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Buckingham Town Defences

Also known as, or recorded in historical documents as;
Bourton

In the civil parish of Buckingham.
In the historic county of Buckinghamshire.
Modern Authority of Buckinghamshire.
1974 county of Buckinghamshire.
Medieval County of Buckinghamshire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SP69463373
Latitude 51.99795° Longitude -0.98968°

Buckingham Town Defences has been described as a Urban Defence although is doubtful that it was such.

There are no visible remains.

Description

No signs of town fortifications built 914, which may have had some C11 use. Bond puts the defences in his 'of no post-Conquest significance' list.

"A.D. 918... After this, in the same year, before Martinmas, went King Edward to Buckingham with his army, and sat there four weeks, during which he built the two forts on either side of the water, ere he departed thence."
Comments

Fort is the given translation of burh in the Everyman Press edition of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle but possibly more accurate than town defence. One of these two forts or burhs is likely to have been the base for Buckingham Castle at the given map reference. However, securing the town would not be too difficult since the river provides a natural defence on three sides and a ditch and rampart a little to the north of the church would secure the forth side.
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:03

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