severely mutilated by later quarrying, measures approximately 52 metres in diameter by 3 metres high, and its ditch is 2.3 metres deep. The inner enclosure has a bank and ditch 3.4 metres high dividing it from the outer enclosure, with a causeway entrance. The earthworks of the now deserted hamlet of Bincknoll, which grew up outside the castle, may be discerned in Bincknoll Dip, sloping away to the north.[1]

Location

The site is located at grid reference SU107793, to the west of the village of Wroughton, and to the north of the village of Broad Hinton, in the county of Wiltshire. Barbury Castle hill fort is about 3.5 miles away to the South-East. The site has a summit of 195m AOD, and is easily accessible from the White Horse trail, and other public footpaths.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bincknoll Castle.

References

  1. "The Megalithic Portal". Retrieved 8 October 2010.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.