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Low Dinsdale Howe Hill

In the civil parish of Over Dinsdale.
In the historic county of Yorkshire.
Modern Authority of North Yorkshire.
1974 county of North Yorkshire.
Medieval County of Yorkshire North Riding.

OS Map Grid Reference: NZ355108
Latitude 54.49228° Longitude -1.45244°

Low Dinsdale Howe Hill has been described as a Timber Castle although is doubtful that it was such.

There are no visible remains.

Description

Butler suggests a low mound here is a potential early castle site designed to control the river crossing of the old Roman road into the honour of Richmond. He writes it as being at Low Dinsdale but his map places it in the other (Yorkshire) side of the River Tees in Over Dinsdale.

Comments

Howe Hill place name on map but no mound marked and nothing in PastScape. Not the manorial centre.
Butler suggested a number of possible small sites, associated with Roman roads, on the boundary of the Honour of Richmond which attributed to the conquest and consolidation period of the newly formed lordship. In fact most of these sites do not appear to have medieval use and his argument about the way Norman authority was established in Richmondshire is probably incorrect.
The suggestion that some early castle were built to control river crossings is made elsewhere (notably by Mary Higham for North Lancashire) but the actual evidence is often weak, certainly for England. This may suggest such sites were early, flimsy and soon abandoned or that the theory is flawed. However, few such sites have been thoroughly investigated.
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:20:08

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