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Nass Point

In the civil parish of Lydney.
In the historic county of Gloucestershire.
Modern Authority of Gloucestershire.
1974 county of Gloucestershire.
Medieval County of Gloucestershire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SO65180171
Latitude 51.71304° Longitude -2.50538°

Nass Point has been described as a Timber Castle although is doubtful that it was such.

There are no visible remains.

Description

Early owners of Nass Manor may have built a small castle here. In 1558 Nass cliff was known as "Nass Castle" and in 1737 the Joneses claimed that a castle had anciently stood on their manor. Its most likely site appears to be at Nass Point, at the southern end of the cliff, guarding the entrance to Lydney Pill (VCH).
Site visit by members of Dean Archaeological Group. No trace of a castle located (Webb 2000). (Gloucestershire SMR)
Comments

This sounds more like a name given to a natural feature of importance to local seafarers, as a navigation mark, with some fanciful 'history' added on for family kudos. The suggested cliff edge site doesn't seem likely as a manorial site (Nass Court at SO649020 was the manorial centre) but it may be possible a prehistoric earthwork was on the site and is now lost to coastal erosion.
The given map reference is that given in the Gloucestershire SMR but should used as an approximate location only.
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:21:29

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