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Bossall Hall

In the civil parish of Buttercrambe With Bossall.
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: SE71716071
Latitude 54.03740° Longitude -0.90652°

Bossall Hall has been described as a Masonry Castle although is doubtful that it was such, and also as a probable Fortified Manor House.

There are earthwork remains.

This site is a scheduled monument protected by law.
This is a Grade 2 listed building protected by law*.

Description

The monument at Bossall Hall is one of a small number of quadrangular castles in North Yorkshire and its defences unusually comprise a double curtain wall with round towers. Although, in common with many of the other North Yorkshire examples, the castle was demolished to make way for a later house, the plan of the castle is still largely visible in the form of its moat while the foundations of the curtain wall, entrance bridge and internal buildings survive below ground.
The monument includes the remains of the quadrangular castle at Bossall Hall, situated to the west of St Botolph's church on the crest of an area of high land to the west of the River Derwent valley. Although the castle was demolished to make way for the present Grade II listed 16th/18th century hall with its gardens, the castle moat which surrounds the house is for the most part retained as an open ditch and the foundations of the curtain wall are visible in places as earth-covered banks at the edge of the moat. The hall stands on the northern part of the inner island, which measures up to 105m north-south by 70m east-west; the inner moat is visible on all four sides of the island as a dry ditch up to 10m wide by 2.5m deep. A 4m wide bank, thought to contain remains of the curtain wall, surrounds the southern half of the island and varies between about 0.5m high on the western arm to 1.5m high on the eastern arm. Another bank, 4m wide by 0.5m high, lies on the outer edge of the eastern arm of the moat. A causeway across the north-eastern corner of the moat and two footbridges are modern but the brick bridge across the eastern arm was built in 1808 on the site of an original entrance and its stone footings are the medieval bridge abutments. Around three sides of the inner moat is an outer court, ranging between 20m and 35m across and surrounded by an outer moat. The northern arm of this moat is visible as a ditch 8m wide by 2m deep with an outer bank on its north side which is not clearly defined but is about 0.5m high and at most 8m wide. There are no upstanding remains of the outer curtain wall but its footings will survive below-ground. Although the eastern end of the ditch has been infilled since the 1920's, the 1911 edition of the Ordnance Survey map records that it extended for a further 40m east of its present terminal. The north-western corner of the moat is still clearly visible and, although the ditch is shallower, the northern end of the western arm can be seen. The western arm is largely infilled but will survive as a buried feature which runs just outside the walled garden of the hall; the post-medieval garden wall is a substantial 2.5m high structure and it is likely that it is founded on the medieval footings of the outer curtain wall. At its southern end, the western arm of the moat becomes visible again as a slight 8m wide depression running into an east-west ditch which is a westerly extension of the inner moat. This latter feature extends for 6m beyond the outer edge of the western arm where it now forms a small pond; originally this ditch may have continued west, towards a series of springs, and served as a leat supplying water to the castle moat. There is a slight indication that a corresponding feature, possibly the overflow drain, ran from the north-western corner of the outer moat. Although the eastern arm of the outer moat is no longer visible and its north-eastern corner lies beneath a group of stables, the infilled ditch, the curtain wall footings and the foundations of medieval structures within the outer court will survive below-ground; the extent of the outer court on this side is estimated to be equivalent to that on the western side. The village of Bossall is thought to derive its name from Bosa, a 7th century Archbishop of York, who reputedly founded a church dedicated to St Botolph on the site of the present church. Bossall was a thriving community in the medieval period and the buried remains of the medieval village are thought to survive to the north-west of the castle, in Old Bossall field. The quadrangular castle dates from the 14th century. Sir Robert Belt built the existing hall before 1644, probably demolishing the castle walls to obtain building materials for the house, although in 1885 his descendant, W J Belt, wrote that foundations of the double curtain wall, square towers, round towers and a barbican of the castle were still to be seen. (Scheduling Report)
Comments

Jean le Patourel writes a licence to crenellate was issued but gives no date. Gatehouse has concluded this is misattribution of the licence given to Buttercrambe Castle in the same parish.
It should be noted that, while this is called a 'quadrangular castle' in the Scheduling Report, the site is not included in King's Castellarium Anglicanum or any other reasonable gazetteer of Yorkshire castles - there may have been some deliberate aggrandisement of the manor house by W J Belt. (N.B. King does list a 'Bossall' but this is clearly Buttercrambe)
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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The author and compiler of Gatehouse does not receive any income from the site and funds it himself. The information within this site is provided freely for educational purposes only.
The bibliography owes much to various bibliographies produced by John Kenyon for the Council for British Archaeology, the Castle Studies Group and others.
Suggestions for finding online and/or hard copies of bibliographical sources can be seen at this link.
Minor archaeological investigations, such as watching brief reports, and some other 'grey' literature is most likely to be held by H.E.R.s but is often poorly referenced and is unlikely to be recorded here, or elsewhere, but some suggestions can be found here.
The possible site or monument is represented on maps as a point location. This is a guide only. It should be noted that OS grid references defines an area, not a point location. In practice this means the actual center of the site or monument may often, but not always, be to the North East of the point shown. Locations derived from OS grid references and from latitude longitiude may differ by a small distance.
Further information on mapping and location can be seen at this link.
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*The listed building may not be the actual medieval building, but a building on the site of, or incorporating fragments of, the described site.
This record last updated 15/08/2017 15:56:49

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