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Elyburne; The Lee

Also known as, or recorded in historical documents as;
Elyburn; Eliburn; Elliburn; Eliburne

In the civil parish of Hesleyhurst.
In the historic county of Northumberland.
Modern Authority of Northumberland.
1974 county of Northumberland.
Medieval County of Northumberland.

OS Map Grid Reference: NZ08089787
Latitude 55.27496° Longitude -1.87431°

Elyburne; The Lee has been described as a Pele Tower although is doubtful that it was such, and also as a probable Bastle.

There are no visible remains.

Description

There are records of a pele tower at Elyburne in 1569. There is no trace of an old building at The Lee today. (Keys to the Past)

At Elyburne p'cell of the lordeshippe of Rotheberye is a strong pele house of the kings maties Inherytaunce as of thaugmentac'ons of his graces crowne & p'cell of the late erle of Northumb'lands landes (All memory of the strong pele house of Elyburne has been lost; the very name has perished. It was evidently between Whitton and Ritton; and the passage 'Rothebury: Thornyhaughe - Roger Mutford tenet unum tenementum &c. in Elybornemouth' in Hall and Humberton's Survey of the confiscated estates of Thomas Earl of Northumberland in 1569 (Vol. I., p. 65 P.P.O.) seems to prove the Elyburne to be the same stream as that now known as the Forest Burn which flows into the Coquet near Thornyhaugh. Consequently we may be justified in regarding the Lee, a farm house on the Forest Burn, in the direct line between Whitton and Ritton, as occupying the site of Eliburne pele. Mr D. D. Dixon of Rothbury, it is gratifying to find (considering the great knowledge he possesses of the Forest and its history), agrees with the identification. 'The proximity (to the Lee) of an old hollow way - the ancient road - seems,' he remarks, 'to denote the spot as an old centre.'). (Bates 1891)
Comments

Farmhouse now stands on site. By crossing point of Forest Burn. The form of this building is obscure. It is not called a toure and it is unlikely it was a tower. It is not called a bastell. It is described as a 'strong pele house' in 1541 and while this may be a little early for the use of that term to describe the simple two chamber bastles to which the term more normal became associated this may, in fact, be the form of the building.
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:20:09

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