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Eccleston Mound

In the civil parish of Eccleston.
In the historic county of Cheshire.
Modern Authority of Cheshire.
1974 county of Cheshire.
Medieval County of Cheshire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SJ41436279
Latitude 53.15896° Longitude -2.87748°

Eccleston Mound has been described as a probable Timber Castle.

There are earthwork remains.

This site is a scheduled monument protected by law.

Description

Earthwork mound of purpose and date; claimed variously as a round barrow (of ?date), a Roman 'botontinus' or roadside exploratory mound, a medieval motte, or a civil war mount. Before 1798 it may have been in use as a tree mound. The mound measures 20m north to south and 18m east to west and is 2.5m high. (PastScape)

The mound lies at about 20m above OD on a natural knoll above the west side of the Dee valley. It is 2.5m high and 15m-20m in diameter, although much mutilated by disturbances which can all be identified as modern. Two lengths of slight bank and ditch run away east from the mound. These are of very similar character, and together with additional small scarps around the base of the west side of the mound probably formed a horseshoe-shaped area open to the east, probably a tree-stand incorporating the mound. The banks are cut by very slight drain-like features, which appear to coincide with boundaries shown on an estate map of 1798 (14a). Authority 6's ditch north-west of the mound is suggested by a sinuous, spread, south-west facing scarp, but a low backscarp and traces of ridge and furrow beyond suggest this scarp is a plough headland. The mound's date and function remain uncertain. It displays none of the particular characteristics that would enable it to be identified as a post-mill mound, garden prospect mount or ice house, although such distinctive features could be missing on account of the modern disturbance. In the early 19th century it was evidently felt to be an ancient feature. However, its size, lack of ditch, and topographical position militate against it being a motte. If the report (authority 3) of finding coins in the mound is accurate, it should be Roman or post-Roman in date. Likewise if authority 3's report of human bones from the mound is accurate this would support a funerary function, although it could also indicate that the mound was scraped up from ground that had already been used as a cemetery. In view of the proximity of the old church, such a cemetery might easily be early Christian. The mound has recently been suggested to be a Civil War mount or fieldwork (14b). The site was surveyed at 1:500 scale by R Wilson-North and D MacKay of RCHME in December 1985. The above description summarises a descriptive text deposited with the plan and other archive in the NMR. (PastScape–ref. Field Investigators Comments–Robert Wilson-North and Donnie Mackay/01-DEC-1986/OS Revision)
Comments

Is close to church and had marshland to east. Eccleston was the site of a ferry crossing of the Dee and the other crossing of the Dee are overlooked by castles (Aldford, Holt, Shocklach, Chester). Rescheduled as motte in 1993. 28m by 14.5m and 3m high.
Links to archaeological and architectural databases, mapping and other online resources

Data >
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:32

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