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Remains of motte and bailey castle 120m west of St Peter's Church

A Scheduled Monument in Eye, Suffolk

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.3201 / 52°19'12"N

Longitude: 1.1498 / 1°8'59"E

OS Eastings: 614767.396543

OS Northings: 273784.112648

OS Grid: TM147737

Mapcode National: GBR TJL.HJ2

Mapcode Global: VHL9F.WY78

Entry Name: Remains of motte and bailey castle 120m west of St Peter's Church

Scheduled Date: 12 February 1925

Last Amended: 9 March 2001

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1019669

English Heritage Legacy ID: 30594

County: Suffolk

Civil Parish: Eye

Built-Up Area: Eye (Mid Suffolk)

Traditional County: Suffolk

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk

Church of England Parish: Eye St Peter and St Paul

Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich

Details

The monument includes a motte, the eastern part of the inner bailey adjoining
it and the remains of a stone castle, situated in the centre of the town of
Eye. Also included is a 19th century mock keep known as Kerrison's Folly,
constructed on top of the motte above the remains of the medieval keep. The
structural remains of the castle and the 19th century folly are a Listed
Building Grade I. The western part of the inner bailey, which is not included,
was the site of a 19th century workhouse and is now occupied by modern
housing.

The motte is visible as a conical mound 12m in height and approximately 57m in
diameter at the base, with a sub-circular platform about 18m in diameter at
the summit. The inner bailey to the west of the motte is ovoid in plan, wider
at the western end, and defined by a scarp up to 4.5m high on the north and
west sides and 2m high on the south. Limited excavations at the western and
eastern ends have demonstrated that it was constructed on a natural hillock
and that the interior, surrounded by an earthen bank, was raised and levelled
by the dumping of imported soil to a depth of between 1.3m and 3m. The motte
was probably surmounted originally by a wooden tower and the bailey surrounded
by a timber palisade. These were replaced by a stone keep and a curtain wall
of stone, and the ruined remains of part of the curtain wall survive on the
north eastern slope of the motte and the north side of the inner bailey
adjoining it, within the area of protection. The wall is visible in three
discontinuous sections and is constructed largely of mortared flint rubble
with some squared blocks of clunch. The longest section has an overall length
of 27.2m and comprises a rectangular tower at the western end, with three
narrow chambers in line adjoining it. To the east of these, at the foot of the
motte, are the remains of a second rectangular tower, and near the summit of
the motte, where the curtain wall would have abutted the keep, are the remains
of another narrow chamber. The western tower, which projects 0.9m beyond the
curtain wall externally, has internal dimensions of 2.9m east-west by 2.6m,
with walls 1.6m thick and up to 3.2m high. The adjoining chambers are 1.8m
wide internally and 5m, 2.8m and 3.7m long respectively from west to east. The
inner and outer walls are 1.2m thick and about 1.7m in height. Only the
foundations of the dividing wall between the two western chambers survive, but
the dividing wall between the middle and eastern chambers still stands to a
height of up to 3.9m. There is no visible evidence for windows or doors, and
the chambers were perhaps intended originally for storage, although it is
thought that they were used in the 14th century as a prison. The eastern tower
has internal dimensions of 2m east-west by 1.6m, and the foundations, which
are all that survive of the walls, are about 1.8m thick. Evidence for a
chamber to the south of it was found during excavations carried out in 1987-
1988. The section of the curtain wall on the motte is up to 2.1m high and has
a maximum length of 7.9m. The chamber which it contains is 3.8m in length
north west-south east by 1.7m wide, and the inner and outer walls are between
1.4m and 1.6m thick. The internal walls to east and west do not appear to be
bonded to the outer walls and may have been inserted at a later date. There
are indications of a another chamber to the west of this, and lower down the
slope of the motte, on the same alignment, is a large block of fallen masonry.

Excavations in part of the interior of the bailey adjoining the wall removed
approximately 1.6m of post-medieval deposits and uncovered a layer of
demolition rubble dated to the 14th century, overlying traces of a clay floor.

By the early 16th century little remained of the stone castle apart from a
tower and some ruined walling, and a windmill was erected on top of the motte
around 1592. A path with steps cut up to 2m deep into the western side of the
motte was probably constructed to provide access to the mill and is shown on
the tithe map of 1839, which also shows a mill still in existence. The mock
keep was built by General Sir Edward Kerrison around 1844, it is said as a
house for the batman who served him at the battle of Waterloo, and occupies
almost the whole of the top of the motte. It is constructed of mortared flint
with moulded brick quoins and dressings, and the shell wall is polygonal in
plan, with nine sides and buttresses at the angles. Each of the outer faces of
the wall is decorated with a mock loophole. Much of the wall survives to its
full original height of 4.6m, but the buildings within are ruinous, standing
for the most part to less than 2m. On the western side of the enclosure is a
ruined tower 4m square which projects beyond the shell wall, and within this,
in the north east angle, is the base of a spiral stair to a now vanished upper
storey, with a hearth against the wall to the west of it. Adjoining the tower
to the south and south east are the remains of two larger rooms connected by
internal doorways, and against the eastern wall of the keep is the base of a
detached outside lavatory. Evidence that the folly may have been built on the
surviving foundations of the medieval keep was found in 1990, when a small
trench was dug against the eastern wall.

Construction of the motte and bailey castle was probably begun by William
Malet, who was granted the estate known as the Honour of Eye after the
Conquest, and was completed by his son, Robert. When Robert Malet was banished
in 1102 the estate, with the castle, reverted to Henry I and was subsequently
granted to Stephen de Blois (later King Stephen). Stephen's successor,
Henry II, granted it to Thomas a Becket in 1156, and it was probably Becket
who was responsible for the original construction of the stone castle. After
Becket's murder in 1170 it returned to the Crown, and it was sacked during the
rebellion of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk in 1173. It was subsequently
repaired, and regular repairs and improvements were carried out until the end
of the 12th century. Henry III granted the estate to his younger brother,
Richard, Earl of Cornwall whose son, Edmund, inherited. The castle was sacked
again in 1265 during the Barons revolt against the King. In 1337 the estate
was granted to the de Uffords, the new Earls of Suffolk, and in 1381 went to
the de la Poles, but by 1370 the castle was assessed as worthless, although
parts remained standing.

A modern viewing platform within the 19th century folly on the motte is
excluded from the scheduling, together with modern railings, the steps up the
motte, a beacon within the inner bailey, benches, information boards,
floodlights and a junction box, a litter bin and the surface of a car parking
area, although the ground beneath all these features is included.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Motte and bailey castles are medieval fortifications introduced into Britain
by the Normans. They comprised a large conical mound of earth or rubble, the
motte, surmounted by a palisade and a stone or timber tower. In a majority of
examples an embanked enclosure containing additional buildings, the bailey,
adjoined the motte. Motte castles and motte-and-bailey castles acted as
garrison forts during offensive military operations, as strongholds, and, in
many cases, as aristocratic residences and as centres of local or royal
administration. Built in towns, villages and open countryside, motte and
bailey castles generally occupied strategic positions dominating their
immediate locality and, as a result, are the most visually impressive
monuments of the early post-Conquest period surviving in the modern landscape.
Over 600 motte castles or motte-and-bailey castles are recorded nationally,
with examples known from most regions. As one of a restricted range of
recognised early post-Conquest monuments, they are particularly important for
the study of Norman Britain and the development of the feudal system. Although
many were occupied for only a short period of time, motte castles continued to
be built and occupied from the 11th to the 13th centuries, after which they
were superseded by other types of castle.

The motte and the standing remains of the curtain wall of Eye Castle survive
well. The eastern part of the inner bailey, although formerly occupied by a
school, has been shown by excavation to include buried deposits of medieval
date. These standing and buried remains will retain further archaeological
information concerning the construction and occupation of the castle, and
evidence for earlier land use is likely to be preserved in buried soils
beneath the motte and the raised platform of the bailey. By the time of the
Domesday survey in 1086, the town of Eye was a prosperous settlement with a
market of regional importance, and the castle is of particular interest in
this context and as the administrative centre of an important feudal estate.

Source: Historic England

Sources

Books and journals
RCHME, , Eye Castle, Eye, Suffolk: An Archaeological Survey, (1994)
Other
SRO Ref SPS 6723, Eye Mill, (1818)

Source: Historic England

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