Castles in Context: Some Conclusions

Rachel E. Swallow Outer Outer Gateway, (c. 1280, since destroyed in 1790). by Moses Griffith c. 1750 (cropped) © Grosvenor Museums,

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Cheshire Castles in Context: cause relatively little archaeological ex- Some Conclusions cavations and survey have been undertaken on the county’s castles (Table Rachel E. Swallow 2). Research on Cheshire castles has thus Introduction sought to contribute to pertinent theories Recent and ongoing research by this author and current debate in Anglo-Norman has confirmed medieval Cheshire to have studies, by considering the symbolic and been a semi-regal county held by powerful defensive roles and significance of medi- Anglo-Norman earls, with a separate iden- eval Cheshire’s castles within their land- tity from England (Swallow 2015). Within scapes. Newly uncovered documentary this context, research has been undertaken sources have driven the overall historical into the number, location, distribution, na- interpretation to provide a contextual ture, function and character of Cheshire’s framework. Indeed, the research has castles built between c. 1069 and 1237 – highlighted the general omission of fresh beyond which date, the county reverted and necessary historical and historio- from the earls of Chester to the Crown. graphical work in related archaeological Research draws upon a number of disci- surveys and excavation previously un- plines and multiple sources of evidence and dertaken in the county. Aiming to redress has given rise to new insights into fortified that imbalance, my research and publica- tion includes the most relevant documen- élite residences within Cheshire, consid- tation from both and England. The ered in the wider context of the Anglo-Nor- overall interpretation therefore contains man world. new elements of national and internation- Set within current historiographical de- al significance by synthesising and rein- bates, research and publication both take terpreting the Cheshire evidence. into account the full geographical area of Research thus crosses modern political medieval Cheshire hitherto insufficiently re- boundaries. The Welsh dynamic has been searched in either depth or breadth. The little researched and understood—this dy- whole of medieval Cheshire has thus been namic having been dwarfed by a readily considered, and its fortifications from this admitted Anglo-centric focus in most cas- period have been contextualised in relation tle studies (Creighton and Liddiard 2008; to earlier and later developments in the re- Hulme 2010). Placing the construction of gion. This paper aims to provide a summary the castle within the political framework of of the key findings of this research to date. Anglo-Welsh social and political relations This research has crossed disciplinary is therefore an original dimension to both boundaries. Landscape studies have seen castle studies and the study of the medieval considerable recent debate, resulting in March of Wales. Additionally, south the development of an interdisciplinary Lancashire/Greater rarely re- research environment, thus reinvigorating ceives reference as part of medieval castle studies by promoting new ap- Cheshire. For example, to include Buckton proaches and interpretations. However, in Castle (Figure 1), in addition to the Anglo- this work, Cheshire has been hitherto Norman castles to the west of the River ignored, perhaps because few medieval Dee, is essential in order to (re-)interpret documents exist for the county, and be- appropriately and correctly the form and

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16116 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions siting of castles within the entire medieval A List of Castles in Cheshire frontier county. Indeed, to base research on The regional research agenda for Cheshire later boundaries established at various stag- (Brennand et al. 2006 and 2007) highlight- es from the late thirteenth century would ed how little was known at that time of miss obscured or overlooked vital and orig- motte-and-bailey castles, despite the coun- inal interpretations concerning the continu- ty containing among the highest density of ing significance of pre-existing and such sites in Britain, situated as it is on the fluctuating Cheshire boundaries evidenced heavily defended Welsh border (Renn in the historical record, the Mercian dykes 1973, 16). Probably because the River Dee and the Lyme (see below, Figure 1, and see largely formed the western boundary from also Swallow 2016 for full discussion). the end of the thirteenth century (Harris The research has also attempted to avoid 1984, 1), Anglo-Norman castles located to archaeological and historical categorisa- the west of the River Dee in medieval west tion. Archaeological evidence is used to Cheshire have tended to be researched sep- explore the contemporary definition of a arately from their counterparts to the east castle, defined in a necessarily broad sense of the River Dee. This has had the overall as ‘a comital or baronial residence, fortified effect of both diminishing the value of this against the weapons of the day, normally important northern section of the Anglo- serving as an administrative centre from Welsh border, and ignoring the significant which the surrounding area was governed’ research and interpretation potential of the (White 2012, 185). This demonstrably an- county’s castles and their landscapes in swers Creighton and Liddiard’s (2008, terms of their individual and group signifi- 167) call for the de-compartmentalisation cance within medieval Cheshire. Indeed, of pre- and post- Anglo- Norman Conquest the castles in west Cheshire formed parallel houses and castles ‘once and for all’, so that defensive chains of fortifications either research should focus away from the type- side of the watershed of the River Dee. casting of castles as ‘agents of “identicide”’ The definition and delineation of Cheshire (Speight 2007–8, 274). Removing such re- for this author’s research purposes is taken strictive preconceptions in the overall anal- from the Latin Great Domesday Book text ysis has enabled new interpretations to be (Morgan 1978; hereafter: GDB) according made throughout previous and ongoing re- to the original entries in the manuscripts, search. rather than according to the organisation of In this paper, a list and map of Cheshire some modern editions. The GDB-noted castles is provided in the light of the above administrative unit of a hundred was a introduction, and each of the core themes of territory of a hundred hides from the tenth the outcomes of interpretation is reviewed century—each hide being an area of taxed in turn (pp. 118-19, and 131-36). The paper land sufficient to feed one family—and will also identify how the findings of the was equivalent to the Welsh cantref (the research have contributed to, and chal- head manor or court of which, was known lenged, current perspectives and interpreta- as the llys). The townships within Dud- tions in Anglo-Norman castle studies. estan Hundred (later Saesneg, in part), as well as those of Exestan Hundred (later Maelor Gymraeg), were not listed

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THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16119 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions separately in GDB, but were, in fact, inter- Continuity: Re-use of Pre-Anglo-Nor- spersed with other Cheshire townships. man Sites Additionally, Atiscros Hundred townships Regional and provincial diversity has appear to have been listed both amongst largely been overlooked to date (Creigh- the Cheshire townships (of which there ton and Liddiard 2008, 167), and its ex- were approximately five) and separately pression in the form and siting of castles (these latter being predominantly unhidat- on the northern Anglo-Welsh border is ed) (Swallow 2016). However, there is no first addressed by this author (Swallow GDB title or subtitle introducing these 2015, 2016). The study of possible rela- townships listed separately, to suggest that tionships between pre-Anglo-Norman they were not included within Cheshire. planned systems of fortification, élite resi- Inter Ripam et Mersam (later south Lan- dences and castles is also recognised as cashire, and post-1974, Greater Man- generally lacking (Hulme 2010, 224). chester) townships, on the other hand, are Semple (2013) convincingly shows that listed separately, and although they are the Anglo-Saxon reuse of prehistoric mon- included within the Cheshire translation, uments and landscapes in England was for are not generally considered as part of the purpose of articulating and manipulat- Cheshire. ing their own identities. How far the loca- A list of definite or possible extant and tion of any given castle in Cheshire had non-extant castle sites established by the been influenced by the builder’s desire to author is provided in the Table 1 below, as appropriate pre-Anglo-Norman power are numerous other references to castle centres and ancient locales in the land- sites/features, predominantly as field- scape has been addressed in recent publi- names. These sites were within the geo- cation (Swallow 2016, Forthcoming graphical area of Cheshire as defined by 2018-19). The results of this research ar- GDB, and are listed together for the entire- gue for a conscious reference to the past, ty of Cheshire for the first time, thus in- where pre-existing identities on the Ang- cluding areas within present-day north-east lo-Welsh border were adopted and adapt- Wales and (the list for ed during the early Anglo-Norman period west Cheshire was first provided in Swal- in the form and placing of castles. low 2016; see also, Figure 1). The early reuse of place and form, along- The castles date, or are believed to date, side geographical, routeway, riverine and from c. 1069–1237 (Table 2), and it is to be Mercian dyke features in the landscape, noted that the majority are situated to the are clearly evident once Mercian and early west of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge. The Anglo-Norman Cheshire is studied as a Ridge is a north-to-south (from to whole. To the west of the River Dee lie Malpas) discontinuous ridge of Triassic three dykes: Offa’s, Whitford and Wat’s, sandstone, with heights of between 143 m generally considered to have been early and 211 m. The ridge forms two main Mercian boundaries (Worthington 1997; blocks, north and south of what is known 2000; Hill and Worthington 2003; as the Beeston Gap. What follows is a brief Hill 2005; Tyler 2011; Ray and Bapty summary of my interpretations to date 2016), although Whitford possibly has (Swallow 2015). prehistoric origins (Jones 2013, CPAT

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Report No: 1182, 4, Fig. 33 and 34). Offa’s Clwydian Range of (immediately Dyke, in part running parallel to the south- west of the Mercian dykes) and the Mid- ern section of Wat’s Dyke, probably de- Cheshire Ridge (for a full description and marcated Mercian lands in the late eighth analysis see Swallow 2016). century (CPAT undated, retrieved 14 June As mentioned above, medieval Cheshire 2015). Offa's Dyke runs almost without a also had a liminal geographical and affor- break between just north of the River Wye ested boundary called the Lyme. Taking a near Hereford, to , south-west of multidisciplinary approach, this author de- Mold in Atiscros Hundred (Hill and Wor- fines the defensive and administrative pre- thington 2003). The relation of the Whit- dominantly natural boundary of the Lyme ford Dyke monument with Offa’s and for the first time (Swallow 2015; 2018b). Wat’s dykes is uncertain. The previously The Lyme is evidenced in an extensive accepted view that it was, in fact, the north- series of place-names, including Audlem, ern section of Offa’s Dyke, was initially Lyme Park, Lyme Handley, Lyne Edge, challenged by David Hill in the mid-1980s Lymford Bridge, Lima and Lymm. (Hill and Worthington 2003, 154 – 61). ‘Lyme’ place-names also exist immediate- Whitford Dyke extends, with some breaks ly beyond the Cheshire boundary, in Inter in its line, for around 9 km, forming a part Ripam et Mersam (e.g. Lyme) and of the boundary between the parishes of Staffordshire (e.g. Newcastle-under- Newmarket and , more-or-less Lyme) (Dodgson 1970b, 36–37; Coates along the centre of the Atiscros Hundred 2004, 40, Swallow 2016, 2018; Figure 1). plateau, dividing the hinterland of the Dee Now a lost regional place-name, ‘Lyme’ Estuary from the Vale of (Jones was understood to refer to an area of Lyme 2013, CPAT Report No: 1182). The earth- trees (Dodgson 1970a, 2–6; Bu’Lock works of Wat’s Dyke, on the other hand, 1972, 25; and contra, Coates 2004, 44). are suggested to have represented the later However, the Latin līmen means ‘thresh- Mercian boundary of early ninth-century old, lintel’, or, at times, ‘field-baulk, limit, conquest; it formed a strategic boundary boundary’, and is perhaps more plausible against a changing political challenge from (Coates 2004, 36 and 47; Horovitz 2005, the Welsh kingdoms, and from which at- 376–77; Tringham Forthcoming). The tacks were launched into , thus Lyme was a district about 80 km long, expanding Mercian power further west which demarcated Cheshire’s eastern and (Malim and Hayes 2008, 147). The dyke is south-eastern border with Derbyshire, about 65 km long, and runs more-or-less Staffordshire, part of Lancashire and continuously as a bank and ditch between Yorkshire, and . With the ex- Basingwerk in Atiscros Hundred/Tegeingl ception west of the county, therefore, the and south of Maesbrook (Shropshire, nota- Lyme covered all the routes into and out of bly meaning ‘boundary brook’) (Ekwall Cheshire: all roads to the earl of Chester’s 1970, 311). Place-name and GDB tenurial Midland estates within the Honour of evidence stress the importance of the dykes Chester, which extended into twenty of the as a late eleventh-century boundary in the thirty-four English counties, and to Lon- west of the Irish Sea Cultural Zone. The don (Sylvester and Nulty 1958, 1; Lewis Irish Sea Cultural is broadly defined as the 1991a, 41). The Lyme district seems to area of medieval Cheshire between the have been used as a political and adminis-

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16121 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions trative boundary term for a region of natu- Hundred by 1086, which provided him ral features: woods, moors, the Lyme with a legally protected hunting landscape, Brook, and particularly uplands above a but also provided the county with an addi- contour height of approximately 120 m tional defensive boundary to the east of the (White 2015, 75; Swallow 2016, 2018). Mercian dyke boundaries, indicates his di- The newly interpreted extent of the Irish rect and early focus on this cultural zone Sea Cultural Zone (Swallow 2016) takes (Swallow 2016; Forthcoming 2018-19; into account the position of the three earth- Figure 1). I have proposed elsewhere that work dykes in the landscape, and demon- continuity from prehistoric, Roman or Old strates that the reuse of monuments to the English/Welsh monuments to Anglo-Nor- west of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge is indicat- man castles reflected the cross-cultural na- ed by the high occurrence of mottes with ture of the Anglo-Welsh border in their no baileys, and the unusual trapezoidal form, and thus reflected the military signif- /rectilinear shape of those castles with bai- icance of the castles’ sitings (ibid.). This leys. More particularly, both forms of cas- theory for the west of the River Dee is tles were sited between the area east of the based on the so-called militarily determin- Mercian dykes and west of the River Dee, istic view that castles were built where and Roman Watling Street heading north- there had previously been fortifications wards direct to Chester. More notably, the because different generations came to the majority of the castles in this cultural zone same conclusion that these were good de- were positioned along, or adjacent to, the fensible sites for surveillance. Mercian dykes, which indicates their likely Continuity in terms of direct succession surveillance and defensive purposes. of Mercian to Anglo-Norman landhold- Dodleston Castle’s newly identified and ings, seen at the Mercian multiple es- uniquely phased structure of motte, ring- tates—that is, dependencies based on a work and trapezoidal form and siting with- central settlement or caput (Faith 1997, 8, in this Irish Sea Cultural Zone (Swallow 12; Davies 2009, 184, 198)—takes into 2014a; Swallow 2016; Forthcoming 2018- consideration the first GDB entry for each 19), was pivotal to, and representative of, Cheshire Hundred. This entry usually has multi-period, cross-cultural and cross-pro- the highest value at 1066 of all other land vincial continuity. It is ironic that the new- tenure under the same lordship; may well ly interpreted distribution of the have been the site of a burh (Anglo-Saxon hitherto-named ‘minor’ and ‘thinned out’ ‘fortified place’, particularly royal resi- castles of the Anglo-Welsh border of dences;) was most probably the caput Cheshire indicates maximum cross-period (head manor) of the Hundred in question, continuity in an area which witnessed the and occasionally includes mention of a greatest fluctuation of boundaries. hall (aula) and/or court (curia). At its I would also argue that Hugh I core, the Anglo-Saxon royal and later co- d’Avranches’s (Earl of Chester from 1070 – mital demesne had the minster, or 1101) castles at and Mold were superior/mother church (Baxter and Blair probably built on the sites of pre-medieval 2006, 35). Cheshire GDB shows a strong structures in the Irish Sea Cultural Zone correlation between minster churches and (Swallow 2016, Forthcoming 2018-19). hundreds, each hundred usually consisting That Hugh had created a forest in Atiscros of two or three interlocking parishes (Blair

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1985, 118; Harris and Thacker 1987, 268– cates that continuity of significance of 73; Higham 1993, 126–81; Blair 2005, 309). landscapes of lordship and land tenure Nevertheless, Cheshire GDB provides only probably occurred within a core zone, rath- limited implicit evidence to identify the er than on the pre-existing hundredal caput county’s eleventh-century minsters. Blair (ibid.; Swallow 2012, 2016, 2018a, notes (1985, 106) that just under half of 2018c). These new locations of power had GDB minsters were attached to royal de- stronger grips on the county’s economics mesne generally, and thus identifies the after the Norman Conquest. Cheshire minsters of Farndon, Acton, Ches- East of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge, Hugh I ter and Halton in this way (Blair 1988, 2; largely retained the Mercian Earl Edwin’s 1985, 106). Less reliable as evidence, High- 1066 holdings of high value and cultural, am (1993, 127) suggests that minsters can be rather than overtly defensive, significance. identified where more than one priest is The analysis of how the distribution of recorded for a manor in Cheshire GDB, high-status settlement in Cheshire affected where the priests had substantial lands that the choice of castle site (Swallow 2016; were separately noted, and where there is Swallow Forthcoming 2018-19) indicates evidence that they enjoyed an element of tax that some pre-Conquest buildings contin- exemption. As Blair points out, however, ued in use during the Anglo-Norman peri- this pattern of minster identification cannot od and the castle (whatever we, or they, be universally applied, as priests were itiner- might mean by the term) came later. Ex- ant in their pastoral role, and so built them- amples include the likely initially royal selves churches in dispersed locations for forestal residences, which Hugh retained at their convenience, rather than in the central and Macclesfield, for example locations of the minsters themselves (Blair (Swallow 2018c). The case studies for 1985, 104, 113; Blair 1987, 271). Additional Nantwich and Aldford castles (Swallow complications of identification are that GDB 2012; 2018a) also call for a closer exami- records collegiate churches, many of which nation of hundreds with Mercian hall com- were old minsters, but some were relatively plexes and later castle sites within new and non-parochial (Blair 1985, 104). Cheshire (Table 3), where the continued On and to the west of the Mid-Cheshire interplay with the religious holdings, both Ridge, there was a high degree of continu- on a parochial and bishopric level, needs to ity in terms of direct succession of Mercian be understood. to Anglo-Norman landholdings seen at the Cheshire as a Frontier Mercian multiple estates and later capita castles of Malpas, Nantwich, and Halton. I The traditional military approach pre- proposes that a multiple estate and later sumed that defence took precedence over castlery with close links to Chester also other considerations, and revisionist theo- existed at the caput of Dodleston in its ries consider non-military explanations for newly interpreted original hundred of Dud- castle features. It has recently been sug- estan (Swallow 2014a; Swallow gested that this debate needs reframing, in Forthcoming/work in progress). Evidence that the issue is not an ‘either/or’ situation, at the capita of Acton/Nantwich, but one of clarifying the military and élite Farndon/Aldford, Overton/Frodsham and residential roles of castles at different Depenbech/Malpas, on the other hand, indi- times and places (Creighton and Liddiard

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2008, 165; Hulme 2010, 223). This ap- to the earls after the end of twelfth centu- proach eliminates the restrictive, categor- ry, and particularly in the early thirteenth ised interpretation of castles, an analytical century, when Ranulf III de Blundeville process already hampered by limited avail- (Earl of Chester from 1181 – 1232) made ability and survival of historical and ar- both Frodsham and Macclesfield bor- chaeological sources. oughs, along with Leek in Staffordshire. Earl Ranulf thus tightened control on the I agree with the argument that physical county’s economics, creating an income geography played a major role in the shap- from the burgesses and the port at Frod- ing the character of a historic landscape sham (Swallow 2018c). (Williamson 2013), and thus in the shaping of the form, purpose and siting of Cheshire’s It would appear that the majority of all castles. The continuity of geographical fea- efforts, expense and personnel were ini- tures dictated the framework of historical tially located and employed for the build- external and internal boundaries (River ing of the county’s castles to the west of Mersey to the north of the county; the Lyme the Mid-Cheshire Ridge, with the excep- (cf. above); Pennine hills to the east of the tion of Stockport and Shipbrook castles, county; Mid-Cheshire Ridge (cf. above); and three de Masci estate castles lining and Clwydian Range west of the Mercian the River Bollin between the northern dykes). The geography also dictated the county boundary of the River Mersey and county’s economics, such as salt and miner- the earls’ forestal estate at Macclesfield. al extraction; the position of important ports Landscapes seemingly not subject to def- at Chester and Meols, for instance; and riv- inite comital castle-building were also erine and road communication routes. The situated to the east of the Mid-Cheshire location and purpose of forests was also Ridge, and include Frodsham, Maccles- dictated by the soils, topography and the field and the Wiches of Middlewich and forests’ proximity to the county’s upland Northwich. In Cheshire GDB, the Wiches boundary landscapes. In turn, the physical refer to the three main salt producing geography directly affected the form and industrial settlements of Northwich, Mid- siting of the county’s castles. dlewich and Nantwich (Swallow 2018a). To what extent each castle’s martial and Castles on hilltops displayed offensive strategic role played a part in the choice of and symbolic power in and over the locations, purposes and shaping of land- Cheshire Plain landscape. In Cheshire, scapes has been discussed (Swallow 2016; hilltop castles were held by the earls, or Swallow Forthcoming 2018-19), the re- by men they had placed in positions of sults of research highlighting the vital role significant power within and throughout of the defence of trade in Cheshire (salt the county (Swallow 2018b). The role of and minerals, in particular). Although the Stockport Castle in this respect is unclear county’s castles were situated predomi- and requires further investigation (Swal- nantly to the west of the Mid-Cheshire low, forthcoming 2019). The other hilltop Ridge, the whole of the county has to be locations were Overton (possibly), and considered as a frontier, not just that part The Roft held by Osbern fitz-Tezzo, both of it on the Anglo-Welsh border. East of sites marking the south-west boundary of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge became important the county, and the south of the Irish Sea

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Cultural Zone; , held by the Hunting Landscapes earls’ constables; and Mold Bailey Hill, The revisionist approach to castles studies held by the earls’ seneschals. Hilltop sites is concerned with the idea of display of also included Buckton Castle, probably power, despite it rarely being the main built by Ranulf II Kevelioc (Earl of Ches- reason for the construction of the castle ter from 1153 – 81), and emulated about (Hulme 2010, 226). Perception of strength fifty years later by his grandson when he was perhaps as important as actual built (Swallow 2018b). strength, as argued for the offensive hill- Notably, all hilltop castles marked and top locations of Buckton and Beeston cas- overlooked pre-Anglo-Norman boundar- tles (see above). In addition, the ies: Stockport Castle overlooked the River mid-fourteenth-century-recorded tower Mersey and the disputable Inter Ripam et with oriel window at the comital residence Mersam to the north, and may have at Frodsham would have looked impres- formed part of the de Masci lands (Swal- sive, and would have displayed wealth and low 2015; Swallow, forthcoming 2019); power within its hunting landscape setting Mold in the far west of the county sat west (Swallow 2018c). However, it is argued of Wat’s Dyke and at the northern end of that these features did not seriously impact Offa’s Dyke; Halton was positioned to the the effectiveness of castles as fortifica- north of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge, and tions (Hulme 2010, 226).I would also ar- overlooked the River Mersey estuary to gue that hunting landscapes cannot be the west, the River Weaver to the south, divorced from the overall purpose and and the constable’s adjoining lands in In- location of the castle. This is seen in the ter Ripam et Mersam to the north; Buck- detailed case study at Aldford, where con- ton Castle overlooked the Lyme to the tinuity of important cultural significance east, as well as the counties of Derbyshire, in the west Cheshire landscape provided Yorkshire and south Lancashire; Beeston the context for newly identified castle significantly bounded the east of the Irish parks (Swallow 2012). The meaning of the Sea Cultural Zone on the southern stretch Anglo-Saxon word haia (e), or hay(s), is of the Mid-Cheshire Ridge, and is mark- also considered for the county for the first edly visible from both the Welsh hills of time, where these enclosures are shown to the Clwydian Range, and from the Lyme fall within the areas of the comital forests to the south and east. (Swallow 2015; Swallow Forthcoming Considering the whole of Cheshire as a 2021). This observation within and with- frontier, it can be seen that it was delineat- out the county is new. ed by boundaries which fluctuated over Forest creation represented élite comital the study period, but also that an identity power on two levels: defence and hunting. of significant power, place and memory The forests were all sited on Cheshire’s was contained within them. Ultimately, external (west, south-east and Lyme) and the various roles that castles within internal (Mid-Cheshire Ridge) boundary Cheshire played as a tool of frontier lord- areas. The Welsh were quick to criticise ship are demonstrated, particularly in its Hugh I’s gluttony and love of hunting, but trade and military functions. this author suggests that his 1070s forestal creation had the additional, and perhaps

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ABOVE: Halton Castle, from the south-east © R. Swallow. BELOW: Halton Castle from the south, Samuel and Nathaniel Buck, 1726.

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16126 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions prime, purpose of providing stringently Swallow 2013, 2014b; 2018b, restricted areas for defence on these bound- Forthcoming/work in progress) suggest aries, as well as providing the protection of cross-period and cross-cultural similarities riverine and road trade routes centred on in their form and siting. Such collaboration the county’s caput at Chester and the Irish and identities have not been identified, or Sea Province (Swallow 2015, 2016, Forth- fully addressed or understood previously. I coming 2018-19, Forthcoming 2021). argue for an episodic, close political align- Collaboration ment between the earls of Chester and the Welsh rulers prior to and following the Ellenblum (2007, 304) has argued that cas- Norman Conquest, which can be witnessed tles ‘could not have developed in a vacu- in both the documentary and archaeological um, unconnected to the military tactics of record. This alignment is used as a context land battles, the essence of the frontier, and for analysing the significance of location, the different capabilities of the two adver- form and architectural features of Cheshire saries’. He argues that castles should be and north Welsh castles. This significance regarded as the obvious visual expression was part of a wider political dynamic in of the cultural dialogue between provinces, northern England, Wales and, indeed, in ‘not because one of the sides “borrowed” Ireland and Normandy. Important conclu- an architectural expression from the other, sions are made in terms of how we view the but because they were the outcome of a relationship between Cheshire, the English lengthy ongoing dialogue between two state, and the rulers of the native Welsh schools of military tactics and approaches’ principality of Gwynedd. Although (ibid.). This interpretation is reached for Beeston (Cheshire) and Cricieth (Gw- the string of castles on the Anglo-Welsh ynedd) castles are well known, for the first border (Swallow 2016, Forthcoming 2018- time, and in a single context, a discussion is 19). However, the results of my research made of their landscape settings and their furthers this argument by considering the wider political/cultural environment (Swal- under-researched and under-played social, low 2014b). political and symbolic dynamics between élite powers from different provinces Medieval Cheshire was not only a milita- (Frame 1988), and in this case, between rised frontier, but was also a border area of Cheshire, Wales and England. acculturation. The newly interpreted Irish Sea Cultural Zone and cross-border rela- Personal power played a significant part tionships of power made a significant con- in the choice of locations, in the purposes tribution to the form and siting of the to which the castles were put, and in the castles in medieval west Cheshire; castles shaping of their landscapes, and that inter- were symbols of a palimpsestic landscape action of personal powers, as well as con- of both contest and collaboration. flict, affected the form, placing and landscape of Cheshire and Gwynedd cas- Overall Conclusions tles. The continuity of form and purpose in Disciplines construct their own internal the Irish Sea Cultural Zone (Swallow boundaries (Mullin 2011, 3), and in taking 2016) and the case studies for Dodleston, a cross-disciplinary approach to research, Beeston (and Cricieth) castles (Swallow I aim to break down non-contemporary [under the name of McGuicken] 2010; boundaries to emphasise the relative inde-

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16127 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions pendence of medieval Cheshire and how very with irregularly shaped baileys, as well as powerful the county’s Anglo-Norman earls Old English place-names indicating a pre- were within England and Wales. The study of Anglo-Norman origin; they are identified the diversity in form of the castle, location by their location on, or to the immediate and function in Cheshire has thus far pro- east of the Mercian dykes, and Wat’s duced the following overall conclusions. Dyke, in particular. This suggests consec- Despite sometimes inconclusive results, the utive or subsequent reuse of their form and endeavour of trying to match a complex site siting in the landscape. biography of often changing locations and The second type is the more typical uses to a specific legal status of the Cheshire motte-and-bailey structures within and to castle has wider implications. Archaeologi- the east of the River Dee within this cultur- cal and historical context demonstrates that al zone. Those positioned to the east of the contemporary descriptions lacked consisten- River Dee and along or adjacent to the cy and precision of either what we now call Roman Watling Street trade route to Ches- ‘castles’ in the Anglo-Norman period, or ter, were clearly also defending and con- regal and comital halls throughout the Ang- trolling movement of people and trade in lo-Norman period. The case study at Frod- the Irish Sea Cultural Zone, along with sham (Swallow 2018c), for instance, appears their western counterparts. The majority of to represent a national conundrum, and lack castle sites in this category were associat- of any further clarity, surrounding contem- ed with manorial settlements, including a porary and subsequent nomenclature of the church adjacent to the castle. Continuity ‘castle’. It highlights the fact that the termi- for this category is demonstrated by the nology of medieval documents might not likely presence of a former Anglo-Saxon relate to the archaeology and architecture multiple estate, where the elements of a that survives, and that we should not let the burh, mother church, burh-geat (and suc- former govern our interpretations and expec- ceeding castle site with a park), river and tations of the latter. Roman road are generally present (see With this in mind, and ironically at the risk Farndon/Aldford, and Acton/Nantwich, of renewed categorisation, this author high- for instance: Swallow 2012, 2018a). These lights four broad types in Cheshire, of what more settled and expansive castle land- we now term a ‘castle’. The first type is the scapes could indicate a higher degree of defensive chain of isolated castles in the security experienced in this area. Their Irish Sea Cultural Zone, which were all development may have been due to the situated to the west of the River Dee and to continuing cultural significance of their the east of the Mercian dykes in a north- relatively high pre-Conquest values as south alignment (Figure 1). They defended Earl Edwin’s Mercian estates (Malpas the riverine and Roman road commercial (and thus Shocklach: (Swallow 2013); network to Chester, which ran onto the Irish Aldford/Farndon (Swallow 2012); Sea via the port of Meols in Wilaveston Acton/Nantwich (Swallow 2018a); and Hundred. This category of castle generally possibly Shotwick (Swallow 2016, Forth- had minimal, or no, associated manorial coming 2018-19), for instance). Addition- settlement. These castles have a high occur- ally, their development may have been due rence of mottes with no baileys, and mottes to their proximity to Chester and an impor- tant London-Irish Sea Roman road. Typi-

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16128 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions cal motte-and-bailey structures also existed 1–12) — which homogenises the multiple, in the east of the county, at the de Masci contemporaneous purposes of a castle in an castles of Dunham Massey, Watch Hill and unrealistic and consecutive temporal sense. Ullersford, for instance, which lined the I would therefore agrees with Ellenblum’s River Bollin running south from the north- (2007, 182) description of a castle, that it ern county boundary of the River Mersey. ‘is not one type of settlement, but a form of Possible exceptions to the general distribu- construction stemming from the medieval tion of this typical motte-and-bailey catego- way of life, and therefore, common to all ry are Rhuddlan (Twt Hill) and Hawarden types of medieval settlements’. motte-and-bailey castles, both situated in Placing together sources from a variety the heavily defended Atiscros Hundred to of disciplines creates a more expansive the west of the River Dee (ibid.). interpretative picture, which means that in The third type of a Cheshire castle relates turn, research thus far has had to be neces- to élite residences, which may or may not sarily selective with its examples and case have been fortified in some way, typified studies. However, there is much evidence by Frodsham and Macclesfield. These were that Cheshire stood apart from England in generally situated adjacent to important Ro- the minds of the contemporaries. Pre-Con- man roads leading to Chester, and within quest Mercia, and the Welsh March known forestal landscapes to the east of the county. to exist from 1160s (Swallow 2015, Forth- The pre-Conquest royal/comital estates coming 2018-19), are both place-names were of relatively high value at 1066 for the meaning ‘boundary’. This suggests that county, and Hugh I’s direct succession of Cheshire was considered a firm frontier them suggests continuity of cultural signif- zone, which reinforces the contemporary icance. This does not necessarily suggest impression of Cheshire’s separateness. Yet the presence of early castles, nor indeed, the frontier of Cheshire had influence be- anything other than what have since been yond its boundaries: it was representative, called fortified manors at any date. and indeed pivotal, to changes within the The fourth and final type is the hilltop British Isles. The county was clearly and castle, summarised above, which was pre- intrinsically linked with the overall politi- dominantly a symbol of significant offen- cal, social and economic dynamics of not sive and élite personal power in the forestal only England, but also Wales and the Irish landscapes. These were situated within the Sea Province. surrounding landscape of the Cheshire My previous and ongoing interpretation of Plain, and on or adjacent to the county’s Cheshire castles has therefore questioned principal boundaries (Swallow 2018a). traditional documentary and secondary While different types of castles are ac- source narratives, which have taken on divi- knowledged generally (e.g. Liddiard 2000), sive Welsh versus English cultural identities the above differentiation of site-types does based on false or irrelevant, modern, and not appear to have been considered before. thus constrictive, historic time periods and Instead, the form of castles tends to be tenurial boundaries. categorised by the perception of their de- Within this context, Cheshire’s castles velopment over time — that is, ‘from func- were intrinsically and continuously linked tionalism to symbolism’ (Liddiard 2005, to a greater or lesser degree with defence,

THE CASTLE STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL THENO 29: CASTLE 2015-16129 STUDIES GROUP JOURNAL NO 32: 2018-19 Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions trade, hunting landscapes, and élite social poses of the significance of landscapes of networks within and without the county. I lordship and land tenure of Cheshire’s agree with the broad argument put forward castle. by Prior (2006), who argued for a more strategic approach to the study of castles. He claimed that the key to the Anglo-Nor- mans’ success was that it mattered less what was built, but where it was built. In addition, I would argue that where a castle KEY to the following Tables: was built was influenced by the county’s DMV Deserted Medieval Village geography and related available resources Encl. Enclosure Castle and Irish Sea trade. In turn, these character- FM Fortified Manor House istics directly dictated what was built, in the F-N Field-Name form of one or more of the four types of M&B Motte-and-Bailey Cheshire ‘castle’ and their inextricably M&B? Motte and possible bailey linked élite landscapes, outlined above. A Mas. Extant masonry multidisciplinary, critical approach to re- search on castles and their landscapes is Motte Motte (only) therefore considered essential, as O’Keeffe MS Moated Site (2013, 261) stressed when he expressed his N/E Non-extant frustration at archaeologists who categorise P-N Place-Name seemingly ‘new’ castles without the ‘requi- PS Planned Settlement (including site scrutiny’. castle/church proximity) R Likewise, as Creighton and Barry (2012, S Settlement (organic, and/or no evi- 65) point out, ‘A key challenge for the dence of planning) future is, of course, to address the fact that Spur Castle positioned on a spur our understanding of the medieval rural U/K Unknown scene has been compartmentalised into these different categories, effectively re- C. King (King 1983, I) tarding any ambition we might have to- CSMR Castle acknowledged in Cheshire wards the appreciation of the countryside in Historic Environment Records (CHER) and Clwyd Power Archae- toto’. Documentary sources include both ological Trust (CPAT) reco above and below ground archaeology, and Morgan Morgan 2001 all have a part to play in an interdisciplinary PN Place-Name volume references cas- approach, which overcomes homogenisa- tle (Dodgson, 1970a–1981b, inclu- tion. Where such research and publication sive; Owen and Morgan 2007) distinguishes itself from previous studies, √ Mentioned/accepted as a castle therefore, is in its recognition, definition within time period and presentation of the entire medieval - No mention county of Cheshire as a medieval frontier. ? Disputed/possible Considered separate from England by its X Rejected, or not within time period contemporaries, this frontier, and the (1069–1232) unique power of the earls of Chester, pro- vided the contexts for the multifarious pur-

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Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions Table 1: Cheshire Castles c. 1069-1237c. Castles 1:Table Cheshire

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continued

. 1069-1237

c Cheshire Castles, Castles, Cheshire

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continued Possible Cheshire Castles, c. 1068-1237 c. Castles, Cheshire Possible

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Cheshire Castles in Context: Some Conclusions Table 2: Cheshire Castles (Definite & Possible: Dates of First Mention First of Dates Possible: & (Definite Castles Cheshire 2: Table

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continued

, Table 1 Cheshire Castles (Definite aand Possible): Date of First Mention of First Date aand Possible): (Definite Castles 1 Cheshire Table

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stle

Table 3: Landscapes of Lordship and Tenure.

The Anglo-Saxon Minster and Anglo-Norman Ca

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