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Great Wolford Village Ditch

In the civil parish of Great Wolford.
In the historic county of Warwickshire.
Modern Authority of Warwickshire.
1974 county of Warwickshire.
Medieval County of Warwickshire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SP25153450
Latitude 52.00804° Longitude -1.63516°

Great Wolford Village Ditch has been described as a Urban Defence although is doubtful that it was such, and also as a Linear Defence or Dyke although is doubtful that it was such.

There are earthwork remains.

This site is a scheduled monument protected by law.

Description

Village, well-placed on a triangle of land above the junction of two little streams, was formerly defended by entrenchments running all round it; these probably enclosed an area of about 9.1 ha. In the memory of people still living the ramparts virtually encircled the village, but they have now been practically levelled, except upon one side, to the E and SE. Here too they have been considerably mutilated in places. The extant defences show formidable double ramparts with intervening fosse, placed on top of a steep decline; they are perhaps best preserved in the SE corner, where water still lies in a ditch which is 4.6m wide. The vallum at this point is 7.6m high and the inner bank 6.5m high, the enclosed village being on a level with the top. There are no records of antiquities (VCH). The main feature is a large ditch, now 6-7.6m at the bottom; this was designed to be fed by a spring, and is still wet. Most of the upcast is on the outer side, making a bank 2.4m high above the ditch; the 'inner' bank is very slight. The field to the E has been ploughed with ridge and furrow. 1968: Possibly erected as a wolf defence (OS record card). (Warwickshire HER)

Great Wolford. The name is probably derived from 'wulf' (wolf) and 'weard'. The latter word must have its sense of 'watching protection' or possibly 'ambuscade'. The name would refer to a spot where a watch was kept for wolves --- In support of its use for watching purposes we note the existence of "relics of ancient entrenchments" at Great Wolford (EPNS). A defensive earthwork. In character the work resembles a late medieval although I do not know of a parallel. It was possibly erected either at the time of the Civil War (which was very active hereabouts) or earlier, as suggested by EPNS, as a wolf defence. There are no traces of further works to complete the village encirclement. (Field Investigators Comments–F1 FDC 20-OCT-68). (PastScape)
Comments

What this extraordinary and exceptional earthwork actually was is inadequately explained. The 'wolf defence' suggestion just seems incredible, is clearly a fantasy inspired by the village name (or, if the earthwork is pre-historic the village name is inspired by the fantasy supposed origin of the earthwork). The ditch does not now encircle the village, although it may have been more vulnerable to infilling and redevelopment on the flatter west side so may have enclosed the village. Equally it may have only ever have been on the east side. Dugdale description of village in the mid C17 is mainly tenurial history but he makes no mention of this notable feature. Seemingly post-Medieval and probably Civil War but may just possibly be pre-historic.
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:20:09

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