Motte-and-bailey castle

Aslockton Castle

United Kingdom Aslockton scheduled monument
Aslockton Castle
Aslockton Castle · Wikipedia

About

Aslockton Castle is a ruined fortification, a motte-and-bailey castle, in the village of Aslockton, Nottinghamshire. (grid reference SK744402) The original name of the settlement was Aslachetone, which suggests a possible Norse origin; it was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 where it was described as a large settlement. A motte-and-bailey fortress was built in the 12th century.

Only the earthworks now remain. The precise date as to when the castle was built is unknown. However, it was most probably built in the 11th or the early 12th century.

The ground plan of the castle is in the shape of a parallelogram, which houses two courts, one of which is square in form. The motte most probably had a wooden tower and a palisade. The castle had two rectangular baileys, an inner bailey and an outer bailey, with the smaller outer bailey used for livestock.

The moat of the castle would have been fed from the nearby stream. At some stage the fort went out of use and was replaced by a manorial site which later became Saucer Farm. The earthworks surrounding the baileys were modified to form fishponds, fed by the stream that had filled the moat.

Additional channels were dug, and sluice gates...