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HER Number (PRN):00165
Name:Camp Ring motte and bailey castle, 400m E of Culmington Farm
Type of Record:Monument
Protected Status:Scheduled Monument 1012855: Camp Ring

Monument Type(s):

Summary

Scheduled Monument: Camp Ring is an excellent example of a Norman earthwork castle, and is of particular interest because of the associated landscape features which include a fishpond, a possible orchard and an area of medieval ridge and furrow. It is regarded as one of the most informative motte and bailey sites in the county.

Parish:Stanton Lacy, South Shropshire, Shropshire
Map Sheet:SO48SE
Grid Reference:SO 4972 8218

Related records

08178Parent of: Enclosure, possible orchard, to the N of Camp Ring motte and bailey (Monument)
08180Parent of: Field system remains around Camp Ring motte and bailey (Monument)
08179Parent of: Fishpond NE of Camp Ring motte and bailey castle (Monument)
04362Related to: Culmington ridge and furrow (Monument)

Associated Finds: None recorded

Associated Events

  • ESA4434 - 1973 field observation by the Ordnance Survey
  • ESA4435 - 1954 field observation by English Heritage
  • ESA4436 - 1987 field observation by English Heritage
  • ESA4437 - 1995 field observation by Shropshire County Council
  • ESA8727 - 2018 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England
  • ESA8625 - 2014 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England
  • ESA8621 - 2015 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England
  • ESA8361 - 2016 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England
  • ESA8362 - 2017 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England
  • ESA9067 - 2019 Heritage at Risk Survey by Historic England

Description

A motte and bailey situated on a low ridge above surrounding former water meadows. The motte is 27m in diameter, 2.3m high; the surrounding ditch is 8m wide, up to 1.3m deep and is waterfilled on the E side. The circular bailey to the SW is 50m in diameter, with and enclosing ditch 5m wide, 0.5m deep with an inner bank 5m wide and 0.7m high. A causewayed entrance crosses the SW side. To the NE of the motte are two contiguous rectangular enclosures bounded by ploughed-down banks and ditches, possibly outer wards, but more likely associated with traces of a surrounding field system. Strong ridge and furrow, which covers the ridge, respects the rectangular banks at all points and post dates them. OS FI 1973 <1>

Stock erosion noted and photographed by H Thomas, March 1995 <13>

An area south of the monument was cut through by a 10m wide corridor of topsoil stripping during Severn Trent Water's Craven Arms Zone Improvements work in 1995 <13><14>
Unfortunately, though some photographs exist, the exact location of the affected corridor was not recorded <15>

Evaluated for MPP in 1990-1: High score as one of 46 Motte and bailey castles; High score as one of 91 Irregular Open Field Systems <16>

Scheduling revised in 1995. Scheduling description [parts of this relate to PRNs 08178, 08179 and 08180]: ->

-> The monument includes the remains of a motte and bailey castle, known as Camp Ring, an L-shaped enclosure, fishpond and parts of a field system with ridge and furrow ploughing. Camp Ring motte and bailey castle stands on a low ridge contained within the confluence of the River Corve to the west and Pye Brook to the east. The motte is roughly circular in plan with a base diameter of 28m rising 2.5m above the surrounding ground surface to a flat topped summit 16m in diameter. A well defined ditch averaging 7m wide and up to 1.3m deep surrounds the motte. The ditch would have originally been wet and remains seasonally water-filled around its north east and east sides. Here water- erosion and stock trampling over the years has flattened and widened the ditch profile to give a maximum width of 10m. Adjoining the motte and ditch on its south west side is a well defined bailey, designed to protect the domestic buildings of the castle. It is sub-circular in plan and is enclosed by a substantial bank 5m wide and 0.7m high with an outer ditch 5m wide and 0.5m deep, from which the material for the bank would have been quarried. The interior of the bailey is roughly at the same level as the surrounding ground surface and slopes slightly north east to south west. The lowest portion is in the south west quadrant of the bailey which is subject to seasonal waterlogging. A shallow channel 4m wide and 0.2m deep runs south west, downhill from the south west corner of the bailey for 30m before fading out on the hill slope. A channel 4m wide and 0.6m deep extends from the south east junction of motte and bailey ditches for 30m to the south east then turns east, running for some 50m to connect with the field ditch to the east. A lowering of the bank, with a corresponding interruption of the ditch, positioned midway along the southern side of the bailey probably represents the position of the original entrance. ->

-> To the immediate north east of the motte is a large L-shaped enclosure defined by a bank and ditch. The north west side of the enclosure is formed by a low inner bank averaging 4m wide and 0.4m high with an outer ditch 3m wide and 0.3m deep. This runs north eastwards from the north west corner of the bailey on a similar alignment to the north west side of the bailey itself. The bank turns at right angles towards the south east after 80m, fading out after some 20m. The outer ditch similarly turns to the south east and continues for 100m. It then turns to the south at right angles for 30m then, similarly, to the WNW, running for 60m before turning to the south west for 30m to join with the north east corner of the motte ditch. The interior of the L-shaped enclosure is occupied by two blocks of ridge and furrow cultivation separated by a north east to south west aligned headland. The western block lies on this alignment and runs the full length of the enclosure interior. The eastern block lies at right angles, parallel with the eastern arm of the enclosure and terminates in the west on the headland and in the east on the west bank of a small fishpond. The length of the blocks is too short to accommodate the turning of an oxen team, suggesting that they represent the remains of ridged cultivation, possibly supporting an orchard. The fishpond lies within the eastern arm of the enclosure and respects its overall north east to south west orientation. It is a rectangular hollow 20m long by 12m wide averaging lm in depth, bounded on all sides by a low bank 0.5m high. Gaps in the bank at the north west and south east corners may represent the outlet and inlet channels linking the pond with the enclosure ditch. Sluices positioned in these channels would have controlled the flow of water and allowed drainage of the pond. The water management system of which the pond is a part includes the ditches of the L-shaped enclosure and those of the motte and bailey. To the north, north west, east and south east of the motte and bailey, enclosure and fishpond, are the earthwork remains of an extensive and well defined system of open fields. These comprise blocks, or furlongs, of broad ridge and furrow earthworks, the individual cultivation strips averaging 8m in width. The furlongs, which lie roughly at right angles to each other, are separated from each other by well defined plough headlands. The furlong adjacent to the northern side of the L-shaped enclosure including the headlands to the west, north and east is complete, whereas all of the other earthworks are parts of blocks of ploughing which have been truncated by modern agriculture. The complete furlong is included within the scheduling as a sample of the field system as a whole, and a 10m wide strip is included all around the monument to protect the stratigraphic relationships between the field system as a whole and the motte and bailey complex <17>

Photographed during aerial survey in 2007-2009. <19>-<26>

Photographed during aerial survey in 2019. <28>

Sources

[00]SSA20722 - Card index: Shropshire County Council SMR. Site and Monuments Record (SMR) cards. SMR record cards. SMR Card for PRN SA 00165.
[01]SSA844 - Card index: Ordnance Survey. 1973. Ordnance Survey Record Card SO48SE6. Ordnance Survey record cards. SO48SE6.
[02]SSA16199 - Oblique aerial photograph: Baker W A. 1974-Jul-22. WAB 808_22 to 26 (5 Photos). Black and white.
[03]SSA16200 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1989-Feb-20. CPAT 89/MB/0056 to 0057 and 0061 to 0063 (5 photos). Black and White. Medium.
[04]SSA16201 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1989-Feb-20. CPAT 89/MB/0065 to 0067 (3 photos). Black and White. Medium.
[05b]SSA178 - Volume: Victoria County History. 1908. Victoria County History 1. Victoria County History of Shropshire. Vol 1. p399 inc measured plan.
[05a]SSA845 - Photograph: Snowdon C A. 1987. Section of Motte Showing Roof Stone.
[05]SSA851 - Field Monument Warden Report: Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission (HBMC). 1987-Aug-11. Scheduled Monument Report on SAM 33020 (11/08/1987).
[06]SSA849 - Photograph: Anon. 1976. Slides. Colour.
[07]SSA850 - Photograph: Anon. Slide.
[08]SSA16202 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1992-Jun-26. CPAT 92/MC19/0003. Colour. Medium.
[09]SSA16203 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1992-May-15. CPAT 92/C/0983 to 0986 (4 photos). Colour. 35mm.
[10]SSA16204 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1992-Jun-26. CPAT 92/C/1034. Colour. 35mm.
[11]SSA847 - Scheduled Monument notification: English Heritage. Map of Scheduled area.
[12.1]SSA16205 - Oblique aerial photograph: Barret Gill. 1993. Barret Gill, Barret Gill, Oblique View, 1993: 93/R/01 (Colour slide): 93/R/03 (Colour slide). Colour.
[12.2]SSA16894 - Oblique aerial photograph: Barret Gill. 1993. Barret Gill, Oblique View, 1993: 93/R/02 (Colour slide). Colour.
[13]SSA846 - Photograph: Thomas Harley O. 1995-Mar. Photos showing Erosion and the Corridor of Stripped Topsoil at Camp Ring. Colour. 35mm.
[14]SSA843 - TEXT: Thomas Harley O. 1995. Notes on the Craven Arms Zone Improvement Works.
[15]SSA20725 - HER comment: Gathercole E Clare. 1999/ 2002. Comments by SMR compiler in SMR database. 30/07/2003.
[16]SSA20084 - TEXT: Horton Wendy B. 1990/ 1991. MPP Evaluation File.
[17]SSA848 - Scheduled Monument notification: English Heritage. 1995. Scheduling Papers (Revised Scheduling, 19/09/1995). 19187.
[18]SSA21573 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1996-Jul-24. CPAT 96/MB/0437. Black and White. Medium.
[19]SSA26962 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2008-Jan-30. SA0802_165 and SA0802_167 to SA0802_169 (4 photos) Flight: 08_SA_02. Colour. Digital.
[20]SSA25068 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2007-Sep-7. SA0708_053 (1 photo) Flight: 07_SA_08. Colour. Digital.
[21]SSA26961 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2008-Jan-30. SA0802_161 to SA0802_162 (2 photos) Flight: 08_SA_02. Colour. Digital.
[22]SSA26943 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2007-Sep-7. SA0708_056 (1 photo) Flight: 07_SA_08. Colour. Digital.
[23]SSA26942 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2007-Sep-7. SA0708_135 to SA0708_137 (3 photos) Flight: 07_SA_08. Colour. Digital.
[24]SSA26023 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2009-Mar-20. SA0906_133 to SA0906_142 (10 photos) Flight: 09_SA_06. Colour. Digital.
[25]SSA25381 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2008-Jan-30. SA0802_009 to SA0802_010 (2 photos) Flight: 08_SA_02. Colour. Digital.
[26]SSA25069 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2007-Sep-7. SA0708_054 (1 photo) Flight: 07_SA_08. Colour. Digital.
[27]SSA27571 - Oblique aerial photograph: Musson Chris R. 1996-Jul-24. CPAT 96/C/1477. Colour. Medium.
[28]SSA30940 - Oblique aerial photograph: Shropshire Council. 2019-Jul-25. SA1902_088 (1 photo) Flight: 19_SA_02. Colour. Digital.
Date Last Edited:Mar 8 2022 11:21AM