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The comprehensive gazetteer and bibliography of the medieval castles, fortifications and palaces of England, Wales, the Islands.
 
 
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Yelford

In the civil parish of Hardwick With Yelford.
In the historic county of Oxfordshire.
Modern Authority of Oxfordshire.
1974 county of Oxfordshire.
Medieval County of Oxfordshire.

OS Map Grid Reference: SP35980474
Latitude 51.74021° Longitude -1.48059°

Yelford has been described as a Masonry Castle but is rejected as such, and also as a Fortified Manor House although is doubtful that it was such.

There are no visible remains.

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

Description

Listed by Harvey as castle with no remains.

Yelford Manor, 'the best and certainly the most picturesque large timber-framed house in the county', (Pevsner, Oxon. 869) stands on a partly moated site some 100 m. east of the church. It was built in later C15 by Edward or John Hastings on the site of an earlier house. (VCH)

A measured survey of the timber-framed house was carried out in Spring 1984. It stands on a moated site within the earthworks of the shrunken medieval village of Yelford. The building consists of a central hall with cross-wings to north and south, probably built in the late C15 / early C16. Remains of an earlier building were revealed beneath the hall in the 1950s. Yelford Manor has been in the hands of only 2 families - the Hastings of Dalesford until 1652 and the Lenthalls of Besselsleigh until 1949. (Gilman)

The full extent of the moat has not been traced. There is no evidence that this was defensive; rather it was for drainage in a particularly wet and floodable area. (Emery)
Comments

Site of moated manor house at Yelford not apparently ever called a castle but Gatehouse assumes this is what Harvey was referring to.
Apart from possibly being moated there seems little evidence for the form of the earlier manor house at Yelford. This does seem to have been a sizeable manor and the Hastings were an important family. However, the manor seems to have been used by junior branches of the family, and Harvey's 'castle' may never have been more than a timber manor house with a moat and an association with the Hastings family (Harvey may have been thinking of William, 1st Baron Hastings who was not an owner of this house.)
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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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